| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.41800 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will meet a $1.41800 price target measured over a specific 15‑minute observation window. It matters because very short windows isolate intraday spikes and are useful for traders focused on event-driven or high-frequency moves.
XRP is a widely traded cryptocurrency whose short-term price moves can be driven by liquidity imbalances, exchange order flow, and news tied to the token or broader crypto markets. Historical context such as regulatory actions, exchange listings/delistings, and large on‑chain transfers have produced rapid price moves in short intervals. Because this is a 15‑minute market, settlement depends on the exact price source and timestamp specified in the market rules—check those details before trading.
Market odds summarize current trader sentiment about whether the $1.41800 level will be reached during the defined 15‑minute window; they move as order flow and information arrive. Treat them as a live consensus indicator, not a guaranteed outcome.
A 'Yes' resolution depends on the market's rule for the observation window and price source: typically whether XRP's referenced spot price meets or exceeds $1.41800 during the specified 15‑minute measurement period. Always read the market's settlement rules to confirm the exact condition and price feed used.
The precise observation window and settlement timestamp are defined in the market's details on the event page or rulebook; platforms often provide an exact UTC timestamp or a procedure for selecting the window. If the market shows 'Closes: TBD,' check the event page regularly or consult platform support for timing updates.
The market's resolution rules should state the authoritative price source (a specific exchange, aggregated index, or oracle). If the source is not listed on the event page, contact the platform or consult the official market documentation before trading.
Zero volume indicates no transactions have occurred yet and implies low liquidity and potentially wide spreads. That increases execution risk and makes market prices more sensitive to individual orders; consider smaller position sizes, confirm rules and fees, and be prepared for limited ability to exit quickly.
The most influential triggers in a short window are surprise regulatory or court announcements, large exchange orders or listings, sudden concentrated on‑chain transfers by large holders, major crypto market breakouts or liquidations, and unexpected exchange outages that distort liquidity.