| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $627.97 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether BNB will hit the $627.97 price target within a specified 15‑minute window; short‑window targets matter for traders seeking to hedge or speculate on rapid price moves. It matters because minute‑scale price action can produce fast gains or losses and reflects immediate market sentiment.
BNB is Binance's native token and is sensitive to exchange‑specific developments, large orders, and broader crypto market moves. Fifteen‑minute windows are a very short horizon where order‑book dynamics, news shocks, or technical events (exchange outages, large withdrawals) tend to dominate price outcomes. Historical minute‑level BNB moves have often been driven by a small number of large trades or sudden shifts in liquidity rather than gradual macro trends.
Prediction market odds on this event reflect the collective expectations of traders and will update as new information arrives; treat them as a dynamic market signal rather than a guarantee. Changes in odds can indicate how new news or order flow has altered the perceived likelihood of the target being reached.
It denotes a specific 15‑minute interval during which the event will check whether BNB trades at or above the stated target (or meets the event's precise condition); the event page on KALSHI will specify the exact start and end timestamps that define that window.
Resolution follows the data source and rules listed in the event description on KALSHI—typically a specified exchange feed or consolidated price and a precise timestamp/rounding convention—so consult the event's resolution criteria for the authoritative method.
The closing time is set by the event listing (currently listed as TBD) and will be published on the platform; any changes or updates will be posted by KALSHI, and trading generally stops before the defined resolution window starts.
Zero reported volume means there have been no trades so far; that implies limited liquidity, potentially wide spreads, and a higher execution cost or market impact if you place an order now.
Most likely causes are one or more large market orders, sudden Binance‑related news or operational issues, abrupt moves in major crypto assets like BTC, or rapid liquidity withdrawals from the order book that create a temporary price gap.