| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $632.58 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Binance Coin (BNB) will reach a price target of $632.58 during a specific 15-minute interval. It matters because short, time-limited targets highlight intraday volatility and give traders a way to express views on immediate price moves.
This event is listed on Kalshi and currently shows no traded volume and a single outcome; the close time is listed as TBD, so the exact settlement window will be defined in the contract details. BNB is the native token of the Binance ecosystem and has historically shown strong intraday swings driven by crypto market momentum, exchange-specific news, token supply events, and macro risk sentiment.
Market prices/odds here represent the crowd’s aggregated expectation that BNB will hit the $632.58 level within the specified 15-minute window; they will move as new information (price moves, news, order flow) arrives. Always read the contract’s resolution rules to know what the quoted market price reflects.
The contract’s settlement details on Kalshi specify the exact timestamp and timezone that define the 15-minute window; check the market page or contract text for the authoritative start and end times and any rules about when the window may be triggered.
The market’s resolution protocol will list the official data source(s) (for example a named exchange or a consolidated price feed); only prices from those specified sources count for settlement, so review the resolution clause on the event page.
The market currently shows 'TBD' for closing; Kalshi will update the market with the closure/settlement schedule—subscribe to the market or check the event page regularly and review platform notifications for the announced window.
Short-window price-target markets tend to be very sensitive to intraday volatility: they can swing quickly as news or large orders arrive and frequently price in the risk of flash spikes; for specifics, review historical trades and settlement outcomes on comparable prior markets to gauge typical behavior.
Whether a single trade or brief print counts depends on the contract’s resolution rules and the data source; some contracts accept any official trade print at or above the threshold on the specified feed, while others use averaged prices or have safeguards against erroneous prints—consult the event’s resolution policy to know how flash spikes are treated.