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Track gold, silver, platinum, and palladium spot prices with interactive historical charts.
$2,371.50
per oz · Mar 2
$1,845.50
per oz · Mar 2
$93.31
per oz · Mar 2
$5,343.90
per oz · Mar 2
Gold
$5,343.90
The ultimate store of value and inflation hedge.
View Gold Details →
Silver
$93.31
Monetary metal with strong industrial demand.
View Silver Details →
Platinum
$2,371.50
Rare industrial metal used in catalytic converters.
View Platinum Details →
Palladium
$1,845.50
Critical automotive catalyst with constrained supply.
View Palladium Details →
Precious metals prices are influenced by a complex interplay of macroeconomic factors. Gold is primarily driven by inflation expectations, real interest rates, and the strength of the US dollar. When real rates fall or inflation rises, gold tends to appreciate as investors seek stores of value outside the financial system.
Silver has a dual nature — it responds to monetary demand like gold but is also heavily influenced by industrial consumption. Roughly 50% of silver demand comes from industrial applications including electronics, solar panels, and medical devices. Platinum and palladium are even more industrially driven, with automotive catalytic converters consuming the majority of supply.
The spot price represents the price for immediate delivery and is determined by trading on commodities exchanges like COMEX. Physical precious metals always trade at a premium above spot to cover manufacturing, distribution, and dealer margins. Understanding the relationship between spot and physical prices is essential for making informed purchases.
The spot price is the current market price at which gold can be bought or sold for immediate delivery. It is determined by trading on global commodities exchanges like COMEX and is quoted in US dollars per troy ounce.
StackWorth updates precious metal spot prices daily from market data feeds. Prices reflect the most recent closing price. During market hours, actual spot prices fluctuate in real-time on commodities exchanges.
Key factors include: inflation expectations, interest rates and monetary policy, US dollar strength, geopolitical uncertainty, central bank buying, industrial demand (especially for silver, platinum, palladium), and investor sentiment.
The spot price is for immediate delivery, while futures prices are for delivery at a future date. Futures can trade above spot (contango) or below (backwardation). Most quoted 'spot' prices are actually derived from near-month futures contracts.
Gold and silver trade nearly 24 hours on weekdays through a network of exchanges: COMEX (New York), London Bullion Market, Shanghai Gold Exchange, and Tokyo Commodity Exchange. Markets are closed on weekends and major holidays.
Precious metals are internationally quoted in US dollars per troy ounce by convention. StackWorth shows prices in USD by default but supports conversion to CAD, GBP, and EUR using daily exchange rates.
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Palladium Value Calculator
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