| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.43020 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This prediction market asks whether XRP will meet a $1.43020 price target measured over a 15-minute interval. It matters because very short windows make outcomes sensitive to intraday volatility and feed/timestamp specifics.
XRP is a liquid cryptocurrency whose price moves on exchanges and via algorithmic trading; short-interval targets capture microstructure behavior rather than longer-term trends. The asset has seen periods of regulatory and market-driven volatility, so minute-scale price spikes or gaps can determine outcomes. For this market, the exact resolution depends on the event’s published reference exchange, feed, and timing rules.
Prediction market odds aggregate participant expectations about whether the target will be met during the specified 15-minute window; they update in real time as participants trade on new information and order-flow risk. Use odds as a snapshot of market sentiment, not as a guaranteed prediction.
It means the outcome is determined by price action measured over a contiguous 15-minute window defined by the market’s resolution rules. The precise start and end times for that window must be checked on the event page or official rules; those times determine which prints are included.
The market’s resolution details typically name a specific exchange, consolidated index, or data vendor as the official reference. Check the event’s resolution clause for the named source, because different feeds can produce different prints at high frequency.
The close and the exact timing of the 15-minute measurement should be listed on the event page; if Close is listed as TBD, the organizer will publish the schedule before the market starts resolving. Always refer to the platform’s published timetable for final timing.
Latency and timestamp differences can determine whether a brief print falls inside or outside the window, so outcomes for 15-minute targets are especially sensitive to which feed and timestamp convention the platform uses. That’s why the resolution source and timestamp rules matter for short windows.
Resolution policies typically define tie-breaking rules (e.g., whether a print must be strictly greater/greater-or-equal or how boundary timestamps are handled) and outline dispute procedures. If the event page does not make this clear, consult the platform’s official resolution policy or contact support for clarification before trading.