| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $38.2869 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the crypto asset labeled "HYPE" will reach the $38.2869 price target during a specified 15-minute interval; short-window target markets matter because they isolate intraminute price dynamics and liquidity-driven moves.
Cryptocurrency prices are typically driven by a mix of on-chain events, exchange liquidity, and rapid news flows; short-duration contracts like this one amplify the influence of high-frequency trading, order-book depth, and momentary news or announcements. Because the market closes are TBD, participants should monitor the market page for the official start window and any resolution rules specific to this contract.
Market prices on Kalshi reflect the aggregate trading views and risk preferences of participants about whether the target will be met during the stated window; treat those prices as a continuously updating summary of market sentiment and new information rather than a fixed forecast.
A 'Yes' outcome typically means the official price feed or exchange price specified in the market rules recorded HYPE at or above $38.2869 at any point during the designated 15-minute interval; always confirm the contract's resolution criteria on the market page because exact measurement sources and tie-breaking rules are specified there.
'Closes: TBD' means the market organizer has not yet set the official start/close times for the resolution window—check the event page for updates; once scheduled, the 15-minute window will be defined in the market rules and all timing will be referenced to a specific time zone and timestamp.
The contract's resolution source is defined in the market's rules on the event page; it may reference a specific exchange, consolidated feed, or an index—verify that source before trading because different venues can show materially different intraminute prices.
High-frequency traders, market makers, algorithmic bots, and large institutional or retail orders (so-called whales) are the actors most likely to create rapid price moves; scheduled announcements or coordinated retail activity can also trigger short bursts of volatility.
Review minute-by-minute historical price and volume around similar past events or times of day to assess typical spike sizes and frequency; increased past intraminute volatility, recurring price spikes, or thin liquidity during certain hours can indicate how likely sudden moves are to occur, but past behavior is not a guarantee of future results.