| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bangladesh | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Pakistan | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which team will win the Bangladesh vs Pakistan match and aggregates trader expectations about the single-match outcome. It matters because market prices respond quickly to news about squads, conditions, and other match-day developments.
Bangladesh and Pakistan have an evolving competitive history: Pakistan has traditionally been strong across formats while Bangladesh has improved markedly over the last decade and often poses tough challenges at home. The match context — format (T20/ODI/Test), whether it is a bilateral series or tournament fixture, and venue — strongly shapes which team is favored on any given day.
Market prices should be read as the collective view of participants at a moment in time rather than a guarantee; they move as new information (team announcements, injuries, weather, pitch reports) becomes available. Use market movement as a signal to supplement, not replace, your own assessment of match factors.
This binary market trades the two match outcomes: Bangladesh wins and Pakistan wins. Other scenarios such as ties, draws, or an abandoned match are handled according to the platform’s settlement rules.
The listed close time is TBD; typically such markets close at or shortly before the scheduled match start or when play begins, but check the market for the final close time and any last-minute updates.
Settlement follows the official match result as determined by the governing body and the event’s rules—if tie-breaking procedures (e.g., super over) are used, the official final winner will determine settlement; abandoned or no-result matches are resolved per the platform’s stated rules.
Announcements affecting key contributors—captain, top three batters, strike bowlers or specialist spinners suited to the venue, and any surprise omissions—are most likely to move the market because they materially change expected team strength.
Toss, pitch, and weather information can shift perceived advantages (e.g., a damp pitch favoring seamers or a dry, turning surface favoring spinners); rapid market moves after such news reflect how participants reweight those factors against pre-match expectations.