| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.42010 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will meet the specified $1.42010 price condition within a 15-minute measurement period. It matters because ultra-short markets highlight short-term liquidity, order-flow, and event-driven volatility that traders and analysts watch closely.
XRP is a liquid crypto asset whose short-term price can swing quickly in response to large orders, algorithmic trading, and news. Short-interval targets like a 15-minute window capture microstructure effects and are resolved by reference price feeds and settlement rules set by the platform.
Market odds represent the crowd's real-time assessment of whether the price condition will be met during that 15-minute window; they update as new information and order flow arrive. Use them as a live signal but always check the event's settlement rules before making decisions.
It indicates the measurement period used to judge whether the price condition is met. The precise interpretation—whether it requires the price to touch $1.42010 at any point during that 15-minute window, to close at or above that level, or to meet some aggregated benchmark—is defined in the event's settlement rules on KALSHI.
The contract will be settled according to the exchange tickers and data providers specified in the event's official description and rulebook. Consult the KALSHI event page for the exact sources and aggregation method used for settlement.
That depends on the contract's settlement criterion: some markets count any touch during the window, others require a closing or aggregated price. Check the event's settlement clause to know which standard applies here.
The listing currently shows the close time as TBD. KALSHI will publish the market close and the timelines for outcome determination; settlement occurs after the measurement window following the platform's verification procedures.
High-frequency traders, market makers, algorithmic liquidity providers, and large institutional or retail orders typically drive outcomes in ultra-short markets, since their flows can create rapid price moves or prevent transient spikes.