| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $1.45579 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether the price of XRP will be higher or lower at the end of a specified 15-minute interval than at the start; short windows like this matter to traders who focus on intraday volatility, liquidity, and news-driven moves.
XRP is a widely traded cryptocurrency whose short-term price moves are shaped by exchange liquidity, large orders, algorithmic trading, and market-wide sentiment. Historically, 15-minute windows are noisy: outcomes often reflect immediate order flow and any news or exchange events that occur just before or during the window. For this specific market, settlement depends on the reference price and timestamps defined in the market rules.
Market odds are an aggregation of trader beliefs and available information about this 15-minute move; changes in odds show how participants update expectations as new information arrives or liquidity shifts.
The precise start and end timestamps for the 15-minute window are defined in this market's rules on the platform; check the market page for the exact interval and any timezone conventions.
Resolution typically compares the reference price at the end of the 15-minute window to the reference price at the start; higher equals Up, lower equals Down; ties, rounding, and edge cases are resolved according to the market’s settlement rules.
Settlement uses the specific price source named in the market's rulebook—either a single exchange or an aggregated index—so consult the event description on the platform to see which feed and timestamp conventions apply.
Only the underlying price feed used for settlement determines the outcome; trades on the prediction platform change market odds but do not affect the external XRP price that settles the event; platform outages or feed errors are handled under the platform’s contingency and dispute policies.
Short past intervals can provide context on typical volatility and liquidity patterns, but 15-minute windows are highly noisy and often dominated by transient order flow and immediate news, so historical moves are an imperfect predictor.