| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $629.22 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether BNB will reach the price level $629.22 during a specific 15-minute interval. Short-interval price targets matter to traders and arbitrageurs who trade on high-frequency moves and news-driven volatility.
BNB is the native token of the Binance ecosystem and its short-term price action is influenced by exchange flows, liquidity on major venues, and broader crypto market momentum. Fifteen-minute contracts are used to isolate very short-term moves and can be sensitive to order-book events, exchange microstructure, and scheduled announcements.
Market odds aggregate participants' views about whether the target will be attained in that 15-minute window, reflecting expectations about volatility, liquidity and upcoming events; consult the contract rules to understand settlement mechanics and data sources.
It refers to a specific 15-minute time window during which the contract checks whether BNB reaches the $629.22 target. The contract page will specify the exact start and end timestamps for that window; always confirm those timestamps before trading.
Closing time (TBD) is determined by the contract and is typically set before the start of the observed 15-minute interval; consult the market’s contract page for the definitive close time and any last-trade cutoff.
Settlement depends on the data source specified in the contract (for example a particular exchange spot price or an aggregated feed). Check the contract rules to see the exact feed, timestamping method, and any aggregation or rounding conventions used.
The contract defines what counts as a hit (typically a trade or reported price at or above the target during the interval). Read the settlement definition on the contract page to know whether a momentary trade, quote, or midpoint qualifies.
Contracts include fallback and dispute-resolution procedures for outages or anomalous data; those rules (listed on the contract page) describe alternative feeds, manual adjudication, or voiding procedures that the platform will follow.