| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $90.0432 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the SOL/USD price will reach the $90.0432 level within a contiguous 15‑minute measurement window. It matters because short time‑frame targets capture intraday volatility and can be used by traders to express views on immediate price moves.
Solana is a high‑throughput smart‑contract blockchain whose token price can move quickly on news, liquidity shifts, and automated trading. This specific Kalshi market measures a brief, 15‑minute price outcome; the market shows no traded volume so far and the official close/resolution timing is determined by the platform (Closes: TBD).
Market prices on prediction platforms represent the collective market view about whether the target event will occur; they update in real time as new information arrives and reflect supply and demand for that binary outcome rather than a long‑term valuation of the asset.
Resolution is based on the platform's published rules and the official price source it uses; in practice this means whether the SOL/USD price, as measured by the platform's specified feed or aggregation method, reaches the $90.0432 level within the defined 15‑minute measurement period.
The 15‑minute window is a contiguous interval defined by the market operator; exact start times, allowable interval boundaries, and any synchronization to exchange timestamps are set by the platform's event specifications—check Kalshi's event page or rules for the precise definition.
Zero traded volume indicates no current liquidity history on this market, which can mean wider bid/ask spreads, greater price impact for any order, and that market prices may move sharply when participants first trade—treat execution risk and slippage as higher than for active markets.
Rapid price moves are most often driven by sudden news (protocol incidents, exchange actions), large buy or sell orders from whales, algorithmic/bot activity exploiting short‑term opportunities, or spillover from a fast move in major crypto benchmarks.
Yes—platforms typically have contingency and force‑majeure rules that address data outages, feed anomalies, or other extraordinary circumstances; such events can delay resolution, use fallback price sources, or result in canceled/voided outcomes according to the operator's policy.