| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $626.55 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether BNB will hit the $626.55 price level during a specified 15‑minute interval. Short-window price targets matter because they capture intraday volatility and are used by traders for quick hedges or speculative bets.
BNB (Binance Coin) is a major exchange-native crypto asset whose price is sensitive to exchange activity, token utility updates, and broader crypto market moves. Fifteen‑minute targets are influenced more by orderflow, liquidity and microstructure than by long-term fundamentals. Because crypto markets operate 24/7, the exact timing and timestamp conventions matter for settlement.
Market odds are an aggregation of participant views and available orderflow about whether the price condition will occur in the specified 15‑minute window; they update as new information and trades arrive. Treat them as a real‑time belief indicator, not a certainty—execution, data feeds and liquidity can all affect the outcome.
A 'Yes' outcome depends on the contract's settlement rule: typically it requires the official price feed to meet or exceed the $626.55 threshold at some point within the specified 15‑minute interval. Always consult the market's rule text to see whether the condition is strict (>) or inclusive (≥) and which price metric is used.
The market rules specify the start and end timestamps and the time zone or clock used for settlement. The window may be anchored to a listed start time or triggered by an exchange timestamp; check the event page or rulebook to see the exact definition and timing convention (e.g., UTC).
The settlement data source is defined in the market's rules—common options include a single exchange's spot price, a consolidated feed, or a specific API endpoint. Review the contract details to confirm the named source and any fallback feeds.
Contingency procedures are typically outlined in the market rules and can include using a backup feed, an alternate time window, or administrative resolution. If you rely on this market, review those fallback provisions ahead of trading so you know how such incidents are handled.
Zero or low volume indicates thin liquidity: spreads may be wide, your orders can move the market, and quoted odds may not reflect deep consensus. Exercise caution—small markets can be more volatile and harder to exit, and prices may change quickly once trading picks up.