| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $88.2503 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether SOL (Solana) will hit the specific price target of $88.2503 during a single 15-minute interval — a short-term, event-style contract that matters to traders looking to hedge or profit from high-frequency price movement.
Short-duration target markets like this compress price discovery into a narrow time window and are influenced by on-chain events, exchange liquidity, and macro crypto flows. Solana is known for periods of both high intraday volatility and sudden liquidity shifts, so 15-minute targets tend to be driven by rapid news, large orders, or exchange-specific price behavior. The market source is KALSHI and the official close/start time for the 15-minute window is listed as TBD on the event page.
Prediction market prices reflect the collective view of participants and update as new information arrives; they are indicators of market sentiment rather than guarantees. For final resolution, consult the market’s official settlement rules, which specify the price feed and exact timing used to determine outcome.
Resolution is governed by the event’s settlement rules on KALSHI; typically a 'Yes' occurs if the designated reference price reaches or crosses $88.2503 at any point during the specified 15-minute interval per the chosen price source. Always verify the exact wording and price source on the event’s settlement documentation.
The start/close time is listed as TBD on the event page; KALSHI will publish the exact interval before trading begins. Monitor the event page or platform notifications for the confirmed start timestamp and any timezone conventions used.
KALSHI specifies the official price source in the market’s settlement rules. That could be a consolidated feed or one or more named exchanges; differences between sources can affect the outcome, so check the event’s documentation to see which feed is authoritative.
Handling of anomalous trades depends on the platform’s rules: some venues accept any qualifying trade at the target price, others apply filters, time-weighted averages, or tie-break procedures. Review KALSHI’s rules for this event to understand whether isolated spikes or exchange errors are excluded or subject to dispute resolution.
Consider SOL’s intraday volatility, typical liquidity at different times of day, past reactions to protocol announcements or outages, and the calendar for derivatives expiries or major market events. Short windows are particularly sensitive to single large orders and clustered trading activity, so recent on-chain and exchange order-flow signals matter more than longer-term trends.