| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.36290 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will reach the price target of $1.36290 within a specified 15‑minute observation window. Short intraday contracts like this matter to traders and analysts because they isolate very near‑term price moves and liquidity events.
XRP is a high‑liquidity cryptocurrency that often exhibits rapid intraday swings; a 15‑minute target focuses on microstructure and short‑term volatility rather than longer‑term fundamentals. This contract is offered on KALSHI; resolution mechanics and the precise observation window are governed by the market's rules on the platform. Historical context matters: flash moves, exchange order books, and sudden news have produced similar sub‑hour price moves in the past.
Market prices on prediction platforms reflect the collective expectations and available liquidity for this specific 15‑minute outcome and can change quickly. When interpreting prices here, account for low liquidity, the contract's settlement rules, and the fact that very short windows amplify noise.
It means the market is focused on whether the reference price reaches the target within a contiguous 15‑minute observation period; the exact start and end times and how they are published are specified on the event page and in the platform's settlement rules.
The event's contract specification on KALSHI lists the reference feed or exchange and any aggregation method used for resolution—consult that section for the authoritative source.
The listing currently shows 'Closes: TBD'; KALSHI will update the market page with the scheduled observation window and closing time—monitor the page for timing announcements.
Yes. Zero or low pre‑trade volume indicates limited liquidity, which can lead to wider spreads, higher slippage, and bigger price moves from small orders; it also means the market price may adjust quickly as participants enter.
Key actors include large spot traders and 'whales', market makers and liquidity providers, algorithmic/high‑frequency traders, and the operators of major exchanges whose order books and outages can create rapid price shifts.