| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $1.39879 | 47% | 47¢ | 48¢ | — | $142 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP's price will be higher or lower after a 15-minute interval from the event's defined start time; it matters for traders focused on ultra-short-term directional moves and liquidity risk. Short-interval markets provide a way to express views on immediate price momentum or test execution strategies.
XRP is a liquid crypto asset traded 24/7 across multiple exchanges and is regularly influenced by order-book dynamics, large trades, and algorithmic activity. Over 15 minutes, price movement tends to reflect real-time order flow, exchange microstructure, and any sudden news or operational events that occur during that window.
Market odds reflect collective expectations about direction over the specific 15-minute window and update as traders place and withdraw bets; interpret them as a continuously updating consensus signal rather than a guarantee of outcome. Because the horizon is short, odds can change rapidly with incoming trades and news.
It measures whether the reference XRP price specified by the event (check the event page for the precise price source and timestamp rules) is higher or lower at the end of a 15-minute interval compared with the start time defined by the market.
The window begins at the event's official start time as posted on the event page; settlement occurs based on the market's stated price source and timestamps. Because this listing shows 'closes: TBD', consult the event details on the platform for the exact start/settlement times before trading.
Low volume implies limited liquidity, so individual trades can move the market price significantly and odds may be more volatile and easier to influence; interpret signals cautiously and expect wider implicit execution costs and higher short-term variance.
Only high-impact or targeted events that occur within that exact 15-minute span (major exchange outages, regulatory announcements, or large whale movements) are likely to alter the outcome materially; routine macro releases are less likely to affect such a short horizon unless they trigger immediate crypto-specific flows.
Use limit orders if you want to control entry price and reduce slippage; market orders can be costly when order books are thin. Account for platform fees, potential spreads, and the rapid time decay of position relevance—small delays in execution can change the trade's expected outcome.