| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $630.86 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Binance Coin (BNB) will hit the price target of $630.86 within a specified 15-minute interval, offering a way to trade very short-term price swings. It matters for traders who want exposure to intraday volatility or to hedge time-limited risks around specific events.
BNB is Binance’s native token and its price often reacts quickly to exchange-level developments (listings, delistings, infrastructure changes), network updates, and broader crypto market moves. Historically, BNB has produced sharp intraday moves around major Binance announcements, macro headlines, and large on-chain or exchange trades. A 15-minute target focuses attention on immediate liquidity and order-book dynamics rather than fundamentals that play out over days or weeks.
Market odds reflect the collective, real-time assessment of whether the target will be met during the event window and will move as new information arrives. Treat odds as a short-term market-implied view driven by order flow, news, and liquidity, not as a long-run valuation.
The exact start and end timestamps and timezone are defined in the event's official rules on the platform; traders should consult the contract details to see the precise 15-minute interval that will be used for settlement.
Resolution criteria (e.g., any trade at or above the target, a quoted mid-price, or a time-weighted average) are specified in the contract's settlement rules; check the event page to learn which type of price observation determines the outcome.
If the close or trading window is listed as TBD, the platform has not yet finalized timings; monitor the event page and official announcements for the posted start/close times and any pre-trade notices.
The contract's settlement/source section names the data provider(s) or exchange index used; common approaches include an aggregated spot index or a single exchange's trade data—always verify that detail on the event page.
Most platforms have fallback and dispute procedures (alternate data sources, extended windows, or cancellation policies); consult the event's dispute and force-majeure rules and any platform notices for the specific resolution approach.