| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $633.04 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Binance Coin (BNB) will reach the price level $633.04 during a specified 15-minute measurement window. Short-duration price-target markets matter because they isolate minute-scale volatility and let traders express views on immediate order-flow and liquidity events.
BNB is the native token of the Binance ecosystem and its price is influenced by exchange activity, liquidity on centralized venues, broader crypto market moves (especially BTC), and news tied to Binance or regulatory developments. Fifteen-minute target markets are sensitive to microstructure — order-book depth, large blocks or liquidation cascades, and exchange-specific price feeds can determine whether a short-lived price touch occurs.
Market prices on this type of market reflect the aggregated expectations of traders about whether the target will be met in the named 15-minute window; because the window is short, odds can move quickly as new trades, news, or liquidity events occur.
It means the market is defined around whether BNB reaches the price level $633.04 within a specific 15-minute measurement window; consult the event details to see the exact settlement definition (e.g., whether a single trade at or above the target, a quoted price, or a time-weighted average is used).
The event page should list the precise start time and time zone (often UTC) used to define the 15-minute window; if the start is not listed or is marked TBD, the market description or settlement rules will state how the timing will be set.
The event’s settlement source field names the exchange or price feed used; always check that field on the event page because different sources (e.g., Binance spot vs. an aggregated feed) can produce different tick behavior during short windows.
That depends on the market’s settlement rule: some markets count any trade at or above the target during the window, while others use quote snapshots or averages; read the event’s settlement criteria to know whether a single brief trade qualifies.
Settlement is published on the event page after the measurement window and any verification period defined by the platform; check the market’s rules for expected settlement timing and where official results and the data source timestamps will be posted.