| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $88.4852 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This contract asks whether the price of SOL will meet a specified $88.4852 target within a defined 15-minute measurement window. Short-interval contracts like this matter because they let traders express views on very near-term price moves and react to short-lived market events.
SOL refers to the native token of the Solana blockchain, a highly traded crypto asset known for episodic volatility. Fifteen-minute targets are common in short-term speculative and hedging strategies and are influenced by exchange order flow, news, on-chain activity, and liquidity conditions. The event is hosted on Kalshi, so final settlement will follow that platform's contract rules.
Market prices on the contract reflect collective trader expectations about whether SOL will reach the stated numeric target during the specified 15-minute window; they are not forecasts you should treat as certainties and should be interpreted alongside contract definitions and trading costs.
The start and end timestamps for the 15-minute window are specified in the contract details on Kalshi; check the market page or rulebook for whether the window begins at a scheduled clock time, at order execution, or relative to a reference timestamp.
Settlement price sources vary by contract; the event page or Kalshi's settlement rules list the reference exchange or aggregated feed used to determine the observed SOL price for resolution.
Kalshi's dispute and settlement procedures govern such cases; typically the platform will follow pre-specified contingency rules, which may include using alternative feeds, a nearby timestamp, or pausing resolution—review the contract terms for specifics.
Zero reported volume means there has been no recorded trading activity yet on that contract; low or zero volume can indicate limited liquidity and wider spreads, increasing execution risk for traders.
Traders commonly use smaller position sizes, limit orders, clear stop rules, and monitor the settlement rules and price feed closely; be prepared for slippage and ensure you understand how rapid moves or exchange issues will affect contract resolution.