| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $89.9797 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether SOL will interact with the $89.9797 price level during a specific 15-minute interval; it lets traders express or hedge short-term views on Solana’s price action. Short-duration targets are useful for capturing high-frequency volatility and event-driven moves.
Solana (SOL) is a high-throughput blockchain whose USD price can move rapidly in response to on-chain events, exchange order flow, macro crypto news, and liquidity shifts. Fifteen-minute contracts focus on intraday microstructure—order-book dynamics, large trades, or fast news releases can swing outcomes quickly. Because settlement hinges on a small time window, execution timing and data-source definitions matter more than for longer-dated contracts.
Market odds reflect the collective trading interest about whether the price condition will be met within the 15-minute window; they update as new information arrives. Treat odds as a live consensus signal rather than a fixed prediction, and consult the event rules for exact settlement mechanics.
It means the contract resolves based on SOL’s price behavior relative to the $89.9797 level during a specific 15-minute interval; consult the event’s official rules on KALSHI to see whether resolution requires touching, being at or above/below the level, and how the interval is defined.
Settlement uses the reference price or aggregate feed specified in the event’s rule text on KALSHI; check the event page for the named exchange(s) or oracle and the tie-breaking procedures for missing or anomalous data.
Zero volume indicates no trades have occurred yet but does not necessarily mean the market is closed; whether you can place orders depends on the platform’s listing and liquidity—verify availability on KALSHI and be mindful of wide spreads in thin markets.
The event rules specify the exact start and end timestamps (including timezone) that define the 15-minute window; always use those timestamps for planning since misalignment by even seconds can change outcomes on short-duration contracts.
KALSHI’s event rules describe fallback procedures—these may include using alternate data sources, a defined backup oracle, or a delay in resolution; check the event’s settlement policy for the specific contingency handling.