| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $91.4725 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the price of Solana (SOL) will reach $91.4725 within a specified 15‑minute window. Short intraday target markets matter because they isolate immediate price dynamics driven by liquidity, order flow, and fast news.
SOL is an actively traded cryptocurrency with episodes of rapid moves driven by on‑chain activity, network events, large orders from whales, and broader crypto market trends. Intraday target contracts focus attention on minute‑scale drivers rather than longer‑term fundamentals. The market is listed on Kalshi and currently shows a closing time of TBD, so the precise window timing is set by the platform once scheduled.
Odds on this market represent traders' aggregated views about the chance SOL will hit the specified level during the 15‑minute interval; because the time window is very short, prices are highly sensitive to immediate liquidity and event risk. Low traded volume or thin liquidity can make quoted odds less informative and more volatile.
It asks whether SOL will reach the specified dollar price at any moment during a contiguous 15‑minute interval defined by the market; consult the Kalshi market page for the official resolution wording and any precision rules.
The start time is set by Kalshi when the market schedule is finalized; 'Closes: TBD' means the platform has not yet published the contract's scheduled start/close times—check the market page or exchange notices for the exact timestamp.
Resolution typically relies on the specific price source named in the market rules (a designated exchange or consolidated index); you must review the Kalshi contract documentation to see the exact feed used for this event.
Zero or very low traded volume indicates thin participation so far; that means quotes may move widely on small orders and market odds reflect few trades, so interpret any prices cautiously and expect higher bid/ask spreads.
Most such contracts resolve as a binary 'hit' if the price meets the target at any time in the window; exact handling of simultaneous ticks, timestamp resolution, or truncated precision is defined in the market's resolution rules—consult the Kalshi page for those specifics.