| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $629.22 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the price of BNB will meet the $629.22 target within a defined 15-minute interval; it matters for traders who trade short-term crypto moves or hedge intraday exposure. The outcome captures a very short, high-frequency price event rather than a longer-term trend.
BNB (Binance Coin) is a major exchange token that can exhibit rapid intraday swings tied to exchange flows, listings, burns, and broader crypto market moves. A 15-minute target is driven by immediate order-book dynamics and newsflow; because the market closing time is listed as TBD, active monitoring of the event page and platform notices is needed for the precise timeline.
Prediction market odds on this event express the market consensus about whether BNB will reach the specified price within the stated 15-minute window; they update as new information, order flow, and news arrive.
A 'Yes' outcome occurs if BNB trades at or above $629.22 during the specific 15-minute interval defined for this market per the platform's settlement rules; check the event page for the precise settlement condition and any price rounding rules.
The market currently lists the close time as TBD; the platform will publish the exact start and end timestamps for the 15-minute window on the event page or in the event rules—monitor that page for updates.
Settlement uses the reference exchange or aggregated price feed specified in the event's official rules on the platform; if the event page does not name a source, the platform's general settlement policy governs which feed is used.
Rapid moves often stem from large single orders or liquidations, exchange-specific news (listings, outages), major announcements from Binance or partners, or sudden spillovers from sharp moves in Bitcoin and broader crypto markets.
Assess order-book depth and recent trade sizes on the reference exchange—shallow liquidity and wide spreads increase the chance that a single large trade can move price into the target, while deep liquidity and tight spreads make short-lived price spikes less likely.