| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $631.85 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether BNB will hit the price target of $631.85 during a specified 15-minute interval; it matters because short-interval targets test intra-minute liquidity and order-flow dynamics and are used for rapid hedging or speculative bets.
BNB is Binance's native token and can move quickly around exchange-specific events, large orders, and broader crypto market swings. Fifteen-minute markets are particularly sensitive to microstructure factors (order book depth, exchange outages, algorithmic trading) rather than longer-term fundamentals. Because closes and settlement details are platform-defined, traders should check the market page for the authoritative timing and data source.
Market odds here represent the collective price at which traders are willing to buy or sell exposure to the event and will change as new information arrives; treat them as an evolving consensus signal, not a deterministic prediction.
Settlement will follow the platform's market rules: the designated price feed (a specific exchange trade feed or an aggregated index) during the 15-minute window will be used to check whether the target price was reached; consult the market's detailed rules page for the exact data source and measurement method.
Closes listed as TBD means the platform has not yet published the scheduled start time; once the platform sets the event timing the market page will show the precise start and end timestamps for the 15-minute interval.
Total volume of zero simply means no one has placed trades on the contract yet; 'Number of outcomes: 1' indicates the market resolves on the single specified event (whether the target is hit or not) — check the contract payout rules to confirm whether it is structured as a binary/yes-no or other payoff.
Large traders placing market orders, sudden exchange-level events on Binance (outages, maintenance, listings), coordinated algorithmic trading, and abrupt moves in major crypto benchmarks like Bitcoin are typical catalysts for minute-scale price moves.
Platforms have contingency and dispute-resolution rules: they may switch to a backup feed, use an alternative aggregated source, or follow a predefined fallback procedure — review the market's settlement and dispute policy for how such scenarios are handled and the expected timeline for resolution.