| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $1.40109 | 52% | 50¢ | 53¢ | — | $122 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP's price will be higher or lower over a specific 15-minute interval; it matters because very short windows reveal immediate market sentiment and liquidity conditions for XRP.
XRP is a widely traded cryptocurrency associated with Ripple that often exhibits rapid short-term moves due to fragmented exchange liquidity and active algorithmic trading. Fifteen-minute contracts focus on intra-session volatility and can react to exchange-level order flow, technical levels, or breaking news. Traders and observers use these short-interval markets to gauge near-instantaneous directional pressure rather than longer-term fundamentals.
Market odds are a live aggregation of participant orders and reflect collective expectations and liquidity at a moment in time; they move as new information and trades arrive and should be read as a dynamic market signal, not a deterministic forecast.
The official contract description on the event page defines the exact start and end timestamps, the reference price source (exchange or index), and the resolution method; consult that contract text for the authoritative definition of the measurement window and price series used.
The event's 'Closes' timestamp determines the last moment you can place or change orders; if the market closes before the 15-minute measurement begins you cannot trade during the interval, so check the event page for the current close time and trading cutoff.
A low reported volume indicates limited participation and thin liquidity, meaning individual trades can move the market price more and quoted odds may be noisy or more sensitive to single orders.
Platform displays vary: a single listed outcome can reflect how the contract is presented (for example, showing only the active 'Up' side or a single contract with an implied complement). Always read the contract details on the event page to see how outcomes are structured and how payout is determined.
Yes — price moves triggered by announcements that occur during the measurement window will generally be captured by the reference price used for resolution, but exact treatment depends on the contract's specified price source and any platform rules about trading halts or erroneous prints, so review the resolution policy on the event page.