| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $38.7083 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market concerns whether the crypto token HYPE will reach a price target of $38.7083 within a 15-minute window. Short-duration price-target markets matter because they isolate very near-term volatility and trader expectations about immediate market moves.
HYPE is a cryptocurrency whose short-term price action can be shaped by liquidity, order flow, exchange-specific trades, and rapid news or social-media-driven attention. Fifteen-minute target contracts are used to trade or speculate on microstructure events (spikes, squeezes, flash crashes) rather than longer-term fundamentals. This specific market is listed on KALSHI; current volume and closure timing are shown on the market page and may affect liquidity and reliability.
Market odds on KALSHI summarize the distribution of trader beliefs and available liquidity at a given moment; with low liquidity or unclear timing, quoted odds can change a lot on small trades and should be interpreted with caution rather than as a precise forecast.
Resolution depends on the contract terms on KALSHI: typically whether the official HYPE spot price reaches or crosses $38.7083 within the defined 15-minute observation window. The market page and rules state whether touching the target qualifies and which price source is authoritative.
The start time is defined in the market’s rules on KALSHI — it may be a scheduled UTC timestamp or triggered by an on-chain or exchange event. Consult the market page for the exact start trigger and check for any posted clarifications before trading.
KALSHI’s contract terms specify the canonical data source for resolution (for example, a named exchange, an aggregated index, or a particular oracle). Always check the market’s resolution policy on KALSHI to identify the official feed and timestamp rules.
Zero volume means there has been no recorded trading activity yet, so liquidity is untested and prices may move sharply with small orders. 'Closes: TBD' indicates the platform hasn’t published a firm closure time; both signals suggest extra caution and the need to confirm market mechanics before entering positions.
Look at minute-level or tick-by-tick historical charts to see prior intraminute spikes, gaps, and volatility, plus how the order book reacted during those events. Also review past instances of news-driven surges, exchange-specific anomalies, and periods when algorithmic traders drove rapid price moves.