| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $39.4790 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the crypto asset labeled HYPE will reach a price target of $39.4790 within a specified 15-minute window. It matters because short, fixed-duration targets can reveal market expectations about imminent price moves and event-driven volatility.
Short-duration price targets are commonly used in crypto prediction markets to capture real-time sentiment around news, listings, or technical breakouts. Crypto prices can move rapidly on low liquidity, exchange-specific order flow, or sudden fundamental announcements, so historical behavior of the underlying asset and current market depth are key context for this market. Note that the event currently shows no traded volume, so available liquidity and participant information are minimal.
Prediction market prices are an aggregate signal of traders’ beliefs and available liquidity; they change as new information arrives and as traders enter or exit positions. Treat market odds as a real-time indicator of perceived likelihood and not as a guarantee of outcome.
The precise definition of the 15-minute window (its start and end timestamps) is set by the market’s resolution rules and will be shown on the event page or in the platform’s documentation. In many markets the window is a contiguous 15-minute interval tied to a specific UTC timestamp or to the market operator’s trigger; check the event details for the authoritative start rule.
Resolution will use the designated reference price source named in the event’s rules—typically a specific exchange, an index, or an aggregator. The event page should list which feed is authoritative; if it’s not visible, consult the platform’s resolution policy or contact support for the official data source.
Whether a brief touch counts depends on the resolution rules: some markets resolve based on the quoted last trade or quote crossing at any time during the window, while others use aggregated ticks or a sampled price. The event’s resolution criteria specify whether instantaneous touches, midquotes, or trade prints are used.
Yes. Low liquidity makes it easier for single large orders, wash trades, or reporting anomalies to produce short-lived price moves that meet or fail the target. The market resolves to whatever the official data feed reports; that data may reflect such microstructure effects.
A 'TBD' close means the market operator has not yet published the final closing timestamp. When the close is set, the event page will be updated with the timing and the resolution methodology. After the window passes, settlement occurs per the platform’s rules using the designated price feed; payouts are made once the operator verifies and publishes the outcome.