| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $38.8549 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the crypto asset HYPE will reach the price level $38.8549 within a 15-minute observation window. It matters for traders who want to speculate on or hedge against rapid, short‑term price moves in this token.
HYPE refers to a specific cryptocurrency token or listed instrument; short-duration targets like this capture microstructure, news reactions, and algorithmic trading rather than longer-term fundamentals. Markets of this design are often used around scheduled announcements, listings, or high-frequency flows that can push prices quickly. Because the market currently shows no volume and the close time is listed as TBD, key settlement details should be checked on the platform before trading.
Prediction market prices reflect the market consensus about whether the event will occur, but they can move rapidly as new information arrives or a few trades execute in a thin market. In low-liquidity, short-window markets, price quotes may be noisy and should be interpreted with caution.
The contract's resolution rules define what price action constitutes a hit; check the event page for the specified price source and whether settlement uses last trade, midpoint, or an aggregated feed during the observation window.
The start and end times (or the trigger that opens the 15-minute window) are listed in the market's details; because this listing shows the close time as TBD, confirm the published schedule on the platform before relying on the window.
The market specifies a resolution source on its contract page—this could be a particular exchange, an index, or an oracle feed—so review that field to know which venue's prices will be used.
No recorded volume indicates little or no trading interest so far, meaning quoted prices may not reflect broad consensus and single trades can move the market substantially; low liquidity increases execution risk.
Resolution disputes or missing data are handled according to the platform's adjudication rules—consult the market's resolution policy for tie-breakers, fallback procedures, and any arbitration or cancellation mechanisms.