| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.41650 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market tests whether XRP will trade at or above $1.41650 during a specified 15-minute interval. It matters because very short-interval price-target markets focus attention on intraday liquidity, execution timing, and microstructure rather than longer-term fundamentals.
XRP is a liquid, exchange-traded cryptocurrency whose price reacts to order-book dynamics, exchange flows, news about Ripple and regulatory developments, and broader crypto market moves. Events that set an exact price target over a 15-minute window emphasize high-frequency activity, exchange-specific price feeds, and transient spikes or dips that may not reflect longer-term trends.
Market prices here represent participants' aggregated views on whether the $1.41650 level will be reached in the 15-minute window; they move as new information and order flow arrive. Treat them as a dynamic, market-implied signal rather than a prediction of long-term value.
It means the event checks whether XRP reaches the price level $1.41650 at any point within a single, defined 15-minute interval. The outcome depends on the platform's official price feed during that interval.
The interval will be specified by the event organizer when the market's start and end times are set; until the platform publishes those times the market remains open with 'Closes: TBD.' Watch the event page or official announcements for the exact window.
It indicates a single binary-style condition focused on the $1.41650 target during the 15-minute window—either the condition to hit that target is met within the interval or it is not, as resolved by the platform's rules.
Resolution uses the platform's designated reference price feeds and methodology; this usually involves exchange-reported trade data or aggregated price indices. Consult the event's resolution policy on the platform for the exact sources and tie-break procedures.
Execution latency, differing timestamps across exchanges, delayed reporting, and off-exchange trades can all produce discrepancies in short windows. Those microstructure factors can cause the target to appear reached on some venues but not on the official feed the market uses for resolution.