| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $38.9287 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the crypto asset referenced as HYPE will hit the price target of $38.9287 within a single 15-minute measurement window. Short-duration target markets like this matter because they isolate immediate price dynamics and test reactions to high-frequency events or news.
Short intraday targets are used by traders to express views on immediate price moves, often driven by order-flow, liquidity and real-time news. Markets for specific minute-long windows have become more common as exchanges and oracle systems can provide precise timestamped settlement based on exchange feeds or aggregated price indices. Because this particular market has a very short horizon, historical volatility and microstructure factors typically matter more than long-term fundamentals.
Market prices on the event page imply the crowd’s current expectation for the outcome and will update as new information arrives; they should be read as a market consensus, not a guarantee. For this event, odds are driven by the same inputs that move the underlying HYPE price on trading venues during the 15-minute window.
Settlement rules on the event page define whether the target is met (for example, price greater than or equal to the target) and specify the exchange or index used; check the event's settlement rule text to see the inequality and the price source.
The start time is determined by the market’s scheduled window as posted on the event page or by the platform at issuance; because this listing currently shows 'Closes: TBD', the precise window and start time will be published by the platform before trading begins.
The event’s settlement description specifies the reference feed or exchange(s) used; settlement commonly relies on a named exchange ticker or an aggregated index—verify that field on the event details to know the authoritative price source.
The platform’s dispute and fallback procedures apply; typical approaches include using an alternative feed, extending the observation window, or following a published outage policy—review the platform’s settlement and contingencies documentation for specifics.
Participants include liquidity providers and market makers who post orders, large traders or 'whales' who can move price with sizable orders, algorithmic high-frequency strategies that exploit microstructure, and any news actors who trigger rapid buying or selling during the window.