| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $1.44339 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP's price will be higher or lower over a single 15‑minute interval; it matters because ultra‑short contracts test immediate market expectations and liquidity. Traders use these short windows to express views on very near‑term price moves or to hedge intraday exposure.
XRP is a liquid, high‑volatility digital asset whose price can move rapidly on news, order flow, or exchange microstructure events. Fifteen‑minute markets isolate immediate drivers (order imbalance, large trades, exchange outages) and are commonly used by high‑frequency and intraday participants. Because the timeframe is short, outcomes often hinge on transient liquidity and timing rather than longer‑term fundamentals.
Market odds aggregate traders' beliefs about the outcome and will change as new information arrives; treat them as a real‑time sentiment indicator rather than a guaranteed forecast. For settlement details and the official reference price definition, consult the event page and exchange rulebook.
It compares XRP's price at the close of a specific 15‑minute interval to the defined reference price for that interval; if the closing price is above the reference it is considered 'Up', and if below it is 'Down'. Check the market's settlement rules for the precise reference and tie‑break procedures.
The interval start and end times are set by the event listing; they may align to clock minutes (for example, a fixed 15‑minute block) or to a market‑specific trigger. Refer to the event details on the exchange to find the official start and end timestamps for this contract.
Settlement uses the exchange's published reference price methodology, which may be a specific exchange feed, an aggregated index, or another defined data source. Review the event's settlement specification to see which price feeds and venues are authoritative.
The exchange's contingency rules govern outages — typical actions include using an alternate reference feed, extending the observation window, or cancelling settlement for that interval. Consult the platform's market integrity and force majeure policies for exact procedures.
Short windows magnify the impact of low liquidity and spread; traders should factor in execution risk, potential slippage, and the possibility that one or a few trades can determine outcome. Use limit orders, monitor order book depth, and consider position sizing appropriate for elevated microstructure risk.