| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $37.6323 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the HYPE cryptocurrency will meet the price target of $37.6323 during a specified 15‑minute window. Short‑duration price targets matter because they isolate immediate market sentiment and liquidity conditions that can move prices quickly.
Ultra short-duration markets like this are designed to capture brief, high-volatility moves rather than longer-term trends; they are sensitive to exchange-level order flow, algorithmic trading, and momentary news. HYPE, like many crypto assets, can experience rapid spikes or dips driven by low liquidity, large orders, or social-media attention. The market’s official resolution rules and the exact timing/window will be posted on the event page; currently the close time is listed as TBD.
Market odds aggregate participant expectations about whether the $37.6323 threshold will be hit within the 15‑minute window; because the window is short, odds are heavily influenced by immediate liquidity, recent trade flow, and any scheduled events or news.
It means the contract resolves based on whether HYPE reaches the specified price threshold at the measurement defined by the market during a single 15‑minute window; consult the event’s resolution text for the precise rule (e.g., whether a touch, close, or average is required).
The platform or event organizer will announce the scheduled 15‑minute window on the event page prior to resolution; until that announcement, there is no confirmed measurement period, so check the event page for updates and the official start/end timestamps.
The event’s resolution rules specify the exact price source or exchange and how the price is sampled; review the resolution/source section on the event page to see which feed and timestamp policy will be used for settlement.
Low volume indicates limited liquidity and thinner markets, meaning quoted odds can move sharply on small trades, spreads may be wide, and individual orders have greater potential to shift the market; traders should be cautious about slippage and the risk of manipulation in low‑volume conditions.
Whether a brief touch counts depends on the contract’s resolution language (for example, some contracts resolve on any trade at or above the target, others require a specific quoted price or sustained level); always refer to the event’s resolution rules for the definitive criterion.