| 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 a $1.41990 price threshold in a specified 15-minute observation window. Markets like this matter because they let traders express short-term views on asset price moves and can highlight expectations about imminent volatility or news-driven moves.
XRP is a liquid, actively traded cryptocurrency often sensitive to exchange order flow, regulatory news, and broader crypto market momentum. Short-duration targets (15 minutes) emphasize microstructure: immediate liquidity, large orders, or algorithmic trading can drive outcomes that differ from longer-term trends.
Prediction market prices on this contract represent the market’s collective assessment of the chance that XRP reaches the stated level during the defined 15-minute window; they are a real-time sentiment indicator, not a guarantee of outcome.
Resolution depends on the contract’s official definition on KALSHI; typically it requires the reference price to equal or exceed $1.41990 at least once within the specified 15-minute observation window. Consult the market’s resolution rules on the platform for the authoritative definition.
The event page lists the close time as TBD. The platform will publish the exact start and end times for the 15-minute window prior to observation; check the KALSHI market page for updates and the scheduled observation interval.
KALSHI typically specifies a particular exchange or a composite index as the official price source in the contract text. Look at the market’s settlement details to see which exchange(s) or price aggregator will be used for resolution.
A total volume of $0 means there has been no trading activity in this market so far, which implies low liquidity and that individual trades could strongly move the market price; exercise extra caution when interpreting prices and when placing orders.
Short windows are more susceptible to transient price spikes from low-liquidity trades or exchange outages. Market operators and exchanges may use surveillance, volume thresholds, or curated feeds to mitigate manipulation, but you should review the contract’s dispute and error-handling provisions to understand how anomalies are treated.