| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $637.83 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Binance Coin (BNB) will reach the price target of $637.83 within a specific 15-minute measurement window. Short-interval targets like this matter because they focus on rapid price moves and intraday volatility that can be driven by news, order flow, or exchange events.
BNB is Binance's native token and typically moves with overall crypto market sentiment, large exchange flows, and platform-specific developments such as token burns or product launches. Short time-frame markets emphasize minute-to-minute liquidity and orderbook dynamics rather than longer-term fundamentals. Settlement and resolution depend on the data source and measurement rules specified by the market operator.
Prediction market prices aggregate participant views about whether the specified event will occur at resolution; they update as new information arrives but are not guarantees. For this event, consult the market's rules on KALSHI to understand the exact settlement definition and data feed used.
The event resolves according to the market's stated 15-minute measurement definition — typically a price at a specified timestamp or an average across a 15-minute interval from the designated data source. Check the event's resolution rules on KALSHI for the exact specification.
KALSHI lists the official price source and any fallback feeds in the market's resolution rules; consult the market page to see which exchange or aggregated feed will be used.
'TBD' indicates the closing/measurement time has not been announced yet. The market will provide an updated schedule before the measurement window; follow the market page for timing alerts.
Zero trading volume only reflects current liquidity on the prediction market and may mean wider spreads and less informative market prices. It does not change the settlement criteria, which remain governed by the event's resolution rules.
Most markets include contingency procedures—such as using alternate feeds, applying data-cleaning rules, or postponing resolution—if the primary source fails. Refer to the market's resolution policy on KALSHI for the specific protocol applicable to this event.