| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $629.63 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether BNB will meet the $629.63 price target within a defined 15‑minute window; it matters because short intraday price targets isolate short‑term volatility and event risk for traders and hedgers.
BNB is the native token of Binance's ecosystem and is commonly traded on centralized exchanges and derivatives venues; its price can move quickly on exchange order flow, listings, and broader crypto market swings. Short intraday windows like 15 minutes emphasize execution timing and can be influenced by single large orders, news flashes, or moments of low liquidity.
Market odds on the event page represent the collective trading view about whether the $629.63 target will be met during that 15‑minute interval and will update as new information arrives; interpret movements as shifts in market sentiment and available liquidity rather than precise forecasts of underlying fundamentals.
It asks whether BNB's reported price will meet the event's $629.63 target at any point (or by the defined rule) during a specific 15‑minute window; check the event page for the precise settlement condition (e.g., trade price vs. mid‑market) used to determine outcome.
The 15‑minute window is a consecutive time interval defined by the event's start and end timestamps shown on the event page; because this particular listing shows 'Closes: TBD', the exact scheduled window and timestamps will be posted on the platform before trading begins.
The event's settlement source (a specific exchange or aggregated feed) is specified in the event rules on the platform; always confirm that source and any fallback or arbitration procedures listed for cases of inconsistent or missing data.
Platforms typically have contingency rules—using alternate feeds, applying delayed data, or invoking arbitration—to determine settlement; consult the event's official rules for the exact resolution process and any stated precedence of data sources.
Key risks include execution and slippage risk, sudden news causing rapid reversals, market‑data latency, and platform‑specific settlement definitions; the short timeframe increases the role of randomness and single large orders versus longer-term fundamentals.