Wellington's weather on April 18 presents a highly specific prediction challenge: will the city's daily high temperature reach exactly 14°C? This exact-temperature market captures uncertainty around April's autumn conditions in New Zealand's capital, where daily highs typically range between 12–16°C during mid-autumn. The current 0% odds suggest traders believe it is extremely unlikely the high will be precisely 14°C, possibly because forecasts are trending toward temperatures slightly above or below that exact threshold. Exact-temperature weather markets are notoriously difficult to price because even minor forecast adjustments can dramatically shift the probability of hitting a specific mark. For this market, any reading of 13°C, 15°C, or any other value resolves as NO, making this a narrowly defined outcome with clear winner-take-all resolution. The 0% odds reflect strong trader sentiment that more probable outcomes lie well outside this precise point. As April 18 approaches, actual weather forecasts may sharpen considerably, and odds could shift in either direction depending on how conditions track. Traders in daily temperature markets seek to capture pricing inefficiencies and validate weather prediction models against measurable, real-world outcomes.