On May 18, New York City's weather will be closely watched by meteorologists, event planners, and observers alike, with particular attention to the day's high temperature. This prediction market aggregator brings together three complementary forecasts that collectively cover different temperature scenarios for that date. The first market explores whether the high will reach 69°F or below—a relatively mild outcome for mid-May in the Northeast—while the second and third markets narrow the focus further, examining the probabilities for slightly warmer ranges: 70-71°F and 72-73°F respectively. Together, these three markets create a fine-grained probability distribution across a narrow but meaningful band of likely outcomes. What makes this grouping valuable is that it allows readers to see exactly where the crowd's confidence is concentrated. By comparing the prices of these three markets, you can identify which temperature range the crowd considers most probable. A market with a significantly higher price than its neighbors suggests stronger conviction in that specific outcome, while conversely, markets with very low prices indicate outcomes the crowd considers unlikely. The relationships between these three prices also reveal something important: they should generally move in tandem, since all three depend on the same underlying weather pattern. If one shifts dramatically while others remain static, that signals a potential market imbalance worth noting. Observers monitoring this event might consider seasonal patterns typical for New York in mid-May, long-range forecasts released by the National Weather Service, and real-time weather developments as May 18 approaches. The prices you see here reflect all available public information filtered through the collective judgment of market participants, and as new meteorological data emerges, these prices will adjust to reflect updated crowd expectations—making them a real-time window into what informed observers believe about New York City's weather on May 18.