| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $639.45 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the Binance Coin (BNB) price will meet a $639.45 target within a specified 15-minute measurement window; it matters because short intraday windows amplify the influence of liquidity and order flow, making outcomes sensitive to fast-moving events.
BNB is a major exchange token with intraday volatility that responds to exchange activity, macro crypto news, and large trades; 15-minute targets capture very short-term price action rather than longer-term trends. Markets like this are typically settled against a defined price feed or exchange reference and can be impacted by feed selection, timestamping, and microstructure effects.
Market odds reflect collective expectations about the specific 15-minute outcome and should be read as a continuously updating measure of traders' beliefs; review the event's official settlement rules to understand precisely how the price will be measured.
It means the market resolves based on whether BNB's price meets the $639.45 threshold within a single 15-minute measurement period defined by the event; consult the market page for the precise settlement definition (e.g., which exchange, price type, and inclusion rules).
The start/end times are set by the market operator and will be shown on the event page when scheduled; those timestamps determine which trades or quotes fall into the measurement window for settlement.
TBD indicates the operator has not published the official timing yet, and $0 simply means no volume has been recorded so far; you should wait for the event schedule and liquidity to appear before placing time-sensitive trades.
Rapid large market orders, algorithmic trading spikes, exchange-specific order flow imbalances, or breaking news coinciding with the window are the primary drivers of short-window price moves.
Historical intraday volatility and past reactions to Binance announcements can provide context about typical price ranges and how quickly BNB moves, but short 15-minute windows are especially sensitive to one-off events and microstructure, so history is informative but not determinative.