| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $1.40139 | 67% | 66¢ | 68¢ | — | $641 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP's price will be higher or lower at the end of a 15-minute measurement window. Short-interval contracts matter because they let participants express views on immediate order flow, liquidity, and breaking news.
Cryptocurrencies like XRP trade continuously and can move rapidly on news, large orders, or automated strategies; 15-minute markets focus on these microstructure drivers rather than long-term fundamentals. Short-duration markets have historically shown sensitivity to exchange-level events, social-media announcements, and derivatives liquidations. Traders use them to hedge or speculate on near-term volatility and information arrival.
Market odds represent the aggregated beliefs of participants about whether XRP will finish up or down over the 15-minute window and update in real time as new information arrives. Always consult the market's resolution rules to see which price source and exact timing are used for settlement.
Resolution compares the reference price at the contract's defined start and end times; the market page and resolution rules specify the exact pricing source and timing used to make that comparison.
The start time is defined in the market's metadata on the platform; if the market currently lists the timing as TBD, the platform will publish the official start and end timestamps before resolution.
The authoritative price source is listed in the market description and resolution rules — it may be a single exchange's spot price or an aggregated index, so check the event page for details.
A large market order can materially move the short-term price on the reference venue, especially in low-liquidity conditions, and that move can determine the contract outcome if it affects the closing measurement.
Historical intraminute and 15-minute patterns provide context on typical volatility and the frequency of rapid moves, but they are not predictive guarantees; current order-book state and live news are more relevant for the immediate window.