| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $627.85 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Binance Coin (BNB) will meet the $627.85 price target within a specified 15-minute measurement window. Short, price-target markets matter because they isolate intraday volatility and order-flow events rather than long-term fundamentals.
BNB is a major exchange-linked token whose price responds to Binance-specific activity (burns, product launches, exchange flows) as well as broader crypto market moves and macro news. Fifteen-minute windows focus attention on immediate liquidity, trade prints, and news-driven spikes that may not reflect longer-term trends.
Market odds reflect traders’ collective assessment about whether the target will be met during the stated 15-minute window and will change as new information arrives; treat them as a real-time sentiment signal, not a guarantee.
The market page will publish the official start timestamp and any inclusivity/exclusivity rules; the contiguous 15-minute window is defined by that timestamp and the platform's stated time standard—check the event details for the precise schedule.
Resolution follows the canonical price feed and methodology listed in the event details; that could be a single exchange's trade-price feed, an aggregated index, or a specified calculation (e.g., high within the window), so confirm the named source and method on the market page.
It depends on the resolution rule: markets that use trade prints or the high during the window will register brief spikes, whereas time-weighted averages or minute-bar-based rules may not—refer to the event's resolution methodology for the definitive answer.
'TBD' indicates the platform has not yet published the window's start time; trading conditions and the ability to place orders may change once the start time is set, so monitor the event page and official platform notices for scheduling updates.
Short windows amplify execution risk: watch order-book depth, potential slippage, cross-exchange price differences, derivative liquidation cascades, and fast news; use appropriate position sizing, execution limits, and have a clear plan for rapid market moves.