| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.41990 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will hit the $1.41990 price level during a specified 15‑minute interval. Short‑duration price targets matter to intraday traders and liquidity providers because they capture immediate momentum and order‑flow dynamics.
XRP is a widely traded cryptocurrency with a history of high intraday volatility and sensitivity to regulatory and exchange news. Short‑window markets like this isolate very near‑term moves and are influenced more by order‑book events, algorithmic trading, and breaking headlines than by longer‑term fundamentals.
Prediction market prices on this event represent the market consensus about the likelihood of the specified short‑term price outcome and will update as new information arrives; they are one signal among many and do not guarantee an outcome.
It denotes a bet on whether XRP's market price will reach the level $1.41990 during a defined 15‑minute window; consult the event page for the precise definition (e.g., whether the market uses the high/low within the window or a timestamped price).
Resolution mechanics—such as which exchange or aggregated price feed is used, how the 15‑minute window is defined, and the exact resolution timestamp—are specified on the market's official rules page on the platform; check that page for final authority.
Whether a very brief touch counts depends on the resolution rule (some markets use the high/low during the interval, others use snapshot prices); review the market's resolution criteria to see how transient ticks are treated.
Last‑minute drivers include large block trades or algorithmic execution, exchange outages or repricing, breaking regulatory or exchange announcements, and sudden moves in major cryptocurrencies that prompt correlated responses in XRP.
Primary actors include market makers (providing liquidity and narrowing spreads), high‑frequency traders and arbitrageurs (exploiting microprice differences), large holders or institutional traders (able to move prices with big orders), and exchanges (through order matching and data feeds); their combined activity shapes short‑term price behavior.