| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.42050 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will reach the price level $1.42050 during a specific 15‑minute measurement interval. Short, single‑price targets matter because they capture expectations about near‑term volatility, liquidity and microstructure events.
XRP is a widely traded cryptocurrency whose price moves are driven by broader crypto market trends, liquidity on major exchanges, macro headlines and token‑specific news. Events resolved over 15 minutes amplify the importance of high‑frequency flows, exchange order books and any sudden announcements or large trades.
Market odds on this event reflect the collective, real‑time view of traders about whether that exact price will be observed in the 15‑minute window; they update as new information and order flow arrive. For settlement details and the exact measurement procedure, consult the market’s official rules on the platform.
The official start and end timestamps and the time zone used are specified on the market page and in the event’s settlement rules; consult those details to know the precise 15‑minute interval that will be measured.
The market’s settlement documentation names the authoritative price source(s) used to determine whether the target price was observed; review that document to see which exchange or consolidated feed will be used.
Whether a trade, quote or aggregated mid‑price counts depends on the platform’s settlement method; many short‑window targets require an executed trade at or above the level, but you should verify the exact criterion in the event rules.
Contingency handling for outages or halted markets is defined in the event’s terms—some platforms may pause, extend, or void resolution in such cases—so check the market’s stated policies before trading.
Participants often use scalping, event‑driven bets around scheduled news, tight limit orders near the target, and liquidity‑sensitive position sizing; risk controls are important because short windows can produce rapid, transient price moves.