| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $38.4782 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the cryptocurrency HYPE will reach the price target of $38.4782 during a specific 15-minute observation window. It matters because short, time-bound price targets highlight liquidity, volatility, and the impact of trades or news on price in real time.
Markets that resolve over very short intervals are common in crypto because prices can move rapidly across exchanges due to order-book dynamics, large trades, and social-media driven flows. Resolution depends on the exchange or price feed KALSHI designates and on precise timing rules, so small differences in source or timestamp can change the outcome. Because this market currently shows zero traded volume and a TBD close, details and liquidity may change before the observation window is set.
Prediction market odds convey the market's aggregated view of whether HYPE will hit the target within the 15-minute window and update as new information and trades arrive. Treat those odds as a dynamic signal about collective expectations, not a guarantee of outcome.
Resolution follows KALSHI's event definition: typically the official quoted or traded price of HYPE must meet or exceed $38.4782 at some point during the designated 15-minute observation window. The event page or KALSHI rulebook will give the precise resolution condition and price source.
The start (and end) times for the 15-minute window will be published by KALSHI prior to settlement. 'Closes: TBD' means the platform has not yet set the observation timestamp; check the event page for the official start time once it is announced.
KALSHI specifies the official price source in the event details or its rulebook. That could be a single exchange feed, a consolidated feed, or another designated source; consult the event's settlement information to know which feed binds resolution.
Treatment of very brief touches depends on KALSHI's timing and quoting rules. Some markets count any recorded trade or quoted price that meets the threshold within the window, while others apply aggregation or minimum-duration rules—refer to the event's resolution criteria for how sub-second prints are handled.
Zero traded volume means the market has had no trades so far; this typically implies low liquidity, wider bid-ask spreads, and higher execution cost for new trades. It does not change how KALSHI resolves the event—the settlement still follows the specified price feed and timing rules regardless of on-platform volume.