| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $630.43 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Binance Coin (BNB) will reach a specific price level ($630.43) within a single 15-minute interval. Short-duration targets like this matter to traders who focus on intraday volatility and execution risk.
BNB is a major exchange token whose price moves with broader crypto market sentiment, Binance-related news, and short-term order flow on spot derivatives markets. Fifteen-minute targets reflect very short-term dynamics driven by liquidity, algorithmic traders, and discrete news events rather than long-term fundamentals.
Market odds on this event summarize the collective view of traders about the chance that BNB will hit the target during the stated 15-minute window; they update as new information (price moves, announcements, liquidity shifts) arrives. Always consult the event's official settlement/source rules to interpret how price observations are taken during the window.
The 15-minute interval is the continuous 15-minute period specified by the event on the platform; the event rules or announcement will state the exact start time or the mechanism used to choose the interval. If the start time is not yet published, monitor the event page for the scheduled window.
Settlement uses the official price source named in the event's settlement rules (for example an exchange ticker or composite index). Check the event details on the platform to see the precise feed or index used to record prices during the window.
Whether a brief touch counts depends on the tick granularity and settlement definition in the event rules (e.g., whether any recorded trade or quote at or above the target qualifies). Review the settlement criteria for how instantaneous price observations are handled.
'Closes: TBD' means the market organizer has not set a final close/scheduled window yet; trading may be inactive or provisional until a close time is announced. Once the close/window is published, the event's settlement and trading timeline will follow the posted rules.
Look at minute-level price charts and historical 15-minute high/low ranges, intraday volatility measures, volume and order book snapshots during comparable sessions, and past instances when news or large trades produced rapid moves—these give context for how plausible a short-term spike is.