| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $649.75 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Binance Coin (BNB) will reach the price target of $649.75 within a specified 15-minute interval. It matters because it isolates an ultra-short-term price move, useful for traders hedging or speculating on high-frequency volatility around specific events.
BNB is the native token tied to the Binance ecosystem and its price is sensitive to exchange activity, token utility changes, and network developments. Short time-window markets like this have grown in popularity as they let participants take directional bets on momentary price spikes or drops without exposure beyond the window. Resolution mechanics and the reference price source are set by the market operator and can materially affect outcomes.
Market odds reflect the collective expectation of whether that specific 15-minute target will be met and can change rapidly as order flow, news, or price ticks occur; for very short horizons, odds tend to be particularly sensitive to immediate liquidity and recent trades.
The market resolves Yes if the reference price meets the event's specified condition — i.e., BNB reaches the stated target within the market's defined 15-minute interval — according to the market operator's published settlement rules; consult the event page for the precise resolution criteria and reference feed.
The start and definition of the 15-minute window depend on the market's wording and settlement rules: it may be a scheduled clocked interval or a rolling check; check the event description and official rules to see whether the window is fixed, rolling, or tied to a particular timestamp.
This event uses the reference exchange or aggregate price feed named in the event's settlement terms; the event page lists which venue(s) or data provider will be used to determine whether the price target was reached.
Contingency rules vary by market operator: common outcomes include using the last available price, extending or voiding the market, or applying a predefined fallback feed — review the operator's halt and force-majeure policy on the event page to understand how suspensions are handled.
Because the window is very short, outcomes can be driven by transient spikes, wide spreads, or single large trades; traders should factor in execution risk, monitor the reference order books and recent trade prints, and size positions to reflect the heightened impact of low liquidity and latency.