| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $92.3841 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether SOL (Solana) will be higher or lower over a specific 15-minute interval; it matters to short-term traders, liquidity providers, and anyone looking to hedge intraday price moves in SOL.
Solana is a high-throughput, often volatile cryptocurrency whose price can move rapidly in short windows due to order-flow, on-chain events, or macro news. Fifteen-minute binary/up-down markets are sensitive to microstructure (order book depth, large trades) and short-lived news, so they capture immediate sentiment rather than long-term fundamentals.
Market prices here reflect the collective supply and demand for the 'up' or 'down' outcome at any moment; they are a real-time consensus price, not a guaranteed prediction. For interpretation and settlement mechanics, refer to the event’s rule text on the platform since odds update continuously as new information arrives.
It measures whether the SOL reference price is higher or lower at the settlement point defined by the event’s 15-minute measurement window; the event page and rules specify the precise settlement condition and reference price to determine 'up' versus 'down.'
The start and end timestamps (or the rule for when the 15-minute window begins) are set by the event creator and shown on the market’s detail page; because this market currently lists 'Closes: TBD,' check the event page for the finalized schedule before trading.
The event’s settlement methodology and chosen reference price sources (single exchange, aggregated index, or oracle) are specified in the market rules; consult that section on the KALSHI event page to see the exact feed that will determine the outcome.
Zero traded volume means no contracts have been executed yet (low liquidity currently); 'number of outcomes: 1' reflects how the platform displays this market’s contract structure—review the market description and order book to confirm available contracts and whether bid/ask interest exists before placing orders.
Resolution depends on the settlement rule: some events use the price at a single timestamp (end of the window), others use an average over the window or a specific exchange snapshot. Check the market’s settlement rules to know whether transient spikes count or if an averaged/endpoint price will be used.