| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $623.56 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether BNB will reach the price level $623.56 within a specific 15-minute observation window. Short-interval targets matter to traders who want to hedge or speculate on rapid, intraday price moves in BNB.
BNB is the native token of the Binance ecosystem and often moves quickly around exchange events, token burns, listings, and regulatory news. Fifteen-minute resolution markets capture very short-term volatility and are sensitive to order-book dynamics and low-latency flows. Because the window is short, outcomes can hinge on transient spikes that would not persist over longer intervals.
Market odds express the collective trading view about whether the $623.56 level will be reached during the specified 15-minute interval; they update as new information and trades arrive. Use the odds alongside your own analysis of liquidity, timing, and news flow rather than as a fixed forecast.
Resolution depends on whether the event’s official price source records BNB reaching or crossing $623.56 at any time during the platform-specified 15-minute observation window; consult the event rules for the precise resolution criteria (e.g., trade price vs. mid-price and which exchanges feed the data).
The platform will publish the exact start and end timestamps for the 15-minute window on the event page or in the event rules; if the page shows 'TBD' for closure, monitor the event page or platform announcements for the scheduled resolution time.
The event’s resolution source should be listed in the event details; it may reference a specific exchange, an index aggregator, or a combination—always check the event metadata to know which feed governs the outcome.
Announcements and burns can trigger sudden buying or selling pressure and sharp intraday moves; because the market has only a 15-minute window, the timing of such news relative to that window is critical—even short-lived reactions can determine the outcome.
Short windows are more sensitive to liquidity: thin order books make it easier for large orders to move price briefly, creating spikes that trigger the target; factor in typical exchange depth, recent volume patterns, and the potential for slippage or temporary gaps when evaluating the event.