SimpleFunctions
KalshiJun 1, 2028760 days left

Will New York City experience population decrease 3% or more during 2025-2027?

This contract is priced at 6¢ on Kalshi. Current book: 0¢ bid, 6¢ ask, 6¢ spread.

Implied probability

6¢
$7K volume
$5K liquidity
19313% of event volume

Event outcomes

8

Family volume

$37

Best sibling

Decrease 1-1.99% 7¢

Ticker

KXPOPCHANGENYC-28JUN01-NYC-3-NAN

Price history

6¢ current

+4¢
25¢50¢75¢100¢
Apr 15, 2026Apr 23, 2026

Orderbook snapshot

0 / 6¢

Kalshi
6¢ spread
BidSize
AskSize
6¢1.0K
7¢500
9¢4
83¢3.7K
99¢97

Contract terms

Resolution, venue, and identifiers.

Resolution rules

If New York City experiences a population increase of between -3% or less between July 1, 2025 and July 1, 2027, then the market resolves to Yes.

Venue

Kalshi

Closes

Jun 1, 2028

Identifier

KXPOPCHANGENYC-28JUN01-NYC-3-NAN

Event family

Will New York City experience population.

This view keeps the individual contract next to its sibling outcomes. For long-tail search traffic, this is the useful context: where the current price sits inside the event, how much volume exists around the family, and which outcomes have actual depth.

Total volume

$37

Outcomes

8

Highest price

Decrease 0-0.99% 40¢

Current share

0%

Indicators

Yield, cliff risk, volatility, and regime.

IY (Yes)

752.9%

IY (No)

3.1%

Adj IY

376%

CRI

16

Overround

0.1%

Regime

neutral

Score

0.5

Full indicator table

752.9%
3.1%
Adj IY
376%
16
Overround
0.1%

Odds pages

Related prediction questions

Browse odds

Related readings

Matched from SimpleFunctions blog, opinions, technical guides, concepts, and learn pages.

Browse library
Blogmacro

US Recession 2025? What 1% Prediction Market Odds Get Right—and Wrong—About the Cycle

Prediction markets put 2025 US recession odds near 1%, while yield curves, economic indicators, and institutional forecasts point to much higher risk. This deep dive compares market pricing to historical base rates, Federal Reserve policy, and forecasting models to see if investors are underpricing recession risk.

Opinionessay

Prediction market liquidity: why depth matters more than volume for serious traders

Why orderbook depth matters more than volume for prediction market traders. Real Kalshi examples, liquidity scoring framework, and how to avoid slippage.

Blogmarkets

Kalshi vs Polymarket: Which Prediction Market Should You Trade?

In-depth comparison of Kalshi and Polymarket for prediction market traders. Regulatory structure, liquidity, fees, API tooling, and cross-venue trading with SimpleFunctions.

Blogmarkets

Prediction Market Orderbook Analysis: Reading Depth, Spread, and Liquidity

How to read prediction market orderbooks. Binary settlement, spread-as-percentage, depth asymmetry, executable edge calculation, and cross-venue arbitrage analysis.

Technicalguide

Kalshi vs Polymarket: A Developer's Comparison of APIs, Orderbooks, and Liquidity

Data-driven comparison of Kalshi and Polymarket APIs, orderbooks, rate limits, and liquidity. Code examples for building on both prediction markets.

Opinionanalysis

Liquidity Availability Is the Real Edge in Prediction Markets

Implied yield, cliff risk, and overround all describe what to trade. Liquidity Availability Score describes whether the orderbook can absorb the trade. Why LAS is the indicator that decides who actually books P&L.

SimpleFunctions context

Index, screen, query, and monitor.

Open index