Why Platinum Consolidation At $1200 Is A Bullish Sign

 | Mar 22, 2021 08:25AM ET

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com 

  • Years as a precious metals laggard
  • Technical break to the upside, but volatile trading around $1200 pivot point
  • Platinum’s value proposition is compelling
  • Liquidity is an issue
  • PPLT the most liquid platinum ETF product

Platinum is a rare precious, and industrial metal. The vast majority of annual production comes from South Africa and Russia. In South Africa, production is primary, with mining companies extracting platinum from deep in the earth’s crust. In Russia, platinum output is mostly a byproduct of nickel production.

Platinum has a long history as a precious metal that is a store of value. For decades, platinum’s nickname was “rich person’s gold.” Meanwhile, platinum’s density and resistance to heat make it a critical industrial metal that cleanses toxins from the environment.

Platinum and platinum group metals (palladium and rhodium) are required in catalysts in automobiles, oil and petrochemical refineries, and other emission-producing areas. Platinum is also used in fiberglass manufacturing and jewelry; it even has pharmaceutical applications in chemotherapy drugs.

Over the past years, platinum lagged the other precious metals. However, in 2021, the price broke above the critical technical resistance level at the August 2016, $1199.50 high.

In 2020, platinum had declined to a low of $562 per ounce in mid-March as the global pandemic caused risk-off selling in markets across all asset classes. Last year, platinum fell to its lowest price in eighteen years. But in 2021, it traded to a six-and-one-half year high.

The Aberdeen Standard Physical Platinum Shares ETF (NYSE:PPLT) tracks the platinum price, holding its net assets in platinum bullion.  

h2 Years as a precious metals laggard/h2

Platinum has been historically inexpensive compared to gold, palladium, and rhodium over the past years.