| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $40.1583 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the instrument labeled “HYPE” will hit the price target of $40.1583 within a 15‑minute observation window. Short, targeted markets like this matter because they isolate high‑frequency price moves and test market microstructure, liquidity and information flow.
The underlying asset titled HYPE is treated as the reference for a narrowly timed price event; such markets are common in crypto prediction platforms where very short timeframes magnify the role of order flow, exchange price feeds and latency. History in crypto shows that sub‑hour windows can be dominated by single large orders, exchange listing/ delisting actions, or rapid sentiment shifts driven by social media or news, any of which can produce sharp moves within 15 minutes.
Market odds on this contract summarize the aggregate view of traders about whether the $40.1583 threshold will be reached in the specified 15‑minute interval; because the window is short, quoted prices can change quickly and reflect liquidity and information available up to the market’s close or resolution point.
It indicates the event resolves based on whether HYPE reaches the $40.1583 threshold during a contiguous 15‑minute observation window. The precise start and end timestamps and how they are published will be determined by the market listing and the platform’s resolution rules.
Resolution uses the data source specified by the market (check the event’s resolution clause on the platform). That clause will state the reference exchange(s) and whether the market uses last trade, best bid/ask, a time‑weighted average, or another methodology.
“TBD” means the market has not yet published a final trading close time; traders should watch the event page for an announced start/close and any pre‑trade disclosures, since timings determine when the 15‑minute observation window will occur and when positions can be entered or exited.
Zero volume means no trades have executed yet on this contract. Low or no volume implies limited liquidity, potentially large spreads, and that displayed market prices (if any) may be indicative rather than firm until traders add liquidity.
Short windows are most sensitive to immediate triggers: a single large market order or block trade, an exchange listing or suspension notice, a sudden surge of coordinated buying/selling prompted by social media, or a broader market cascade; automated trading bots and market‑maker inventory adjustments can also create rapid moves.