| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $37.9485 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the crypto asset 'HYPE' will reach the price target of $37.9485 at any point during a 15-minute observation window. Short-duration markets like this matter because they isolate ultra-short-term price moves and test market microstructure and liquidity in real time.
Short, time-bound crypto contracts are used by traders to express views on sudden moves driven by news, order-flow or algorithmic activity; they differ from longer-term bets because settlement hinges on a very narrow time interval. HYPE’s price behavior will be shaped by its listing venues, recent trading history, and any token-specific announcements or exchange events around the observation window. Because this market closes TBD, participants should consult the contract page for the authoritative start/settlement mechanics.
Market odds reflect the collective view of participants and update as new information arrives; they are best interpreted as a summary of current sentiment and available information rather than a guarantee of outcome. For precise settlement mechanics and data sources, always consult the market’s official rules on the platform.
Yes: the contract is structured around a 15-minute observation window and resolves based on whether HYPE’s price reaches the stated target at any moment during that window; the official market page and rules specify the precise resolution criteria and any tie-break rules.
The market uses the reference exchange or data feed listed in the contract terms on the platform; that page identifies the source (single exchange or aggregated feed), the quoted ticker, and how the reported price is sampled for settlement.
Start and end timestamps are defined in the market’s contract details on the platform; because this event currently shows 'Closes: TBD', you should monitor the market page for the published observation window and any updates to timing.
Platform rules typically describe contingency procedures—such as using an alternate source, pausing settlement, or applying an official dispute/settlement protocol—so check the contract’s event-resolution and force-majeure clauses for the exact fallback process.
Low or zero trading volume means price quotes may be thin and easily moved by single orders, so quoted market prices may reflect little consensus; traders should factor in larger spreads, execution risk, and the possibility that a small trade could materially change the market price.