| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $38.5827 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market centers on whether the crypto asset labeled 'HYPE' will interact with a specified price target of $38.5827 within a 15‑minute observation window. Short, price‑target markets matter because they isolate very short‑term price behavior and can be used for hedging, speculation, or measuring market microstructure.
The contract combines a tiny time horizon (15 minutes) with a precise numeric target, a format common in crypto micro‑events and exchange/aggregator price‑oracle products. As listed on KALSHI, the market currently shows no traded volume, which indicates limited liquidity and possibly limited information reflected in the market price. Resolution will depend on the exchange’s specified data source and timestamp rules rather than long‑term fundamentals.
Market prices on platforms like this represent traders’ collective view of whether the contractual condition will be met at the specified observation interval; they are not firm predictions and should be interpreted alongside the contract’s resolution rules, data source, and liquidity conditions.
It denotes the length of the observation interval during which the platform will check the HYPE price against the $38.5827 target. The contract’s rules should specify whether that window is a single 15‑minute period starting at a defined timestamp or a rolling period; consult the market’s resolution text for the exact start and end times.
Single‑outcome or numeric‑target markets typically resolve by applying the contract’s payout formula to the observed price at the specified time (for example: whether the price meets or exceeds the target, or the exact price used for settlement). The market’s description or rules will state the precise resolution condition and payout mechanism.
The resolution source is defined in the market’s event rules on the platform; common sources include a specific centralized exchange ticker, an aggregated oracle, or an index. Check the event details to see which venue or feed KALSHI will use for settlement.
Yes. Zero or low traded volume means limited market participation and shallower liquidity, which can increase bid/ask spreads, make prices less informative, and raise the risk that individual trades materially move the market or that price discovery is incomplete.
Confirm the contract’s exact start/end timestamps and time zone, verify the declared settlement data source, monitor order books on likely contributing venues, watch for HYPE‑specific announcements or sudden liquidity events, and review the platform’s dispute or settlement‑failure procedures in case of data feed problems.