| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.42650 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will hit the $1.42650 price target within a specific 15‑minute interval, providing a way to trade a precise, short‑duration price event. It matters because 15‑minute targets highlight immediate liquidity, news sensitivity, and execution risk that differ from longer‑term bets.
XRP is an actively traded crypto that can move quickly on exchange flows, regulatory news, or large block trades; short windows like 15 minutes amplify those intraday dynamics. Markets that settle on brief windows rely on the chosen reference price feed and exact timing, so small timing or data differences can change outcomes. Before trading, review the event page for the official settlement source and any posted start/close timestamps.
Market odds aggregate participant views about whether the target will be met during the 15‑minute window and update as liquidity, news, and trades change those expectations.
Reaching the target generally means the designated settlement price feed records the reference price at or above $1.42650 at a timestamp within the specified 15‑minute interval; consult the market's settlement rules for the precise definition used to determine outcomes.
The precise start and end timestamps for the 15‑minute window are shown on the event page or settlement documentation; if the market currently shows 'Closes: TBD', the platform will publish the official interval before settlement or trading begins.
The event's settlement terms identify the reference exchange(s) or aggregated index used; always check the market page or settlement spec to see which data source will be authoritative for this market.
A brief touch can trigger settlement if the designated price feed records that tick and the market's rules count such timestamps; some markets use consolidated minute bars or averaged prices, so verify the settlement methodology before assuming how short spikes are treated.
Zero traded volume indicates low participation and likely thin liquidity; in such conditions spreads are wider, individual orders can move prices more easily, and outcomes are more sensitive to single trades or data quirks, so factor in higher execution and manipulation risk.