| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $610.81 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Binance Coin (BNB) will reach the price target of $610.81 within the 15-minute observation interval defined by the contract. It matters to traders who want to express short-term directional or volatility views on BNB around specific events or market conditions.
BNB is a large-cap cryptocurrency whose price is influenced by liquidity on major exchanges, Binance ecosystem developments, and overall crypto market sentiment. Short intraday windows like 15 minutes emphasize microstructure drivers — order flow, large trades (whales), news headlines, and technical chart levels — rather than long-term fundamentals. Because the event is time-limited, transient moves (flash rallies or flash crashes) can determine outcomes.
Market pricing on this platform represents the paid-in market view of whether the specified price condition will be met during the observation window; it changes as new information arrives. Traders should interpret the contract price as a tradable claim on the event, not a guaranteed prediction.
Success is determined by whether the contract's designated price source records BNB meeting or exceeding $610.81 within the observation period specified by the event. The exact definition (e.g., whether a single trade, last-tick, or aggregated index level counts) is set in the event's settlement rules on the platform.
The start and end times for the 15-minute window are specified on the event page or in the contract details. Because the event currently lists a TBD close, you should check the platform for the scheduled observation timestamps before trading.
Settlement uses the price feed or index explicitly named in the event contract (platform-specified aggregation or a particular exchange). Review the event’s settlement methodology to identify the source and any exchange weighting or filtering rules.
Whether a very short-lived print counts depends on the event's settlement definition — some contracts accept any trade included in the official feed, while others use time- or volume-weighted measures. Consult the event page for the exact treatment of fleeting prints.
The platform’s force‑majeure and data-quality rules govern exceptional situations. Typical measures include using an alternate feed, pausing settlement, or applying an index that filters anomalies; check the event’s terms for the operator’s stated procedures.