| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $642.72 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether BNB will hit a $642.72 price target within a specified 15‑minute window. Short‑interval price targets matter because they test immediate market liquidity and news‑driven moves rather than longer‑term trends.
BNB is the native token of the Binance ecosystem and is sensitive to exchange news, on‑chain flows, and macro crypto sentiment. Fifteen‑minute target markets are short‑duration contracts that resolve quickly and therefore react strongly to intraday volatility, exchange events, and concentrated order flow. This particular market currently shows no traded volume and has a closing/resolution window listed as TBD, so participants should confirm the official start/close times on the market page.
Market odds are a real‑time expression of traders’ collective expectations about whether the target will be met during the 15‑minute window; they update as new information arrives and as liquidity and order flow change. Odds are not guarantees—short windows can flip quickly due to news or large orders—so treat them as dynamic indicators rather than fixed forecasts.
Resolution depends on the market's published rules: generally the contract resolves 'yes' if the official resolution price feed records BNB at or beyond $642.72 at any point during the designated 15‑minute window. Check the market page for the precise feed and resolution criteria used by the platform.
This listing shows the close time as TBD, so the platform has not yet published the exact window. The 15‑minute period will be defined by the market’s start and end timestamps; consult the market page or platform announcements for the official schedule and any updates.
Different markets use different reference prices (a single exchange ticker, an aggregated index, or a specific data provider). The definitive answer is in the market's resolution rules—review those details to know which feed and timestamping method will be used.
Zero volume means there has been no liquidity or expression of trader views yet, which can lead to wide bid/ask spreads and larger price swings when orders do enter. Early traders may face higher transaction costs and greater sensitivity to single large orders.
Outages can freeze order books and create price discontinuities when trading resumes, potentially producing abrupt moves. Large derivative liquidations or margin calls can cascade through spot order books and cause rapid spikes or crashes within minutes, directly influencing whether a short‑window target is hit.