| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Price: $1.43130 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will reach the $1.43130 price level within a single 15-minute observation window. Short-duration targets matter because they test sudden volatility and the market's reaction to breaking news or liquidity shocks.
XRP is a liquid cryptocurrency whose short-term price is sensitive to regulatory developments, exchange listings, major on-chain flows, and broader crypto market moves. Historical episodes (regulatory rulings, large exchange activity, or sharp Bitcoin moves) have produced rapid multi-minute price swings that can decide outcomes with short observation windows.
Prediction market prices reflect collective expectations about whether the contract's resolution condition will be met during the specified 15-minute window; those prices change as new information arrives and as trading liquidity shifts. Always check the event page for the contract's exact resolution rules and data sources.
Resolution depends on whether the contract's specified reference price meets the $1.43130 condition during the single 15-minute observation window defined in the contract; consult the event page for the authoritative resolution definition and any rounding or trade/quote rules.
The event page currently lists the market as 'Closes: TBD'; the exact start and end times of the 15-minute observation window will be published on the market page once scheduled, and the contract will state the closing procedure.
The contract specifies the data feed(s) and exchange(s) used for the reference price—this may be a consolidated index or specific exchange tickers; check the event's rules to see which feeds are authoritative for resolution.
Low or zero reported volume indicates limited liquidity so far; that can lead to wide spreads, higher price impact for individual trades, and more volatile market-implied expectations until more participation occurs.
Rapid outcomes are typically driven by sudden, high-impact events such as regulatory announcements or court rulings, large exchange listings/delistings, sizable on-chain transfers or whale orders, or abrupt market-wide moves (e.g., a sharp Bitcoin price swing) that trigger algorithmic trading.