| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $39.1596 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the crypto asset labeled 'HYPE' will meet the specified $39.1596 price target during a 15-minute measurement interval. It matters because very short-timeframe price moves can create trading opportunities and test liquidity and price-feed mechanics for that asset.
Short, time-limited crypto prediction markets focus on intraday microstructure rather than long-term fundamentals. Outcomes for a 15-minute target are driven by order-book dynamics, exchange-specific reporting and rapid news or social-media-driven flows rather than macroeconomic trends. The contract will resolve based on the defined reference price source and timestamp conventions in the event terms.
Market odds on this contract reflect the market’s aggregated expectation that the price condition will be met during the 15-minute window and update as new information or trading interest arrives. Traders should interpret odds as a dynamic signal that can change quickly around news events, liquidity shifts, or during the defined measurement interval.
A successful outcome depends on the market’s resolution definition: typically it means the official reference price for HYPE reaches the specified dollar level at some point during the defined 15-minute measurement window, according to the contract’s chosen data source and resolution rules—check the event terms for the precise condition (e.g., 'at or above', 'equal to', or other wording).
The market will resolve based on the specific exchange(s) or aggregated price feed named in the event’s resolution rules; those details (exchange list, index method, or API endpoints) are published in the contract terms on the platform and should be consulted before trading.
The measurement window and market close time are defined in the event’s schedule; because the close is listed as TBD, traders must watch the platform for the official announcement of the start and end timestamps and any updates to settlement timing.
Even if a reference price briefly touches the target, tight fills depend on available depth; thin order books, wide spreads, and slippage can prevent executed trades at that price, and transient ticks caused by low-liquidity trades or reporting artifacts can affect whether the reference feed registers the level.
Zero reported volume indicates the market has seen no trading activity yet and may be thin or newly created; a single outcome suggests a binary-style event. Low activity can lead to volatile market prices and larger impact from new orders, so participants should account for potential execution risk and confirm settlement rules before placing sizable positions.