| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $38.7109 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the crypto asset labeled HYPE will hit a target price of $38.7109 within a designated 15-minute window. It matters because very short timeframes concentrate price moves and can create trading opportunities or risks tied to microstructure and news.
Fifteen-minute target markets are short-duration contracts that capture immediate price action rather than longer-term trends. Outcomes on such contracts are highly sensitive to intraday liquidity, exchange order-book dynamics, and any announcements or trades that occur near the resolution window. Because Kalshi-style markets rely on a disclosed reference price and resolution rule, those specifications drive how the event is judged after the window ends.
Market prices reflect participants' aggregated views about whether the target will be met and will change as new information and liquidity arrive. Treat current prices as a live consensus signal, not a definitive forecast, and check the event rules for how resolution is defined.
It specifies a contract that resolves based on whether the asset labeled HYPE reaches the price $38.7109 within a defined 15-minute interval; the event title summarizes the asset, the monitoring window, and the target price for resolution.
The event page currently lists the close as TBD; the platform will announce the official start and end times and any changes on the event detail page, and you should monitor that page or platform notifications for the confirmed resolution window.
Resolution depends on the market’s stated reference (e.g., a specific exchange, consolidated feed, or index) and timestamp rules; consult the event’s official rules to see which data source and time-matching method will be used to judge the target.
A reported volume of $0 means no trades have been recorded yet; that can indicate low interest or that the market is newly listed, and low liquidity can produce wide spreads and larger price impact for any trades placed.
Movements can be driven by high-frequency traders and arbitrage bots exploiting microstructure, large single traders executing market orders, sudden news or token-specific events, and market makers adjusting quotes to manage risk around the short window.