| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $1.45019 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP's market price will be higher or lower after a 15-minute interval; short-interval directionals matter to traders who focus on intraday volatility and market microstructure.
XRP is an actively traded cryptocurrency whose price can move quickly on order‑book events, exchange-specific liquidity, regulatory news, and broader crypto market swings. Fifteen‑minute markets are used by scalpers and algorithmic traders and tend to emphasize transient effects — exchange feed noise, large individual trades, and social‑media or news flashes can change outcomes rapidly.
Market odds aggregate participants' views about the direction over the defined 15‑minute window and serve as a live consensus signal; interpret them alongside explicit market rules and the chosen reference price feed rather than as guarantees.
Settlement generally compares the market price at the event's defined start timestamp and the price at the timestamp 15 minutes later, using the platform's specified reference exchange or index; check the event rules/page for the exact feed and timestamp conventions.
The 15‑minute window begins at the event's published start time; if the page shows 'Closes: TBD', wait for the platform to publish the scheduled start/settlement timestamps or subscribe to platform notifications so you know the exact interval before trading.
Wide spreads and low liquidity increase the chance that single orders produce large price moves and increase execution cost for participants; settlement uses the reference price feed rather than individual trade executions, so thin markets can create outsized directional moves in the 15‑minute window.
On‑chain events only influence the outcome if they affect the market price on the chosen reference exchange during the 15 minutes; ledger activity can move sentiment and liquidity indirectly, but settlement depends on the price feed specified by the market.
Similar short‑interval markets have tended to be noisy and driven by microstructure and news rather than fundamentals; traders should expect rapid swings, higher effective costs, and sensitivity to timing, so risk management and awareness of the reference feed and timestamps are critical.