| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $38.2260 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the crypto labeled HYPE will hit the $38.2260 target within a 15-minute window; it matters because very short‑term moves reveal immediate liquidity, volatility, and trader sentiment on that asset.
Short-duration crypto markets are driven by order-book dynamics, algorithmic trading, and any news that arrives in the minutes before or during the window. This is a single-outcome Kalshi market with total volume currently listed as $0 and a close time listed as TBD; participants should confirm the official start/close times and resolution source on the event page.
Prediction market odds express the market's collective view about whether the specified condition will occur and will change as new information arrives; to interpret them here, compare odds movement to contemporaneous price and news while keeping the 15-minute horizon in mind.
Resolution is determined by the contract's official rules on the Kalshi event page; typically it will reference a specific exchange price feed or trade print and a defined measurement period, so check the event's resolution criteria to see whether a trade, last price, or quoted price must equal or exceed the target.
The exact start and end timestamps are set by the market listing on Kalshi and may depend on time zone convention; confirm the official window and any pre-window conditions on the event page or market documentation before trading.
The market's resolution source (for example, a specific exchange, aggregated feed, or oracle) is specified in the event details; consulte the Kalshi event description to identify which feed governs settlement.
Because the window is short, a single large order or coordinated algorithmic activity can move the reference price rapidly; this makes liquidity and order-book structure especially important to monitor in the minutes before the window.
Consider bid-ask spreads, slippage in thin markets, fees, and the ability to enter or exit positions quickly; also verify any minimum contract sizes and the settlement mechanics listed on the event page to understand execution risk.