| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price to beat: $1.44599 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether XRP will finish higher or lower after a specific 15-minute interval — a very short-duration event that matters to traders trying to capture immediate price moves and order-flow shocks.
XRP is an actively traded cryptocurrency that often exhibits intraday volatility from liquidity shifts, large trades, and news. Ultra-short markets like a 15-minute up/down contract amplify microstructure effects (exchange spreads, order-book depth) and are resolved according to the platform's price-source and timestamp rules.
Market odds on this page reflect collective real-time expectations about that 15-minute price change and will shift with new trades and fresh information. Always check the event's official resolution rules to understand the exact price feed, time stamps, and settlement mechanics used to determine the outcome.
It measures whether XRP's price at the end of the specified 15-minute window is higher ('Up') or lower ('Down') than at the start; the event's resolution documentation on the platform specifies the exact price source and comparison method.
The canonical start and end times are set by the event page or the market's terms—some markets begin at a scheduled timestamp, others when the contract triggers; consult the event details on KALSHI for the authoritative timeline.
Reference pricing can be based on a specific exchange feed, an aggregated index, last-trade prices, or midpoint values; the market's resolution rules list which source and price convention are used for this contract.
Tie handling is market-specific: some contracts declare a 'no movement' outcome, some refund or void trades, and others apply a pre-defined tie-breaker—check the market's resolution policy for the governing rule.
Because outcomes depend on a narrow window, traders should monitor exchange status, known scheduled announcements, on-chain or off-chain liquidity, and be prepared for sudden price moves from single large orders or algorithmic activity; also review settlement mechanics so you understand how such events are treated.