Platinum is a precious metal with both investment and industrial demand, so its price can respond to more than one type of market driver. Traders often watch platinum for automotive catalyst demand, jewelry use, hydrogen and industrial applications, South African supply conditions, US dollar movement, real yields, and shifts in risk sentiment. Compared with gold, platinum can be more closely tied to industrial cycles and supply constraints, which makes instrument-specific context important. On FXGlory, the Platinum page combines live pricing, chart movement, latest forecasts, technical-analysis tools, and Platinum trading conditions. Users can review spread, point value, contract size, leverage rules, minimum trade size, lot step, and weekly trading hours alongside the chart. The page therefore supports research into platinum as a distinct precious metal rather than treating it as a simple copy of gold or silver.
Platinum Live Chart & Trading Conditions
Platinum Live Price
1631.90000
+2.93%
1Platinum = –––USD
–––%
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Platinum
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Latest Platinum Forecasts
About Platinum
Platinum Trading Conditions
Symbol description
SPOT Platinum Ounce vs US Dollar
Point
0.01
Typical spread
40 pips
Stops level
400
Freeze level
0
Contract size
100 units
Hedged margin
50%
Maximum leverage
Account type dependent
Minimum trade size
0.01 lots
Maximum trade size
1000 lots
Lot step
0.01 lots
Sunday
Closed
Monday
01:00 - 24:00
Tuesday
01:00 - 24:00
Wednesday
01:00 - 24:00
Thursday
01:00 - 24:00
Friday
01:00 - 24:00
Saturday
Closed
Platinum FAQs
What is platinum trading?
Platinum trading involves speculating on the price movement of platinum, a precious metal used in industries such as automotive manufacturing, jewelry, electronics, and industrial production. Traders may follow platinum prices through live charts, forecasts, market news, and technical analysis.
Why do automotive markets affect platinum prices?
Platinum is used in automotive catalysts and industrial applications, so vehicle production, emissions technology, substitution trends, and industrial demand can influence its price. Mine supply, jewelry demand, US dollar strength, and risk sentiment also matter.
What affects the price of platinum?
Platinum prices can be affected by industrial demand, automotive-sector demand, mine supply, geopolitical risk, jewelry demand, US dollar strength, interest-rate expectations, commodity-market sentiment, and changes in global economic activity.
Why can platinum prices react to mine supply?
Platinum supply is concentrated in a limited number of mining regions, so disruptions, production changes, labor issues, or geopolitical risks can affect prices. Traders also watch industrial demand, jewelry demand, and broader commodity-market sentiment.