| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.35930 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will reach the price target of $1.35930 within a specified 15-minute interval. It matters because short, high-resolution targets capture very short-term volatility and can be driven by microstructure events that differ from longer-term trends.
XRP is a liquid cryptocurrency with price movements influenced by broader crypto markets, regulatory developments, and exchange-level order flow. Fifteen-minute targets focus attention on intraday microstructure: sudden spikes, large market orders, exchange-specific prints, and scheduled news can all produce rapid moves that matter for this contract. KALSHI-style event contracts resolve based on a predefined price source and timing rules specific to the contract.
Market odds on this contract aggregate traders' views about whether that specific price will be hit during the specified 15-minute window and will update as new information arrives. To understand final settlement you should consult the contract rules for the exact price feed, time zone, and resolution procedure.
Resolution depends on whether XRP trades at or above the contract's target price within the designated 15-minute window according to the contract's official price source; consult the contract rules on KALSHI for the precise settlement definition and tie-breaking procedures.
The event page and the contract terms on KALSHI list the scheduled start time, end time, and time zone; if the page shows 'Closes: TBD' you should monitor the contract listing or platform announcements for the published interval.
The contract's settlement section identifies the authoritative price feed or exchanges used for settlement; check that section to see which source(s) and any aggregation method apply.
Yes—short-interval contracts can be affected by a single large trade or outlier print; the contract rules describe how unusual trades, outliers, or exchange anomalies are treated and whether there is a dispute process.
Thin order books make it easier for large orders to move price into the target range, while deep liquidity typically dampens intraminute swings; traders should consider exchange-specific depth and recent trading volume heading into the window.