| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $629.91 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Binance Coin (BNB) will reach the $629.91 price level within a specified 15‑minute measurement window. Short‑duration price targets matter because they test immediate liquidity, order flow, and short‑term volatility rather than long‑term fundamentals.
BNB is the native token of the Binance ecosystem and its price reacts to exchange activity, broader crypto market moves (especially Bitcoin), and Binance‑specific news or policy changes. Fifteen‑minute target markets emphasize minute‑level events such as large trades, liquidations, exchange outages, or sudden news releases that can move price quickly.
Odds in this market represent the consensus view of traders about whether BNB will hit the stated level during the 15‑minute window; they incorporate available information, perceived short‑term risk, and liquidity conditions rather than long‑term valuation.
The platform will use a specific 15‑minute time interval defined on the event details page; settlement is based on the price feed and timestamp specified there. Consult the event page to see the exact start and end timestamps and which exchange or index is used for pricing.
Typically, a brief touch that meets or exceeds the target during the official measurement window is sufficient for a 'Yes' outcome, but the event’s settlement rules (such as whether the price must close above the level or just touch it) determine the final result—check the event rules for the precise condition.
Settlement usually relies on the specific price feed or exchange list named on the event page (an aggregated index or one or more exchanges). The event details will state which sources are authoritative for this market.
Low trading volume on the market can mean wider spreads and greater slippage when placing orders; it also makes market odds more sensitive to individual trades, so monitoring order book depth and recent fills is important before trading.
Platforms typically have contingency settlement rules—such as using backup feeds, pausing settlement, or applying fallback procedures—specified in the event terms; check those terms to understand how disruptions are handled for this market.