| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.42170 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will reach the price target of $1.42170 within a 15-minute observation window. Short-duration price-target markets matter because they test immediate market liquidity and information flow rather than long-term fundamentals.
XRP is a widely traded cryptocurrency that has shown acute intraday volatility, so minute-to-minute price moves can be driven by order flow and discrete news. Crypto markets operate 24/7 and respond rapidly to exchange liquidity, large traders, and macro or regulatory announcements. Markets like this isolate very short-term price behavior rather than long-term trends.
Prediction market odds aggregate participants' views about whether the specified price will be met during the 15-minute window; for very short windows, odds primarily reflect expectations about immediate liquidity, order-book events, and imminent news. Always check the market's resolution rules and feed to understand exactly how the outcome will be determined.
It asks whether the market-reference XRP price will reach or exceed $1.42170 at any point during a specific 15-minute observation window defined by the market's rules; success is determined by the official price feed used for resolution.
The market page or rules will list the scheduled start time for the observation window; if the market currently shows 'Closes: TBD', the platform will publish the exact window before trading/settlement—refer to the event page for the authoritative schedule.
Resolution uses the price feed specified in the market's rulebook (for example, an exchange ticker or an index); check the market's resolution details to see the exact exchange(s) and timestamps that will be used.
Immediate drivers include large market orders, liquidity gaps in the order book, sudden news or announcements, exchange-specific technical problems, and cascading liquidations in margin positions.
These markets are high-frequency and outcome-sensitive to microstructure and timing; traders should account for execution latency, fees, and the possibility that brief spikes or quotes that meet the target may be transient or subject to the market's resolution rules.