| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $38.9402 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the crypto asset labeled "HYPE" will hit a target price of $38.9402 within a 15‑minute observation window. Short, single‑outcome markets like this matter because they test ultra short‑term price moves and liquidity dynamics in crypto.
Short‑duration price targets are commonly used by traders and algos to express views on immediate volatility, liquidity events, or reactions to news. Because the window is only 15 minutes, forks, exchange microstructure, and order‑book depth often matter more than longer‑term fundamentals. The listing shows no traded volume so far and the market closes are listed as TBD, so timing and liquidity may change before opening and resolution rules should be reviewed.
Market odds summarize the price at which participants are willing to buy or sell exposure to this single outcome and move continuously as new information and orders arrive. Interpret them as a live consensus signal that can shift rapidly in a 15‑minute market rather than a fixed prediction.
It designates a single outcome that will be resolved based on whether the HYPE price meets the specified $38.9402 target within a defined 15‑minute observation window; check the market's official rules for the precise start/end timestamps and the price feed used for resolution.
The event currently lists closes as TBD, so the exact start and end times are not yet published; the market page or official event metadata will provide the start timestamp and cutoff once scheduled.
"Total Volume Traded: $0" means no recorded trades have occurred yet, which can imply thin liquidity and wider spreads; "Number of outcomes: 1" indicates a single binary condition (the target is met or not) rather than multiple payoff levels.
Resolution will follow the data feed and rules specified by the event operator (KALSHI); consult the event's resolution criteria to learn whether they use a specific exchange, an aggregated feed, or an oracle and what tie‑breaking or error procedures apply.
Key risks include rapid price moves, slippage from market orders, feed latency, and exchange halts. Strategies tend to emphasize tight position sizing, use of limit orders to control entry price, monitoring order‑book depth, and being prepared for quick exit or settlement once the 15‑minute window begins.