| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.34050 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will trade at or reach a price of $1.34050 during a 15‑minute interval. Short, time‑bound price targets matter because they capture immediate liquidity, order‑flow and sentiment around the asset.
XRP is a liquid cryptocurrency that can exhibit rapid intraday moves driven by large orders, liquidity gaps, and news flow. Short‑duration markets like this one are especially sensitive to microstructure (which exchanges and feeds are used) and to sudden information or execution events.
Market odds aggregate participant expectations about whether that price will be hit in the specified 15‑minute window. Because the window is short, odds can change quickly as live price ticks and order activity evolve.
It means the market resolves based on whether XRP reaches the $1.34050 price within a single 15‑minute interval as defined by the platform; the exact start and end timestamps for that interval are provided in the event's rules or will be announced before resolution.
Resolution follows the platform's settlement specification — typically a trade or published price at or above $1.34050 on the designated reference feed during the 15‑minute window. Refer to the event’s settlement rules for the precise criterion (last trade, mid‑quote, or index).
The platform designates the official price source in the event listing or market rules; if the listing does not show it, the platform will publish the reference exchange(s) or index used for final settlement prior to resolution.
Many platforms employ vetting, consolidated feeds, or dispute procedures to prevent resolution on obviously erroneous ticks, but whether a single trade counts depends on the market’s published resolution and error‑filtering policies—check those rules for this event.
Most impactful are large block trades or algorithmic executions hitting thin order books, exchange outages or re‑listings, sudden regulatory or legal headlines, and clustered stop/limit orders near the target that can produce fast, amplified moves.