| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $39.0074 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the crypto asset HYPE will reach the $39.0074 price target during a specific 15-minute measurement window. Short-duration, single-target markets matter because they isolate immediate price risk and let traders express views on rapid moves or execution outcomes.
HYPE is traded on crypto venues where prices can swing quickly; 15-minute markets capture the effect of order flow, liquidity and intraday news rather than longer-term fundamentals. These events depend heavily on the chosen reference price feed and settlement rules, and are particularly sensitive for lower-liquidity tokens and periods of elevated market volatility.
Market odds reflect the collective market view about whether the target will be met during the 15-minute window; they update in real time to incorporate new trades, news, and changing liquidity conditions.
It refers to the specific 15-minute measurement period used to determine whether HYPE meets the $39.0074 threshold; the authoritative start and end times and how that window is defined will be stated in the event's resolution terms on the platform.
Resolution uses the reference price source specified in the event rules (for example a particular exchange ticker or an aggregated feed); consult the event's official description for the exact data source and sampling method.
Most target events resolve based on whether the price meets or exceeds the stated level during the measurement window, but the event's resolution language defines whether a touch, close, or median price qualifies—check the platform's resolution criteria.
A $0 traded volume means no contracts have been bought or sold in this market yet; low volume implies wider spreads and greater price impact for any trade, making the market more sensitive to individual orders and less indicative of broad consensus.
Platforms typically have contingency resolution rules for halted markets or data feed failures—these may use the last available price, an alternate feed, or an adjudication process; the event's official terms describe the applicable fallback procedures.