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So platinum is actually sitting as the third most-traded precious metal globally, and honestly, most investors sleep on understanding what actually drives its demand. Let me break down the main platinum uses that matter for anyone looking at this asset.
First thing to know: platinum's price movements are deeply tied to industrial demand. The automotive sector is the biggest one here. We're talking about catalytic converters in exhaust systems that convert over 90% of harmful emissions into less dangerous compounds. This has been standard since the 70s, and now over 95% of new vehicles have them. Back in 2024, automotive platinum demand was running around 3.17 million ounces, with forecasts suggesting it would climb to 3.25 million ounces by 2025. The tighter emission regulations get, the more platinum the industry needs.
But here's what's interesting about platinum use beyond just cars. Jewelry is actually the second-largest demand driver. The metal's got serious advantages for jewelry makers—it doesn't tarnish, handles repeated heating without degrading, and it's incredibly durable. China has become the dominant market here. In 2024, jewelry demand was expected to hit around 1.95 million ounces with growth to 1.98 million by 2025. There's a historical angle too: South American indigenous peoples were working platinum into ornaments over 2,000 years ago.
Then you've got industrial applications that are honestly pretty wild. Platinum catalysts help manufacture fertilizers, it's essential in electronics, hard drives with extreme storage density, silicones, dental work, glass manufacturing, and sensors. Because it reacts to oxygen and nitrogen oxides, it's used for detection systems in vehicles and buildings. Medical applications are another significant platinum use category—we're talking catheters, stents, neuromodulation devices, and cancer drugs like cisplatin. The metal is biocompatible and inert in the body, which makes it ideal for implants. Industrial and medical demand combined was forecast at 2.43 million ounces in 2024.
What's worth noting is that platinum has been trading at a discount to gold since around 2015, even though platinum is 30 times rarer. Back in 2024, platinum was bouncing between $900-$1,100 per ounce while gold was commanding more than double that. The gap exists partly because gold has that safe-haven reputation during economic uncertainty, while platinum's heavily dependent on industrial and automotive sectors that contract during downturns. The supply side has been squeezed too—COVID hangover, Ukraine situation, and electricity issues in South Africa have all constrained production.
Understanding these platinum use cases gives you real insight into supply-demand dynamics and why the metal's price might move in certain ways. If you're considering precious metals for your portfolio, platinum definitely deserves a closer look beyond just the mainstream gold narrative.