| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $92.6241 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether SOL (Solana) will be higher or lower over a 15‑minute interval; it matters for traders, liquidity providers, and anyone looking to hedge or speculate on very short‑term price moves.
Solana is a high‑throughput blockchain token that frequently exhibits intraday volatility driven by order flow, on‑chain activity, and rapid news cycles. Fifteen‑minute windows capture market microstructure effects — liquidity, execution, and immediate information — rather than longer‑term fundamentals.
Market prices for this contract reflect the collective supply and demand for the directional outcome over the specified interval; treat them as a market view and consult the event’s settlement rules on KALSHI to understand the exact reference price and timing.
It signifies a directional contract that resolves by comparing SOL’s price at two times separated by a 15‑minute interval; the platform’s contract page will state whether the outcome is determined by a single snapshot, an average, and which venue or index is used for the reference price.
The official start timestamp is set in the contract details on the event page; because the event currently lists its close as TBD, monitor the listing or platform notifications for the announced start time and any countdown to commencement.
Settlement methodology (specific exchange, index, snapshot timing, or averaging window) is specified in the market’s settlement rules on KALSHI; check those rules before trading to know exactly which price feed and timestamps will be used.
Total volume of $0 means no trades have been executed yet on this listing; a single outcome entry suggests one directional instrument rather than separate 'Up' and 'Down' contracts—review the payoff and liquidity implications (like wider spreads and execution risk) before participating.
Short intervals are most affected by high‑frequency traders, market makers, large exchange orders from institutional or whale accounts, sudden news or social media shocks, and any Solana network anomalies that alter buying or selling pressure.