| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $637.81 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This event asks whether Binance Coin (BNB) will meet the $637.81 price target during a specific 15‑minute window on KALSHI. Minute‑level targets matter for traders focused on short‑term liquidity, volatility events, and fine‑grained execution outcomes.
BNB is the native token of the Binance ecosystem and its price is influenced by exchange flows, token utility events (like burns), derivatives activity, and broader crypto market moves. Markets that settle on multi‑minute windows capture microstructure effects — sudden large orders, liquidations, and news releases can move price quickly over a 15‑minute span. This KALSHI market currently shows zero traded volume and a single outcome, and the stated closing time is TBD, so participants should monitor the platform for updates.
Market prices on KALSHI reflect the aggregate beliefs of traders about this specific 15‑minute outcome and will change as new information and trades arrive. Low traded volume can make quoted prices less robust, so interpret quotes with caution and check the event’s settlement rules for how the outcome is determined.
It denotes a condition tied to BNB price behavior within a defined 15‑minute period; the exact settlement rule (e.g., whether any trade at or above $637.81 suffices, or whether an index or midpoint is used) is specified on the event page and in KALSHI’s market rules — check that settlement definition before trading.
A specific close time will be posted by KALSHI once set; until then the market may remain open for orders but subject to change, so watch the event page and official announcements for the firm close time and any last‑minute schedule updates.
Zero volume indicates no executed trades yet, and a single outcome suggests a single condition to resolve; low activity can mean wide bid‑ask spreads and greater susceptibility to price swings from small orders, increasing execution and liquidation risk.
Settlement uses the data source and method defined on the market’s rules — often a specified exchange feed, index, or agreed timestamped trade feed — so consult the event’s settlement specification to see which venue and tick types KALSHI will use and how disputes are handled.
Large, timed market orders, concentrated high‑frequency trading, liquidations in derivatives books, and time‑coordinated news or Binance announcements can all drive short bursts of volatility that make the target more or less likely to be met within that narrow interval.