| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $637.17 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether BNB will meet the specified $637.17 price condition within a 15-minute interval; it matters because short intraday price targets test liquidity and immediate market reaction to news. Traders use these markets to express views on near-term price action and to hedge short-window exposure.
BNB is a major exchange-linked cryptocurrency whose price can move quickly on exchange order flow, macro crypto moves, and Binance-specific developments. Short-interval targets reflect intraday volatility rather than longer-term fundamentals, so outcomes often hinge on transient liquidity, large orders, and news headlines. KALSHI-hosted markets typically resolve according to a published settlement methodology tied to time-stamped exchange or index data.
Market odds reflect the collective assessment of participants about whether the target condition will be met during the specified 15-minute window; interpret odds as a relative measure of confidence, not a guaranteed prediction. Always check the market description and KALSHI's settlement rules to understand precisely what price feeds and time conventions are used.
It denotes a condition tied to BNB price behavior over a defined 15-minute interval; settlement depends on whether the market's specified price condition is met during that interval. The event page and KALSHI's rulebook explain whether settlement looks at trade ticks, midpoint, or an exchange/index price for that interval.
Start and end times are defined by the market’s settlement specification on KALSHI; some markets use fixed clock-aligned intervals while others use a window anchored to a stated timestamp. Check the market details to confirm the exact time convention and timezone used.
KALSHI typically specifies the reference feed or exchange(s) for settlement on the event page; if unspecified, the platform’s rulebook describes fallback and reference-data procedures. Consult the market description for the definitive source.
Resolution follows KALSHI's contingency and arbitration policies: they may use backup feeds, delayed data, or administrative resolution if primary data are unavailable. The event rules outline these procedures and any thresholds for accepting delayed or substitute data.
High-frequency traders, large single orders (whales), liquidity providers, and rapid news-driven flows are the main drivers for a 15-minute target; coordinated or concentrated order flow at a specific price level can push the market through such a short-term threshold.