| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.37060 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will trade at or above $1.37060 during the specified 15-minute interval; it matters because it lets traders express views on ultra short-term XRP price moves and hedge or speculate on immediate volatility.
XRP is a widely traded cryptocurrency whose short-term price is driven by exchange order flow, news flow, and liquidity conditions. Fifteen-minute target markets focus on transient price action rather than medium- or long-term fundamentals, so outcomes often reflect brief spikes, feed discrepancies, or concentrated trades. Historical events that move XRP quickly include large block trades, exchange outages, and major news about Ripple or regulatory developments.
Market odds here reflect the collective trading interest and willingness to take positions on whether the price will reach the target during that short window; they change in real time with new information and order flow and should be read as a dynamic market signal rather than a guarantee.
A 'hit' is determined according to the platform's published resolution rules: whether the official reference price reaches or exceeds $1.37060 at any time during the designated 15-minute window. Check the event details on the platform for the precise data feed and tie/precision rules that govern settlement.
The platform will publish the start and end timestamps for the 15-minute interval once the market's schedule is set. The event page and the platform's resolution notices are the authoritative sources for the exact timing.
This market resolves using the specific price feed(s) listed by the platform for the event—sometimes a single exchange feed or an aggregated oracle. Refer to the event details on the platform to see which sources are used and how they are aggregated or prioritized.
Because the window is short, a single large market order or clustered algorithmic activity can move the observable price past the target briefly; thin liquidity increases the likelihood that isolated trades or stop runs create temporary hits that determine resolution.
Zero reported volume means no contracts have traded yet, so published prices may reflect initial order postings or no market consensus. Early markets can have wide spreads and low liquidity; monitor the order book and recent fills after trading begins before sizing positions.