| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $1.42929 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP's price will be higher or lower after a 15-minute interval, making it a very short-term directional bet. It matters for traders and liquidity providers who focus on rapid price moves and intraday risk management.
XRP is a liquid cryptocurrency that often exhibits rapid, small-scale price changes driven by order flow, algorithmic trading, and market sentiment. Fifteen-minute windows are dominated by microstructure effects rather than fundamental developments, so outcomes often reflect immediate supply/demand imbalances and any breaking news that arrives during the window.
Market odds on this event represent the market's real-time consensus about immediate price direction and are shaped by active order flow, liquidity, and new information; they are a snapshot of expectations, not a statement of long-term value.
The outcome is determined by whether the reference XRP price used by the market is higher or lower at the specified end time than at the start time; check the market's rules or settlement reference (exchange or index) on the platform to see which price source and exact timestamps are used.
The start and end timestamps are set by the event listing on the trading platform; if the times are not shown or marked 'TBD', consult the market details or platform support to confirm the official start time and time zone before trading.
Settlement rules define the price source (specific exchange, consolidated index, last trade vs. mid-price) and any tie-break or error procedures, so differences in those rules can change which trades or quotes determine the outcome — always review the market's settlement specification.
Yes; outages, delayed feeds, or corrected trades can alter the official price feed or trigger contingency procedures specified by the market operator, so such incidents can affect whether the market resolves up or down according to the platform's predefined rules.
High-frequency traders and algorithmic scalpers, market makers adjusting inventory, large institutional or retail orders executed quickly, and traders reacting to breaking news or social signals are the primary drivers in such a short time frame.