| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.42220 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will reach a price target of $1.42220 during a specified 15-minute measurement window. It matters to short-term traders and hedgers because it isolates a very narrow time horizon where sudden moves or news can produce outsized effects.
XRP is an actively traded digital asset whose intraday price can move sharply on order flow, liquidity imbalances, or news. Short-duration targets like a 15-minute window emphasize microstructure drivers (order book dynamics, algorithmic execution) in addition to broader market sentiment and regulatory developments.
Market prices here reflect participants’ aggregated expectations about whether that specific 15-minute condition will occur and adjust as new information arrives. Movement in the market price is informative about changing consensus or new short-term catalysts, not a guarantee of outcome.
The event is resolved based on whether the settlement price feed designated by the market shows XRP at or above (or at or below, depending on wording) $1.42220 during the defined 15-minute measurement period; the market's official rules specify the precise resolution condition.
The start and exact timing of the 15-minute window are set by the event organizer and should appear in the market rules or on the event page; because the close time is listed as TBD, participants should monitor the event page for the announced measurement window and any updates.
The market will use the data source named in its official settlement rules—often a consolidated exchange feed or specified venues—so consult the event details to see which feed is authoritative for determining whether the target was reached.
Large market orders or thin order books can cause sharp, transient price moves that either push XRP through the target or prevent it from reaching the target due to slippage; therefore execution timing and venue matter for short windows.
Yes—examining historical 15-minute returns and frequency of spikes provides context on typical intraday volatility, but past occurrences don’t guarantee repetition and sudden news or structural changes can alter short-term behavior.