| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $39.0684 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the crypto asset labeled "HYPE" will hit a price target of $39.0684 during a specified 15-minute measurement window; outcomes test short-term liquidity and execution risk, making the market informative about intraday sentiment and volatility.
Fifteen-minute price-target markets are a form of short-duration event market that settle against exchange-referenced prices or an index over a compact interval. Historically, similar micro-duration crypto markets have been driven by sparse liquidity, exchange microstructure, and automated trading, which can produce abrupt, hard-to-predict outcomes.
Prediction market odds here summarize the crowd's current view on whether that 15-minute price event will occur; interpret odds as a live consensus signal and a reflection of perceived execution and liquidity risk rather than a deterministic forecast.
The official start and end times are defined by the market listing on the platform; check the market details for the exact timestamp and timezone. If the market page shows "TBD" for close, monitor the listing for an announced measurement window or official settlement schedule.
Settlement depends on the market's reference price methodology (e.g., last trade, aggregated feed, or VWAP). In many cases a single qualifying trade in the referenced feed can satisfy the condition, but always confirm the platform's settlement rules for this specific market.
Zero traded volume means no transactions have occurred in this market yet; that can indicate low interest and potentially wide bid-ask spreads or limited counterparties, so be prepared for execution risk and check the order book before trading.
Price moves in a narrow window are usually driven by large single orders from big holders, exchange flow (listings or outages), high-frequency/algorithmic traders, or rapidly spreading news and coordinated social activity that concentrates orders in a short interval.
Platforms typically have contingency and settlement rules for delisting or feed failures—options include using alternate reference feeds, relying on the last available reliable price, pausing settlement, or invoking an exception process. Consult the platform's official rulebook or market-specific notice for this market's protocol.