Singapore's highest temperature on May 18, 2026, is the focus of three linked prediction markets that examine specific temperature thresholds. The first market assesses whether the day's maximum temperature will be 24°C or below—a cool outcome for the tropical city. The second and third markets zero in on precise single-degree outcomes: exactly 25°C and exactly 26°C respectively. Together, these three markets slice the temperature spectrum into specific, measurable scenarios, allowing forecasters to express detailed views about which outcome they expect. These markets are grouped together because they all address the same underlying event—Singapore's weather on a single date—at complementary temperature points. Their pricing should reflect a logical interdependence: if forecasters collectively believe the day will be relatively cool, the ≤24°C market would command a higher price relative to the warmer scenarios. Conversely, if consensus leans toward typical May heat, the 25°C and 26°C markets would show stronger pricing. The precise price relationships depend on how market participants distribute their probability across the three outcomes, informed by seasonal weather patterns, meteorological forecasts, and historical May temperatures in Singapore (which typically range from 24°C to 27°C or higher). When examining the prices below, look for signals about market consensus on the likely high temperature. High prices on the ≤24°C market suggest forecasters view a cool day as probable; strong pricing on the 26°C market points to confidence in typical heat. Notice also the gaps between outcome prices—tight spreads indicate agreement, while wider gaps reveal underlying disagreement and uncertainty. These three markets collectively offer insight into how prediction market participants are anticipating Singapore's summer weather conditions on that date.