| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $1.41619 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the price of XRP will be higher or lower over a 15-minute interval, offering a short-duration wager on immediate price direction. Short-interval markets matter to traders who want to hedge or express views on rapid moves and microstructure-driven volatility.
XRP is a widely traded cryptocurrency with price behavior that can change quickly in response to order flow, exchange liquidity, and news. Fifteen-minute resolution markets focus on intraday, high-frequency drivers rather than fundamentals, so outcomes are often determined by liquidity, large trades, and algorithmic activity rather than slower macro developments. Check the market’s rules for the exact settlement reference (exchange or index) used to define the start and end prices.
Odds in this context represent the market’s current consensus about the likelihood of the contract’s condition being met and will change as new information and trades arrive. Treat the quoted odds as a live market signal rather than a definitive forecast—read the event rules to understand how settlement data is chosen and applied.
It asks whether XRP’s settlement price, as defined by the contract’s reference source, will be higher or lower after the specified 15-minute interval compared to the defined starting price; consult the event’s settlement rules for the precise reference times and price feeds.
The event listing shows the closing time as TBD; the market’s detailed rules and the event page will state the exact start and close timestamps that determine the 15-minute measurement once they are posted.
The contract’s settlement details specify the authoritative price source (a named exchange or an aggregated index); check the event rules on the platform to see which exchange(s) or data feed will be used for settlement.
Outages or anomalous prints can produce atypical settlement prices; most event rules include tie-breaking, outlier filtering, or alternate data sources—review those procedures on the event page to understand how such situations are handled.
The listing indicates the number of outcomes on the event page; a single tradable outcome in the platform’s interface typically reflects how the contract is structured (for example, a binary condition that will settle to one of two values), so consult the market description to see how trades map to the up/down resolution.