| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $644.16 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether BNB will trade at or above $644.16 within a specific 15-minute window — a short-duration, high-resolution price event that matters for traders monitoring intraday volatility and sudden price moves.
BNB (Binance Coin) is a major exchange token whose price can move quickly in response to exchange-level news, large orders, and broader crypto market swings. Short-window markets like this capture whether a rapid spike or dip occurs, and they are often resolved using an official price feed or index specified by the market operator.
Market odds reflect the consensus view of participants about whether that specific 15-minute price condition will be met; they do not predict long-term value but indicate how traders price the chance of a short, discrete price event given available information.
The outcome is met if the market's designated reference price shows BNB trading at or above $644.16 at any time during the specified 15-minute settlement window; consult the event rules for the precise tie-break and timestamp conventions used for settlement.
The platform defines the 15-minute window in the event terms or once the market schedule is set; because this market currently lists its closing time as TBD, the exact start and end times will be published by the market operator prior to resolution.
Resolution relies on the platform's specified reference price or index for BNB; check the event's official rules for the named data source and any aggregation method or exchange list used for settlement.
That depends on the market's data-handling rules: some settlement feeds filter out obvious outliers or require quotes from multiple venues, while others use real-time trade prints; review the event's adjudication and data-cleaning procedures to understand how anomalies are treated.
Rapid price spikes are typically driven by exchange-specific announcements, large institutional or whale buy orders, concentrated liquidation events in derivatives markets, major listings or partnerships, or sudden macro/crypto-wide news that triggers heavy short-term buying.