| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.38230 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will reach a trade price of $1.38230 at any point during a specified 15-minute interval. Short-window price targets matter because they test immediate liquidity, order flow and short-term volatility rather than longer-term trends.
XRP is an actively traded cryptocurrency whose price can move quickly across exchanges in response to large orders, exchange-level liquidity and news. A 15-minute target focuses on minute-scale drivers such as block trades, algorithmic execution, and sudden shifts in market sentiment. Events like major exchange listings, regulatory announcements, or large on-chain transfers have historically produced the kind of rapid moves that determine outcomes for short-window markets.
Prediction market prices represent the collective view of whether the target will be met during the 15-minute window and update as new information arrives. For settlement, the platform will compare the relevant published price feed or exchange trades during that defined interval against the $1.38230 target according to its rules.
Typically, the target is considered hit if an eligible trade price or official index value equals or exceeds $1.38230 at any moment within the 15-minute interval, as defined by the market's settlement rules. Check the event's published settlement definition to confirm whether trades, mid-price crosses, or specific index prints are the operative data points.
The market operator should specify an exact start timestamp for the 15-minute window on the event page; if the start time is not listed it will remain TBD until published. The interval runs for 15 consecutive minutes from that start time and all eligible price data inside that span are used for determination.
The platform will rely on the data sources named in its settlement rules—this may be a single exchange, a combination of exchanges, or a consolidated index. Participants should review the event’s official documentation to see which feeds are authoritative and whether fallback sources apply.
Most platforms have contingency procedures—such as fallback data feeds, extended observation windows, or dispute mechanisms—detailed in their rules. Before trading, review the market’s force-majeure and dispute resolution policies to understand how exceptional disruptions are handled.
Zero volume indicates little or no current trading interest, which can mean wide spreads and limited liquidity if you try to enter a position. A TBD close time means the event’s schedule or specific settlement timing may change; confirm the final start time and settlement rules before participating and be prepared for elevated execution risk in thin markets.