| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $1.42749 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP's price will be up or down over a specific 15-minute window. Short-duration contracts like this matter to scalpers and traders focused on intraday liquidity and microstructure.
XRP is an actively traded cryptocurrency whose price can move quickly on exchanges and aggregated indexes. Fifteen-minute windows capture very short-term order flow, algorithmic activity, and any market-moving headlines that arrive within that interval. On-platform rules and the chosen reference price source determine exactly how the movement is measured and settled.
Market odds on this contract reflect the collective view of participants and adjust as new information or trades occur; they are not guarantees of the outcome. Interpret them as a continuously updating snapshot of sentiment and liquidity rather than a fixed prediction.
Settlement is determined by the contract's official rules and reference price source: typically by comparing the designated reference price at the start of the 15-minute window to the price at the end. Consult the event's settlement documentation on the platform for the precise data source and tie-breaking rules.
The interval begins at the start time specified by the contract on the trading platform; this event's closing time is listed as TBD, so check the event page or contract terms on the platform for the confirmed start and end timestamps before trading.
News arriving during the interval can rapidly shift price and thus the outcome; exchange outages or feed disruptions may trigger fallback procedures defined in the contract (for example, using an alternative data source or pausing settlement). Always review the contract's contingency and data-feed policies.
A reported volume of $0 means no trades have been recorded yet for this contract, indicating low or no liquidity; low liquidity can lead to wide spreads and greater slippage, so treat market prices as less informative and consider execution risk before participating.
High-frequency and algorithmic traders, liquidity providers/market makers, and large single traders (whales) are the most likely to move price in such a short window; retail traders reacting to real-time news can also contribute to rapid moves.