Hong Kong's weather on any given day reflects broader climate patterns across East Asia, and daily temperature ranges are closely watched by meteorologists, city planners, and residents alike. On April 28, 2026, the city's highest temperature will be a measurable outcome with real implications for energy consumption, transportation logistics, and general weather planning. This event aggregator brings together five related prediction markets that all measure a single underlying outcome: what will be Hong Kong's maximum temperature on that specific date? The five markets here represent different temperature thresholds—21°C or below, 22°C, 23°C, 25°C, and 29°C—offering a granular view of how market participants assess the probability of various temperature ranges. By comparing prices across these linked markets, you can understand what the crowd currently expects for that day. When you observe that the 23°C market is trading at a given probability level, for example, it means market participants collectively estimate that likelihood for the high temperature reaching that threshold. These price points across multiple thresholds paint a picture of market consensus: do most traders expect temperatures clustered in the low 20s, suggesting cooler weather, or are prices weighted toward the 25–29°C range, indicating warmer conditions? Because all five markets depend on the same underlying event—the single, official highest temperature recorded in Hong Kong on April 28—price movements across them should move in concert with new information. As weather forecasts update, historical patterns shift, or seasonal models adjust, you'll see these probabilities adjust together. As you review the current prices and trading activity below, consider what the distribution of capital and price positioning reveals: which temperature range do traders currently favor, and what does that suggest about atmospheric conditions and seasonal expectations for late April in Hong Kong?