Mexico City's weather patterns play a significant role in agricultural activity, tourism, and energy consumption across the Mexico Valley region. On May 5, 2026, the city's maximum temperature will be a focal point for weather analysis, agricultural planning, and trading activity. This event page bundles seven distinct prediction markets—all focused on a single underlying question: what will Mexico City's highest temperature be on that day? The seven markets here represent different temperature thresholds, creating a price ladder from 17°C or below, through 18°C, 20°C, 21°C, and 22°C ranges. Together, they form a complete probability distribution of what traders expect the day's high will be. This structure is similar to how financial markets work with options at different strike prices—each market isolates one outcome, allowing traders to express precise forecasts and find others with opposite views. By comparing prices across all seven markets, you can spot implicit probabilities: if one temperature threshold is trading at 20¢ and the adjacent one at 40¢, the difference reflects how much more likely traders believe the higher temperature outcome is. Some markets may be more liquid than others, depending on where trader conviction clusters, and arbitrage signals emerge when two related markets price the same underlying probability range differently. Consider also what these prices reveal about consensus—are traders expecting a hot day or a cooler one? Does price momentum across these markets suggest conviction is firming up, or are opinions scattered? Use the related market cluster to build a deeper understanding of what participants believe about May 5 weather, beyond any single market's price alone.