| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.36780 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will reach the price target of $1.36780 within a specified 15-minute measurement interval. Short-interval targets like this matter because they test intraday liquidity, news sensitivity, and algorithmic order flow.
XRP is a liquid, high-frequency-traded cryptocurrency whose price can move sharply in short timeframes due to order book dynamics, news, or correlated moves in larger assets like Bitcoin. Intraday targets reflect microstructure behavior — for example, thin order books can amplify small orders into large price moves, while deep books can dampen volatility. Market operators resolve these questions using a defined price feed and a fixed 15-minute window, so precise timing and data source matter.
Prediction market quotes represent the market’s aggregated expectation about whether the target will be met during the event window and will update as new information arrives. Treat them as a real-time indicator of collective belief, not a guarantee of outcome.
The event uses a contiguous 15-minute interval defined by the market operator; the precise start time will be published on the event page or in the market’s resolution rules prior to or at market opening.
The operator will specify the official reference feed in the event’s resolution rules; that could be a single exchange ticker, a consolidated feed, or an index—check the event page for the exact source because different feeds can show different ticks.
Resolution depends on the event’s stated condition (e.g., any trade at/above the level within the window versus a closing price requirement); many short-interval markets count any qualifying trade during the interval, but confirm the exact resolution criteria on the event page.
Contingency procedures are set in the market’s rules—common approaches include using alternative feeds, extending or rescheduling the measurement window, or voiding the market—so consult the event’s rules for the platform’s specified fallback policy.
Look at past 15-minute high/low ranges, intraday volatility patterns, and event-driven spikes around similar news or times of day; these patterns can indicate how likely short, transient moves are to reach a specific level and how long they typically last, but they don’t predict any single outcome.