| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $1.41939 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the market price of XRP will be higher or lower after a specific 15-minute interval; short-interval markets isolate very short-term price moves and matter for traders and analysts focused on intraday liquidity and microstructure.
XRP is a liquid cryptocurrency traded across many exchanges; a 15-minute outcome captures transient effects from order flow, algorithmic trading, and news rather than longer-term fundamentals. These short windows are sensitive to exchange-level liquidity, large individual orders, and immediate news events that can move price quickly.
Market prices on this contract reflect the aggregated expectations of participants about that 15-minute move and should be read as a real-time consensus signal about short-term price direction, not as a guarantee of future movement.
The contract compares a reference XRP price at the designated start timestamp to the reference price at the designated end timestamp 15 minutes later; if the end price is higher it counts as 'Up', if lower it counts as 'Down' (consult the event text for tie or equal-price rules).
The market page or contract text lists the official start timestamp and therefore the 15-minute window; because this event shows 'Closes: TBD', verify the precise timestamps and any announced start time on the platform before trading.
The event's settlement specification names the reference exchange, index, or oracle used for pricing and any fallback sources; always check that specification on the event page to know which venue's prices govern settlement.
Trading access during the measurement window depends on the platform's cut-off rules; many markets stop accepting new orders at or before the official start time, so confirm the platform's trade cutoff time for this event.
Settlement and dispute procedures are defined in the event's contract: common measures include using alternate data sources, applying aggregation rules, or invoking dispute resolution—review the contract's fallback and dispute terms to see how such scenarios are addressed.