On April 27, 2026, Mexico City will reach some high temperature, and this collection of prediction markets breaks down the forecast into distinct outcomes—ranging from 13°C or below, to specific readings at 15°C, 16°C, 19°C, and 20°C. These seven markets are grouped together because they all address the same underlying question: what will be Mexico City's highest temperature on that particular day? By examining them as a set, you can view the full distribution of expected outcomes and gauge trader confidence in each temperature range. Each market's price reflects the aggregate assessment of thousands of participants worldwide who have weighed meteorological data, seasonal patterns, geographic factors, and recent forecasts into their predictions. The prices you see below represent real-money predictions, where participants put capital at stake on their chosen outcome. A high price (near $0.90) suggests strong consensus that outcome will occur; a low price (near $0.10) indicates skepticism. By comparing prices across all seven markets, you can quickly identify which temperature ranges traders view as most probable, which as unlikely, and where uncertainty is greatest. This distribution view provides valuable insight into the overall forecast confidence—if prices cluster tightly around one or two outcomes, it signals trader agreement; if they spread across many outcomes, it reflects higher uncertainty about the eventual result. Understanding Mexico City's weather patterns requires accounting for altitude, seasonal variations, and local geography, so seeing how traders weight these different temperature scenarios offers a window into professional meteorological thinking for April 27.