| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.37240 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will reach the price level $1.37240 within a specified 15‑minute measurement period, offering a focused bet on a very short-term price move. It matters because such brief spikes or drops reflect immediate liquidity, news, and trading flow dynamics.
XRP is a liquid cryptocurrency whose intraday price can move quickly on concentrated order flow, exchange activity, or news. Short-window (15‑minute) contracts isolate microstructure events and are sensitive to high‑frequency trading, large block orders, and sudden news releases. Because settlement mechanics and the exact measurement window determine outcomes, traders should review the event contract details before participating.
Prediction market odds here represent the market's collective expectation about whether that specific 15‑minute condition will be met and will update as new information arrives. For very short windows, odds can change rapidly in response to order flow, exchange data, or breaking news.
It denotes a contract tied to whether XRP meets the $1.37240 price condition within a 15‑minute measurement interval; the event contract defines whether that means touching, closing at, or averaging to that level during the window.
The platform specifies the exact start and end timestamps for the 15‑minute window in the event metadata; because this event currently shows 'Closes: TBD', check the event page or platform notifications for the official scheduled window once it is published.
Settlement uses the reference price source named in the event's settlement rules; consult the contract details on the platform to see the exchange(s) or index that will be used for price determination.
That depends on the contract's settlement criterion: some markets count a single touch during the window, while others require the price to be at or above the level at a designated timestamp or based on an average; confirm the specific rule in the event terms.
Common drivers include large market orders or block trades, exchange liquidity imbalances or outages, sudden regulatory or company announcements, algorithmic trading/liquidation cascades, and cross‑market arbitrage or listing news that briefly move price.