| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $629.09 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Binance Coin (BNB) will reach the $629.09 price level within a specified 15-minute observation window. It matters because short-window price-target markets highlight immediate liquidity, news sensitivity, and trader expectations for rapid moves in a major crypto asset.
BNB is a major exchange-linked cryptocurrency whose price frequently moves with broader crypto markets, Binance-specific news, and short-term order flow. Fifteen-minute targets are inherently high-frequency: they reflect intraday volatility and can be driven by single large trades, liquidation cascades, or sudden announcements. Because the event closes are listed as TBD, timing and resolution mechanics should be checked on the platform before trading.
Odds in this context represent the aggregated views and willingness of traders to take positions and will move as fresh information arrives. Use them as a dynamic indicator of market sentiment and not as a fixed forecast.
The event resolves as successful if the official price feed used by the market reaches the specified $629.09 level at least once within the designated 15-minute observation window; the event’s page and resolution rules define whether equality counts and which price source is authoritative.
The platform defines the start and end times for the 15-minute window on the event page; it is typically a continuous interval tied to a timestamped price feed, so check the event details for the precise start time and any timezone or timestamp conventions.
The market uses the resolution source specified in the event rules on the platform (for example, a specific exchange ticker, consolidated index, or KALSHI-specified feed); consult the event’s resolution section to see the authoritative data source.
Contingency procedures are set out in the event’s resolution rules—common outcomes include using the last available reliable price, extending or pausing the window, or following a predefined error-handling protocol—so review the event’s stated dispute and force-majeure policies on the platform.
Short windows are dominated by microstructure effects: low liquidity can amplify single large orders, algorithmic traders can create rapid reversals, and sudden news or liquidations can produce spikes that would be unlikely over longer horizons, all of which increase unpredictability for a 15-minute target.