| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.41760 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will reach the price target of $1.41760 within a specified 15‑minute interval. It matters because short intraday targets capture high-frequency and event-driven price moves that can produce rapid gains or losses for traders.
XRP is a widely traded cryptocurrency known for intra‑day volatility driven by liquidity, exchange flows, and news. Fifteen‑minute target markets isolate very short‑term price behavior and are resolved according to the market operator's official rules; because the event currently shows no traded volume and a TBD close, conditions may change as participants enter the market.
Market prices on this contract represent the collective market view about whether XRP will hit the specified level during the 15‑minute window; prices move as new information arrives and as liquidity conditions change, so watch both news and order book depth for short‑term signals.
The official start and end timestamps for the 15‑minute window are set in the market's resolution rules on the event page; always check that specification (including time zone/UTC) because the precise interval determines which price data are eligible for settlement.
That depends on the operator's stated resolution method: some markets treat any trade or tick that touches the price as a hit, others require the reference or consolidated price to equal or exceed the level, and some use an exchange or index feed—confirm the rule on the event page before trading.
Some contracts resolve on any touch and would count a brief spike, while others require a last‑trade or sustained price; check the event's resolution criteria to know whether a transient tick is sufficient.
Zero volume means there may be little existing liquidity and quoted prices could move sharply on small orders; a TBD close means the market timeline could be updated—monitor the event page for updates and size orders conservatively to limit market impact.
Short‑term moves have been driven by sudden regulatory news, legal decisions, major exchange listings or outages, large whale transactions and liquidations, and macro risk‑on/off shifts; such catalysts can produce rapid price action within a single 15‑minute window.