| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $629.55 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether BNB will hit the price target of $629.55 within a specified 15-minute interval. Short-window targets matter because they capture expectations about immediate volatility and can be used to hedge or speculate on rapid moves.
BNB is Binance's native token and trades across spot and derivative venues; its price can move quickly on exchange-specific prints, liquidity shifts, or news. Fifteen-minute markets focus attention on transient drivers—order flow, scheduled announcements, technical breakouts, or sudden macro moves—rather than long-term fundamentals.
Market odds reflect the traded consensus about the chance the target is reached during the 15-minute window and will update as new information arrives. Use them as a market-implied view rather than a guarantee, and account for liquidity, fees, and resolution rules when trading.
A 'Yes' outcome occurs if the official price feed or settlement source specified by the market reports BNB at or above $629.55 at any time during the defined 15-minute interval; resolution follows the event's published settlement rules and data source.
The market will specify the exact 15-minute window and close time on the platform; 'TBD' means the closing interval is not yet published, so check the event page or platform notices for the announced start and close times before trading.
The market will name an official data feed or exchange index in its resolution details; consult the event description or settlement rules to see which exchange(s) or aggregator will be used and whether they use last trade, mid-price, or an aggregated index.
Transient spikes, reporting errors, or wash trades can produce prints that meet the threshold; many platforms have explicit rules about handling erroneous prints or using aggregated prices to reduce manipulation risk, so review the market's dispute and data-cleaning policies.
Zero traded volume so far means there has been no prior activity and liquidity may be low; that can widen spreads and increase price impact on orders, so gauge available counterparties and order-book depth before placing significant trades.