| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $1.41059 | 58% | 52¢ | 56¢ | — | $103 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP's traded price will be higher or lower after a 15-minute interval; it matters because very short-duration markets provide a snapshot of immediate market sentiment and liquidity for XRP.
XRP is a liquid, high-frequency-traded cryptocurrency that often exhibits rapid price moves over minutes due to order flow, algorithmic trading, and news. Short-interval outcomes like this capture microstructure effects rather than longer-term fundamental shifts and are influenced by exchange liquidity and transient flows.
Market prices on this contract reflect the collective, real-time expectations of participants about XRP's direction over the 15-minute window; treat them as a live market-implied snapshot that can change quickly as new information arrives.
The outcome is determined by whether the market's defined reference price for XRP at the end of the 15-minute interval is higher or lower than the reference price at the start, according to the platform's stated price source and settlement rules; check the market page for the precise price feed and settlement reference.
The interval begins at the start time specified on this market's detail page; the market runs for exactly 15 minutes from that start time and will close at the end of that interval — the event page or platform UI will show the official start/close timestamps.
Low liquidity means relatively small trades can move the reference price substantially in a short window, so last-minute or large orders can swing the outcome; higher volume generally reduces the impact of any single trade on the settlement price.
Such events can materially move the reference price; the market will settle based on the platform's predefined price sources and contingency rules, so consult the market's settlement policy for how outages, feed disruptions, or anomalous data are handled.
Historical short-interval patterns can provide context about typical volatility and likely price ranges, but minute-level moves are often noisy and driven by transient flows, so past behavior is informative but not determinative for any single 15-minute result.