| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $647.64 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Binance Coin (BNB) will reach the $647.64 price level within a specified 15-minute interval. Short-window price-target markets are useful for testing immediate liquidity and the impact of news or large orders on price.
BNB is a major exchange token whose intraday moves can be large relative to conventional assets; minute-to-minute behavior is driven more by order flow and liquidity than by long-term fundamentals. Fifteen-minute targets focus attention on microstructure: exchange order books, whale trades, exchange-specific events, and any time-sensitive news can drive resolution.
Prediction market prices represent the collective views of participants and update as new information arrives; they are an evolving market-implied signal rather than a guaranteed forecast.
It means the contract resolves based on price action during one contiguous 15-minute interval specified by the market; the exact start time and resolution details are provided on the event page once scheduled.
Resolution follows the market's published rules: some markets rely on executed trade prints on a specified exchange or a consolidated index, while others may use quoted prices; check the event's resolution source on the KALSHI event page or resolution policy for this market.
The close and the precise 15-minute window are listed as TBD; the event page will be updated with the scheduled window and closing time when the market operator sets them.
Zero volume means no contracts have traded yet, so the market currently lacks revealed participant convictions and may be illiquid; prices and implied odds will become more informative only after trading or new orders appear.
Yes — in a short 15-minute interval a single large trade, coordinated activity, or an exchange outage can cause the price to touch or avoid the threshold; markets typically state how they handle erroneous prints or halted markets in their resolution rules, so review those provisions.