| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $647.36 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the price of Binance Coin (BNB) will meet or exceed a $647.36 target during a specific contiguous 15‑minute measurement window. Short-duration targets like this matter because they isolate very short-term price dynamics and liquidity events that broader price forecasts may miss.
BNB is the native token of the Binance ecosystem and is traded across spot and derivatives venues, where high leverage and concentrated order flow can create rapid moves. Markets with short measurement windows often reflect exchange microstructure, liquidity in the order book, and immediate reaction to news rather than longer-term fundamentals; consult the contract rules on KALSHI for the precise measurement and settlement definitions.
Market odds on this contract represent the aggregated judgment of traders about whether that 15‑minute condition will occur and can change quickly as order flow, news, or technical conditions evolve. Because this is a single short window, implied odds tend to be especially sensitive to immediate liquidity and event timing.
The contract uses a single contiguous 15‑minute interval defined in the event details; that interval is the only time during which prices are checked for the $647.36 threshold. Check the KALSHI contract page for the explicit start and end timestamps once they are posted.
The event settles against a predefined public price feed or exchange specified in the contract rules; the KALSHI event page lists the authoritative source and whether trades, quotes, or a published index are used for settlement.
Whether a single touch qualifies depends on the settlement convention in the contract (e.g., trade price vs. quote mid). Most short‑window contracts count any qualifying trade or tick defined in the rules; verify the exact tick‑level criteria on the event details before trading.
A zero volume figure and TBD close often indicate the contract is newly listed or that trading is not yet active; availability to trade depends on KALSHI’s market status—use the platform interface and contract page to confirm when orders can be placed and when the measurement window will be scheduled.
Contracts include contingency and dispute procedures for feed interruptions—possible outcomes include use of an alternate feed, adjusted timestamps, or specific remediation rules. Review the event’s settlement and dispute rules on KALSHI to understand how such scenarios would be handled.