| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $624.42 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Binance Coin (BNB) will reach the $624.42 price target during a specified 15‑minute interval; it matters to traders who want to express or hedge views on very short‑term price moves and microstructure events.
BNB is the native token of the Binance ecosystem and can show rapid intraday moves driven by exchange flows, listings, or headline news. A 15‑minute target focuses on transient price behavior—spikes or squeezes—that may not reflect broader trend changes. The market's scheduled interval and resolution rules are listed on the event page; because the close is currently TBD, participants should monitor the market for the official timing and data source.
Market prices on this event represent the collective market view about whether that specific 15‑minute outcome will occur and can change quickly as new microstructure information arrives. Treat the quoted price as a short‑term consensus signal, not a long‑term valuation.
The event page lists the precise start and end timestamps (including timezone) that define the contiguous 15‑minute window; because this market currently shows its close as TBD, the official interval will be posted on the market page when scheduled.
The market's designated resolution source is specified on the event page; platforms commonly use a single exchange, an aggregated index, or a named data provider—consult the event details for the exact feed and any tie‑breaking rules.
Resolution criteria such as whether equality counts (≥ vs >) are defined in the market rules on the event page—check those rules to know whether an exact match or exceeding the target is required.
The platform's contingency procedures apply: common outcomes include using the nearest available data, switching to an alternate feed, or applying specified fallback/resolution rules; the event page and platform terms describe the exact process.
They can have decisive impact: a large market order or forced liquidation can generate a brief spike or dip that causes the target to be hit or missed, and exchange halts or throttling can prevent normal price discovery—traders should account for this heightened short‑term sensitivity.