| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $37.7493 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the price of the crypto token HYPE will reach the $37.7493 level within a specified 15-minute window; it matters because short intraday targets capture trader sentiment and can be used for speculative or hedging strategies.
HYPE is a tradable crypto asset that can exhibit rapid price moves driven by liquidity, news, and order flow; 15-minute target markets are designed to isolate very short-term price action and are therefore highly sensitive to microstructure. Kalshi-hosted markets resolve against a specified price feed or exchange reference, so the exact resolution mechanics depend on the market description.
Market odds represent the collective expectation of traders about whether the target will be reached during that 15-minute window; treat odds as a dynamic summary of market sentiment, not a guarantee of outcome.
A 'hit' occurs when the price reported by the market's specified reference reaches the $37.7493 threshold within the defined 15-minute window according to the market's resolution rules; consult the market description to confirm whether touching or exceeding the level is required.
The start and end timestamps for the 15-minute interval are set on the Kalshi market page and are the authoritative times; check that page for the exact UTC/local time and any clarifying notes about timestamp conventions.
The market's resolution text lists the official price source(s) or oracle used for settlement; review that field to know which exchange or aggregated feed will determine the outcome.
Kalshi follows the contingency and dispute procedures in the market rules: if the primary feed is unavailable, a designated backup source or fallback procedure in the market terms will be used; consult the market's dispute and force-majeure provisions for exact steps.
No — settlement depends on the referenced price feed and resolution criteria, not on how much trading has occurred in the contract; however, zero or low volume can mean wider spreads and less liquidity for participants looking to trade.