Platinum Price

Platinum Spot Price (XPTUSD)

Platinum Futures Price ("PL1!" Front Month)

Platinum Spot Price per Gram (XPTUSDG)

How Is Platinum Priced?

A simple internet search for official platinum prices in troy ounces will produce many results with multiple platinum price feeds. Even when simultaneously comparing prices site by site, the platinum prices can vary by up to 1% or even 2%, making it difficult to determine the best way to assign prices to platinum bullion products. Rest assured, there is a logical explanation and it comes down to understanding the difference between spot platinum price and futures platinum price.

Platinum Spot Price

The spot platinum price is the current market price at which platinum can be bought or sold in the LBMA Over The Counter (OTC) market for immediate delivery. The London Bullion Market Association’s (LBMA) daily platinum auctions are a global benchmark for pricing platinum and platinum’s spot price reflects the live price of physical platinum in the physical bullion marketplace at any given moment. Large market makers, also known as Direct Participants (DP), access these daily auctions, which officially price the metal when purchased in bulk, commercial quantities. Working alongside these DP’s, the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) facilitates trade for smaller institutions and producers seeking direct access to investment-grade LBMA Good Delivery bars. ICE clears these contracts through ICE Clear U.S. and delivers the platinum bars in Switzerland from unallocated vaults, which is known as “Loco Zurich.”

Platinum Futures Price 

On the other hand, the futures platinum price is the agreed-upon price for a platinum transaction that will settle at a specified future date. Platinum futures are standardized contracts traded on centralized exchanges, where buyers and sellers commit to transact a certain amount of platinum bullion at a predetermined price on a set, future date. The largest derivatives marketplace in the world, the CME Group, operates four futures exchanges, including NYMEX, for trading platinum futures. NYMEX futures contracts are leveraged derivative products, typically settled in the form of cash, but traders in long positions may stand for and take physical delivery after contract settlement. And unlike OTC contracts that settle with immediate delivery, NYMEX futures contracts settle at a future date. The PL1! is the “front month” contract, which is the nearest expiring futures contract. The front-month futures contract captures a majority of trading volume, offering liquidity for all market participants.

Under normal conditions, or “contango,” the futures platinum price will be higher than the spot price due to the “cost of carry” (storage, insurance, financing costs) for the physical commodity. “Backwardation” is less common and occurs when futures prices are lower than current spot prices due to a premium placed upon immediate delivery or expectations about future market conditions.

 

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