| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $37.7930 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the crypto token HYPE will reach the price target of $37.7930 within a 15-minute observation window. Short-window price targets like this matter because they test immediate liquidity, order-book dynamics, and short-term sentiment around HYPE.
HYPE is being evaluated on a very short time horizon, which amplifies the influence of exchange liquidity, bots, and event-driven order flow. The market is listed on KALSHI with the close time marked TBD, and the currently reported total volume traded is $0, indicating the market is nascent and may have thin liquidity. Short-duration crypto markets often reflect microstructure noise as much as fundamental news.
Market odds on this event reflect traders' collective view about whether HYPE will hit the specified price within the 15-minute window; in low-volume, short-duration markets those odds can move quickly and may be driven by a few large orders or a single news event.
Resolution follows the event rules on KALSHI: the market will be evaluated against the designated price feed and timestamp to determine whether HYPE met the $37.7930 threshold during the specified 15-minute observation window. Refer to the event's rule text for exact resolution mechanics and tie-breakers.
The event page currently lists the close time as TBD; the 15-minute window will begin at the official start timestamp posted on the market page and end 15 minutes later. Monitor the KALSHI listing for the announced start/close times.
The event will resolve using the specific price source named in the market's rules on KALSHI. Only that designated feed/exchange is used for outcome determination, so prices on other venues or delayed reporting do not affect resolution unless they are the stated source.
A $0 traded volume means there have been no prior trades in this market, suggesting low liquidity and potentially wide spreads; small orders or single participants can move the market price significantly, increasing execution risk.
Short-window movements are most often driven by high-frequency traders and market makers reacting to order-book imbalances, large single traders ('whales'), and coordinated retail activity; timing of news or listings that coincide with the window can also prompt decisive moves.