Platinum Price Guide and Investment Insights
Platinum is one of the rarest precious metals on Earth, historically trading at a premium 
to gold. Its unique properties make it indispensable in automotive, jewelry, and industrial 
applications, creating a complex price dynamic driven by both investment and industrial demand.
What Makes Platinum Valuable?
Platinum's value comes from several unique characteristics:
    - Extreme Rarity: 30 times rarer than gold
 
    - Industrial Necessity: Critical in catalytic converters
 
    - High Melting Point: Essential for high-temperature applications
 
    - Corrosion Resistance: Does not tarnish or wear down
 
    - Dense and Pure: Denser than gold, silver, or palladium
 
Platinum Price Factors
Key influences on platinum prices:
    - Automotive Industry: ~40% of demand from catalytic converters
 
    - Mining Supply: South Africa and Russia dominate (75%+ of production)
 
    - Palladium Substitution: Price competition with its sister metal
 
    - Jewelry Demand: Especially in China and Japan
 
    - Investment Demand: Safe-haven status during uncertainty
 
Platinum Purity Standards
Platinum hallmarks indicate purity:
    - 999 Platinum: 99.9% pure - investment bullion
 
    - 950 Platinum: 95% pure - jewelry standard
 
    - 900 Platinum: 90% pure - some jewelry applications
 
    - 850 Platinum: 85% pure - European jewelry
 
Platinum vs Gold vs Palladium
Comparing the platinum group metals:
    - Price History: Platinum usually trades above gold (but not always)
 
    - Volatility: More volatile than gold, less than palladium
 
    - Industrial Use: Higher than gold, competing with palladium
 
    - Investment Market: Smaller, less liquid than gold
 
Industrial Applications
Platinum's critical uses:
    - Automotive: Catalytic converters for diesel engines
 
    - Chemical: Catalyst in petroleum refining
 
    - Electronics: Computer hard drives and LCD displays
 
    - Medical: Chemotherapy drugs and medical devices
 
    - Glass: Manufacturing high-quality glass and fiber optics
 
Platinum Investment Strategies
Ways to invest in platinum:
    - Physical Platinum: Coins and bars (American Platinum Eagle, Canadian Maple Leaf)
 
    - Platinum ETFs: PPLT (Physical) or other platinum funds
 
    - Mining Stocks: Anglo American Platinum, Impala Platinum
 
    - Platinum Futures: NYMEX contracts for traders
 
Investment Outlook
Platinum offers unique opportunities when:
    - Trading at discount to gold (historically unusual)
 
    - Electric vehicle transition may reduce automotive demand
 
    - Hydrogen fuel cell technology could increase demand
 
    - Supply disruptions from South African mines
 
Consider platinum as a portfolio diversifier with potential for mean reversion when 
trading below gold prices.