| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.34070 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will reach the specified price level ($1.34070) within a defined 15-minute interval. Short-interval price-target markets matter because they isolate high-frequency drivers of price moves and let traders express views on immediate, event-driven volatility.
XRP is a high-liquidity crypto asset that has shown sharp short-term swings in response to order-flow imbalances, macro moves, and regulatory headlines—particularly developments related to Ripple and major exchanges. Fifteen-minute target markets focus attention on intraday microstructure, so historical context (recent volatility, liquidity, and news flow) is often more relevant than longer-term fundamentals.
Market odds reflect the collective, real-time expectations of participants and will move as new information arrives. Use odds as a snapshot of market sentiment and as one input alongside order-book and news monitoring, but consult the market's settlement rules to interpret outcomes precisely.
It means the market is settled based on whether XRP reaches the specified price level during a single, platform-defined 15-minute interval; check the market page for the exact interval start and settlement criteria.
The platform listing for this event contains the authoritative start and end timestamps and any timezone conventions; the 15-minute window is defined by those timestamps and is used for settlement.
The contract's settlement specification lists the price feed or set of exchanges used; review that specification on the market page because different contracts use different consolidated feeds or selected exchanges.
Whether a brief touch counts depends on the contract's settlement rules—some markets count any trade or quoted price at or above the target, while others require a trade; verify the rule on the event page.
The most common proximate causes are a sudden large market order, a cascade of algorithmic stop orders, exchange disruptions, or unexpected regulatory/news announcements that trigger intense, short-duration buying or selling.