| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.33200 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP's trade price will reach the $1.33200 level within a specified 15-minute interval. It matters to short‑term traders and hedgers who want to express or manage views on rapid price moves in XRP.
Short intraday targets for XRP are driven both by broad crypto market moves and by events specific to XRP and Ripple, such as regulatory news, exchange actions, or large on‑chain transfers. Because the prediction window is only 15 minutes, outcomes are highly sensitive to sudden liquidity shifts, large orders, and data‑feed timing differences.
Market prices reflect the aggregate trading activity and available liquidity on the platform and should be read as a snapshot of collective sentiment and risk, not a guaranteed outcome. Always consult the market's rule page to see which price source and timestamp will be used for final settlement.
It asks whether XRP's trade price meets the specified $1.33200 condition during a contiguous 15‑minute interval defined by the market's rules; check the market description for whether the threshold is 'equals', 'equals or exceeds', or similar wording.
A closing/resolution timestamp will be posted by the platform; resolution will use the times and windows specified in the market rules once they are announced, so monitor the event page for official timing.
It means the market defines a single condition that determines settlement (the target is either met or not, per the platform's settlement rules) rather than multiple competing outcome buckets.
The platform will specify an authoritative price feed or exchange in the market's rule set; that declared source and its timestamping are what determine whether the target is met, so consult the market rules for the exact feed.
Low volume typically means thinner liquidity and wider spreads, so quoted market levels may reflect few participants and can move sharply on new orders; low‑volume markets can be less informative about broad consensus and more sensitive to order‑flow noise.