| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $38.8515 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the crypto asset labeled HYPE will reach the $38.8515 price level within a 15-minute window. Short, time-bound price targets matter because they isolate immediate liquidity and microstructure effects and highlight extreme short-term volatility.
Short-duration crypto contracts like this are designed to capture rapid price moves driven by order flow, liquidity provision, exchange latency, and breaking news. HYPE, like many crypto tokens, can experience sharp intraday swings driven by a small number of large orders or by news and sentiment shifts, so outcomes often reflect execution details as much as underlying fundamentals. The event’s official start, price source, and settlement rules are defined on the contract page and should be consulted before participating.
Market odds on the event represent the aggregated view of participants given available information and will move as new trades, orders, and news arrive. Interpret odds as a live indicator of market expectations, not a static forecast, and remember that short windows magnify the impact of individual trades and data sources.
The start and end times are defined in the event’s official contract terms on the platform; the window may begin at a specified timestamp, upon market open, or when a triggering condition occurs. Consult the event page for the authoritative schedule and any updates, since the listing shows 'Closes: TBD' until the organizer sets the time.
The contract’s settlement rules specify the price source—commonly a last-trade price on a named exchange, a consolidated index, or a specific data feed. Check the event details to see which feed or exchange is authoritative for resolution.
Resolution depends on the contract language: many short-window markets treat any qualifying trade at or above the target as a hit, while others may use a published best-price or index crossing. Review the settlement definition on the event page to know which execution types count.
Yes; in short windows a single large trade can move the observed price and thus affect resolution. Platforms often have rules about wash trades and may investigate anomalous activity, but the immediate observable price feed used by the contract is typically what determines resolution subject to any official adjudication.
'Closes: TBD' means the official start/end timestamps have not been published yet; once the platform posts the schedule, the event will run according to those times and resolve after the end of the 15-minute window using the specified price source. Expect any post-window validation or dispute process described in the contract to occur before a final settlement is published.