| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.41330 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This prediction market asks whether XRP's market price will reach $1.41330 within a specified 15-minute measurement window. It matters because short intraday moves test liquidity and can be used to hedge or speculate on sudden volatility.
XRP is a widely traded cryptocurrency that routinely exhibits intraday volatility driven by order flow, exchange liquidity, and news. Short-duration targets like a 15-minute window focus attention on market microstructure — how quickly large orders, algorithmic traders, or news can move price — rather than longer-term fundamentals.
Market odds on this event summarize the trading market's collective view about whether that price level will be hit during the stated 15-minute window. Treat those odds as a dynamic sentiment signal and pair them with price feeds and liquidity information before trading or hedging.
It means the contract will resolve based on whether XRP's price reaches the $1.41330 level within a defined 15-minute measurement period; the event description on the platform specifies how that measurement is taken.
The event page or contract terms define the start and end times of the 15-minute window. If the listing shows 'Closes: TBD', the platform or contract host will publish the exact window before trading or settlement.
Settlement uses the price feed or oracle specified in the event's contract (typically a designated exchange or consolidated index). Check the event details for the authoritative data source and whether settlement uses trade prices, quotes, or a midpoint.
Yes. You can monitor liquidity across exchanges, set price alerts near $1.41330, follow relevant news, and determine your risk sizing in advance; finalize any orders only after the event parameters and trading window are published.
The target can be met by organic price moves, large market orders, stop-loss cascades, or algorithmic activity. Whether a brief tick counts depends on the contract's measurement (instantaneous trade price vs. averaged quote), so review the settlement rules to understand how momentary spikes are handled.