| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.40830 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will reach a price of $1.40830 during a defined 15-minute interval on the KALSHI platform; short, time-limited targets matter because they capture near-term volatility and can be sensitive to single large trades or news events.
XRP is an actively traded cryptocurrency with continuous 24/7 trading across many venues; a narrowly specified dollar target like $1.40830 is designed to test whether intraday price action will briefly reach that level. Because the window is only 15 minutes, resolution will often hinge on orderbook depth, exchange tick data, and the precise price feed and timestamp the event uses.
Market odds reflect the aggregated expectations of traders about whether the target will be hit in the specified interval and will change as new information arrives; consult the event's official rules and data source to understand exactly how the outcome will be determined.
The event rules specify the exact start and end timestamps and the authoritative time standard; check the event page for the official window definition and any timezone or timestamp conventions used for resolution.
Resolution relies on the specific exchange(s) or aggregated feed named in the event's official rules; consult the event details to see the designated data source and any tie-breaking methodology.
Typically any trade or quote that meets the event's price threshold within the official window and per the designated data source counts, but check the event rules for whether trades, quotes, or both are used and how rounding or tick conventions are handled.
The event resolves according to the designated feed named in the rules; if multiple sources exist the event will describe how discrepancies are handled, so rely on the stated settlement source rather than cross-exchange comparisons.
A 15-minute window offers little time for averaged pricing to smooth out spikes, so large orders, low liquidity, or exchange anomalies can create brief price moves that meet or miss the target; that sensitivity is why designated data source and orderbook conditions matter for this event.