| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.38060 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will hit the price target $1.38060 within a specified 15‑minute measurement window. It matters for traders looking to hedge or speculate on immediate, short‑term price moves in XRP.
XRP is an actively traded cryptocurrency whose intraday price is driven by exchange order books, liquidity, news about Ripple and regulatory developments, and broader crypto market momentum. Fifteen‑minute target markets are especially sensitive to high‑frequency trading, exchange‑specific feeds, and short bursts of volatility.
Market prices aggregate trader expectations about whether the target condition will occur during the designated 15‑minute window. For precise interpretation, always refer to this market's contract text and resolution rules rather than assuming how an external ticker will be used.
Resolution depends on whether XRP meets the contract condition—reaching $1.38060 during the specified 15‑minute measurement period—according to the official price source and the market's resolution policy. Check the event's contract text for the definitive rule (for example, whether any tick, a timestamped value, or an averaged price is used).
The exact measurement start and end times are set in the market's contract; if the market lists 'Closes: TBD', the window has not been scheduled yet. Monitor the market page for the announced measurement window and its timezone (often UTC or the platform's stated zone).
The contract specifies the authoritative price feed or exchange(s) used for resolution. That information is published on the market page; different feeds can diverge briefly, so consult the contract to know which source will be authoritative.
Whether a brief spike counts depends on the resolution mechanics in the contract. Some markets count any tick that meets the target, while others use a specific timestamped or averaged reference. Read the market's resolution rules to determine how momentary price moves are treated.
Low traded volume indicates limited participation and wider bid/ask spreads, which can make prices less informative and trades more costly. Volume can change quickly; if you plan to trade, factor in potential slippage and confirm contract details before entering a position.