| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.41620 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will hit the $1.41620 price level within a specified 15‑minute window — a focused way to trade or hedge intraday price action in XRP. Short, time‑bounded targets matter because they isolate high‑frequency drivers and immediate liquidity dynamics.
XRP is a liquid cryptocurrency that often shows sharp intraday moves driven by order‑flow, macro headlines, and crypto‑specific news. Markets with a 15‑minute horizon are particularly sensitive to exchange liquidity, large orders, automated trading, and any news that arrives right before or during the window. The market operator will publish exact resolution rules and the start/stop times when the market is active.
Market prices here reflect the collective view of participants about this specific short time window and update as new information and trades arrive. Treat them as real‑time signals rather than fixed forecasts — they can change quickly as conditions evolve.
Resolution follows the market operator's stated rules: typically a timestamped reference price (from a designated exchange or aggregated index) within the defined 15‑minute interval. Check the event page for the exact data source, tie‑break rules, and whether the price must be bid, ask, or last trade.
The '15 min' label denotes a specific contiguous 15‑minute period during which the price is observed for resolution. The precise start and end times will be shown on the market page or when the market opens; monitor the event details to know the official window.
The platform specifies the official reference data source in the market's resolution rules. That might be one exchange's trade price or an aggregated index; consult the event documentation to see which feed is authoritative for this market.
Traders use such markets to express short‑term views (speculation) or to hedge exposure around anticipated intraday volatility. Because the window is short, consider execution risk, available liquidity on the market, fees, and the potential for rapid price swings driven by single events.
Historical intraday volatility provides context: assets with larger short‑term swings are more prone to brief spikes that could reach specified targets. However, each 15‑minute window is path‑dependent and influenced by real‑time order flow and news, so history informs risk modeling but doesn't determine the outcome.