| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.42240 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will reach the price target $1.42240 within a defined 15‑minute window. It matters because short‑duration price targets test microstructure, liquidity and immediate news sensitivity for XRP.
XRP is a highly traded cryptocurrency with frequent short‑term volatility; events such as regulatory rulings, exchange listings/delistings, or large transfers have historically produced rapid price moves. A 15‑minute target focuses attention on intraday order flow and can be driven by a handful of large trades or by sudden shifts in broader crypto market sentiment.
Market odds on this contract summarize the collective view of participants about whether that specific 15‑minute condition will occur, updating as new information arrives. They are shorthand for market consensus at a moment in time, not guarantees about future price action.
A 'hit' means the settlement reference price used by the platform records XRP at or above $1.42240 at least once during the contract's defined 15‑minute window; the precise definition of reference price and whether ties count will be in the market's official settlement rules.
The platform sets the start and end timestamps for the 15‑minute window and publishes them on the event page; because this market currently shows 'Closes: TBD', check the contract details on the provider site for the finalized UTC timing before trading.
Settlement typically relies on one or more specified exchange or consolidated data feeds listed in the contract terms; consult the event's official settlement specification to see which exchanges or indices are used and whether they use last trade, mid‑price, or another aggregation method.
Zero traded volume simply means no transactions have yet occurred in this market; low or no volume implies limited liquidity and wider execution risk, so traders should be cautious and wait for clearer pricing or higher participation before taking positions.
Most platforms have rules for anomalies: they may use consolidated feeds, apply filters (e.g., outlier removal), rely on multiple exchanges, or invoke dispute/resolution procedures; read the market's settlement and dispute policies to understand whether an extreme outlier would be disregarded or trigger other remedies.