| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Memphis | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
| Phoenix | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market concerns the outcome of the Phoenix at Memphis game and matters because final result determines settlement for traders who take positions on which team will win. It aggregates market expectations about team form, availability, and matchup dynamics into a tradable market.
Games between these franchises are shaped by roster composition, coaching strategy, and situational factors such as rest and travel; those elements can change meaningfully over a season. Historical head-to-head trends and recent performance provide context, but single-game outcomes often hinge on day-of availability and matchup specifics.
Market prices reflect traders’ aggregated views about which team will win and move as new information (injuries, starting lineups, lineup rotations, and in-game events) becomes available. Treat prices as one input alongside box scores, injury reports, and team-specific matchup analysis.
Each outcome corresponds to one team winning the official game result; the market will settle to the outcome that the exchange recognizes as the final result after any overtime or official review.
The exchange sets the market close time, which is typically at or shortly before official game start; settlement occurs after the league confirms the final result. Check the market page for timestamp updates and any announcements about schedule changes.
Monitor official injury reports, starting lineup confirmations, and last-minute availability notices; changes to primary scorers or key defensive starters tend to have the largest impact on expected outcome and can move the market quickly.
Look at how each team defends the opponent’s main scoring areas (paint vs. perimeter), rebound and transition tendencies, and how turnovers or pace affect scoring opportunities; coaching matchups and in-game adjustments also matter.
Low initial volume can indicate a new or thin market; it means prices may be more sensitive to individual trades and new information. Low volume does not change settlement rules but suggests greater short-term volatility until liquidity builds.