| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.41800 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the XRP/USD price will reach the $1.41800 level within a contiguous 15-minute window. It matters because very short‑duration targets test immediate liquidity and intraday volatility, making them useful for traders seeking to express views on minute-scale price moves.
XRP is a liquid crypto asset that often exhibits rapid intraday moves driven by order flow, news, and algorithmic trading. Short‑window markets like this focus on price action over minutes rather than longer-term fundamentals, so outcomes are especially sensitive to exchange microstructure, liquidity depth, and real‑time events. The market page will specify the precise settlement source and timing, which determine how the outcome is judged.
Prediction market odds on this contract reflect the market’s aggregated expectation that XRP will hit the specified price during the 15‑minute interval and will change as new information arrives. Use the odds as a dynamic market signal about short‑term risk and liquidity rather than a definitive forecast.
For a 'Yes' settlement, XRP must meet or exceed the $1.41800 threshold during the contiguous 15‑minute observation window according to the market's designated price source and settlement rules; check the event terms for tie, rounding, and timestamp conventions.
The page currently lists 'Closes: TBD'; the market operator will publish the exact start and end times. The 15‑minute window is a contiguous interval defined by those posted times and used for settlement.
Settlement uses the specific price feed(s) named in the market's rules on the event page—this could be a single exchange or an aggregated index—so review the market terms to identify the authoritative source.
No—traded volume on the prediction market affects liquidity and ease of trading but does not change settlement mechanics; the outcome is determined by the external price data specified in the market rules regardless of how many contracts were bought or sold here.
Brief touches can stem from large market orders, liquidity gaps on specific exchanges, algorithmic or high‑frequency trading, sudden news or leaked information, and exchange‑specific anomalies; if a touch is captured by the designated data source within the observation window, it will typically count toward settlement.