| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $37.0597 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the crypto asset labeled HYPE will meet a $37.0597 price target during a specific 15-minute window; short-interval target markets matter because they let traders express views on near-term price moves and immediate liquidity events.
Short-duration price-target markets are common in crypto because of rapid price swings, low-latency trading, and event-driven moves (listings, tweets, or order-book squeezes). These markets typically resolve based on exchange-reported prices or an agreed reference feed over the stated window, so understanding which feed and the exact timing is crucial.
Market odds (prices) reflect traders' aggregated expectations about whether the target will be hit during the 15-minute window and will update as new information, orders, or liquidity arrives; they should be interpreted as a continuously updating consensus signal, not a guarantee.
The event page specifies the exact start and end timestamps for the 15-minute window; resolution uses data only from that interval, so confirm those timestamps on the Kalshi event page before trading.
Resolution will follow the exchange or reference feed defined in the market’s resolution rules on Kalshi; check the event's rule text to see the designated price source and whether it uses trade prints, quote midpoint, or an aggregate feed.
Settlement depends on the platform’s adjudication policy described in the rules: some venues exclude flagged or cancelled prints, others rely on final exchange reports; consult the event’s resolution policy for how disputed trades are handled.
Low on-platform volume means the market price may be thin, spreads wide, and moves driven by small orders; low Kalshi volume does not prevent the underlying asset from hitting the target, but it can limit participants’ ability to enter or exit positions without impacting the market price.
Key actors include large holders or 'whales', high-frequency traders and bots that cause rapid price changes, market makers providing liquidity, and news sources or influencers whose commentary can trigger sudden flows; exchanges and their matching engines also shape short-term price dynamics.