| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $629.45 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether BNB will reach the specified $629.45 price level during a defined 15‑minute window. It matters because short intraday targets test very short‑term liquidity and order‑flow dynamics for a major exchange token.
BNB is the native token of the Binance ecosystem and is frequently subject to rapid intraday moves driven by exchange order flow, product releases, and macro crypto news. Fifteen‑minute target markets focus attention on transient price events rather than longer‑term trends, and they often react strongly to single large trades, derivatives activity, or time‑limited announcements.
Prediction market quotes on this event aggregate traders' views about whether that brief price move will occur and will update as new information arrives; because the window is short, odds can shift quickly in response to real‑time order‑book changes and news.
Settlement will follow Kalshi's official event rules: the designated price feed during the defined 15‑minute window is checked against the $629.45 threshold and the market is resolved according to whether that recorded price condition is met.
The precise start and end timestamps will be published on the event page or in the market's rule set before the window opens; until Kalshi posts those times the market's trading mechanics remain based on the announced schedule once available.
The event's official rule text specifies the price source(s) used for settlement (for example a consolidated feed or a primary exchange); consult the event page or resolution rules to see the exact feed that applies to this market.
Large single trades or block orders, sudden news about Binance or BNB, concentrated derivatives activity causing forced liquidations, and exchange outages or maintenance windows are examples of events that can produce rapid 15‑minute price moves.
Kalshi's contingency and dispute procedures, described in the market rules, govern such situations; they typically specify fallback feeds, aggregation rules, or resolution postponement—refer to the event's official rules for the exact process.