| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $84.9052 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether SOL will reach the $84.9052 price target during a specified 15‑minute interval; it matters because short intraday moves can reflect sudden news, liquidity events, or trading activity that matter to traders and risk managers.
SOL is a liquid crypto asset with episodes of rapid intraday movement; markets that span short time windows like 15 minutes are designed to capture transient moves rather than longer-term trends. This specific contract is listed on KALSHI, shows no traded volume at present, and has a closing time that is not yet announced on the event page.
Market odds aggregate traders' views about whether the target will be met during the 15‑minute window; for short-duration contracts those odds can change quickly in response to new order flow, news, or changes in liquidity.
The platform defines a contiguous 15‑minute measurement window with a specific start and end time; the exact start time for this event will be shown on the event page once scheduled and resolution uses the timestamped reference prices within that interval.
Settlement uses the reference price feed specified in the event’s official rules on KALSHI; check the event details or rulebook for the list of exchanges or oracles that the platform relies on for this contract.
Typically the event resolves as successful if the platform’s reference price equals or exceeds the stated target at any timestamp during the defined 15‑minute window; consult the event rules for whether trade prices, mid-prices, or aggregated ticks are used.
Because the close time is not yet announced, monitor the event page and KALSHI notifications; once the platform schedules the window the market will close at the event’s stated start time and then settle after the 15‑minute measurement and any post-window reconciliation.
Potential causes include price-feed or oracle failures, exchange halts or outages, timestamp disputes, or force majeure; KALSHI’s rules describe procedures such as postponement, manual review, or cancellation in those circumstances.