| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Korea | 71% | 69¢ | 71¢ | — | $21K | Trade → |
| Australia | 31% | 29¢ | 31¢ | — | $15K | Trade → |
This market lets traders express expectations about the outcome of an upcoming Korea vs Australia international match. It matters because market prices aggregate information from fans, bettors, and analysts and update as new information arrives.
Korea and Australia regularly meet across several international sports and competitions in the Asia–Pacific region, often in qualifying tournaments, friendlies, or continental championships. Each matchup reflects recent team form, coaching decisions, travel demands, and tournament context rather than a long-term structural advantage by either side.
Market prices are a real-time aggregation of traders' views and new information; they indicate collective expectations but are not guarantees. Treat prices as a continuously updating signal that responds to news such as lineups, injuries, or weather.
The market close time is listed as TBD on the event page; many sports markets close at official kick-off or match start, but settlement follows the market’s contract terms. Check the market description on the platform for the definitive close and settlement rules.
This binary market represents the two primary outcomes offered by the contract—one outcome for Korea winning and one for Australia winning. The exact labels and any additional conditions are defined in the market’s contract.
Resolution of a draw depends on the market contract: some binary markets explicitly exclude draws (leading to a push/refund), others include draw-resolution rules (extra time or penalty results may count). Always read the market’s resolution clause to know how ties are treated for this specific event.
Watch official starting lineups, injury reports, late suspensions, weather and pitch conditions, travel or logistical news, and any statements from coaches about squad rotation or match priority—these items commonly move market prices.
Higher traded volume generally means deeper liquidity and smaller price impact when placing orders; low-volume markets can have wider spreads and larger price moves from relatively small trades. Review the order book and recent trades to assess liquidity before entering large positions.