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Best-Performing Metal of COVID-19 (It's Not Gold or Silver)

Written By Luke Burgess

Updated January 25, 2021

Precious metals have been one of the top-performing asset classes amid the coronavirus pandemic. The price of gold has increased nearly 20% for the year. Meanwhile, silver has rallied over 30% higher.

But there’s one metal that has gone gangbusters throughout the crisis, with prices rocketing up 200% higher. And it’s a metal you may not know of.

Rhodium is now trading for $16,250 an ounce.

Rhodium Price — Three Years
rhodium12/20

What is rhodium?

You may not be familiar with its name, but there’s no doubt rhodium is around you right now in some of the products you use every day.

Rhodium is a member of a group of metals with similar physical and chemical properties known as the platinum group metals (PGMs). This gang includes platinum, palladium, ruthenium, iridium, osmium, and the star of today’s show: rhodium

 

Rhodium is an important industrial metal used in specialty optical instruments, electronics, aircraft turbine engines, and as a jewelry finish. If you’ve ever bought “white gold” at a jewelry store, you’ve bought rhodium. White-gold jewelry is made with a mixture of pure gold and white metals like silver or platinum that have been electroplated with rhodium.

The primary application for rhodium, however, is catalytic converters in cars and trucks. In fact, over 80% of all rhodium production will end up in a catalytic converter somewhere. So demand from the automobile industry is critical for rhodium.

Thing is, rhodium is very rare. It’s so rare there are fewer than 10 mines in the entire world that produce any significant amounts of rhodium.

An entire year’s worth of total world supply could be hauled by two 55-foot flatbed trucks.

The majority of the world’s rhodium is mined in only one country: South Africa. South Africa accounts for about 80% of the total global supply of rhodium — and that’s a problem.

The problem isn’t that rhodium production is concentrated in South Africa, per se. The problem is simply that the world’s rhodium resources are rare and concentrated in one area. The world would have similar rhodium supply issues if resources were concentrated anywhere else.

And that’s simply because any kind of disruption to mine production can have a significant impact on supplies. In 2008, mining strikes in South Africa caused shortfalls, which drove prices to over $10,000 an ounce.

Rhodium Price — 25 Years
rhfodium12/20

The disruption in mine production and distribution due to the COVID-19 pandemic is clearly the driver behind the current rise in rhodium prices. But if you were thinking about investing in rhodium to ride momentum higher, there are many things to consider.

First of all, prices are already high. At over $16,000 an ounce, the price of rhodium is 45% higher than its previous all-time high. Buying today is buying at the absolute top to date. But even if you were absolutely confident rhodium was still headed much higher, you’d run into problems investing.

Investing in rhodium is not easy. There are no public mining companies with a lot of exposure to rhodium mining. Again, there are fewer than 10 mines in the entire world that produce the stuff in any significant amounts. And the mines that do also produce other valuable metals like platinum and palladium.

Fact is, rhodium is only produced as a coproduct. There is really no such thing as a rhodium mine. There are mines that produce platinum, palladium, iridium, ruthenium, osmium, and rhodium at the same time. That said, the two largest public rhodium producers are the two largest public platinum and palladium producers: Anglo American Platinum (OTCMKTS: AGPPF) and Impala Platinum Holdings (OTCMKTS: IMPUY).

There are no futures market for rhodium, and few exchange-traded products. There is a rhodium ETF listed on the South African exchange and an ETC (which is better-known) listed on the London exchange: Xtrackers Physical Rhodium ETC (LSE: XRH0).

You can buy physical rhodium bullion — that is, you can, but you probably shouldn’t.

In 2009, the Cohen Mint was the first to produce 0.999 fine rhodium bullion rounds and bars. More recently, Baird & Co. and Pamp Suisse have introduced a line of physical rhodium bars that are available in 1- and 5-ounce bars and fractional sizes of one-tenth, one-quarter, and one-half ounce.

So there are physical bullion options. But on top of high premiums, physical rhodium bullion is quite liquid.

It’s going to be difficult to sell an investment-size rhodium holding when it comes time to divest. So if you do decide to buy rhodium as an investment, make sure you know where you’re going to sell it first.

At the end of the day — and despite soaring prices — there are really just no great rhodium investing options. The metal is just too rare.

Until next time,
Luke Burgess Signature
Luke Burgess

As an editor at Energy and Capital, Luke’s analysis and market research reach hundreds of thousands of investors every day. Luke is also a contributing editor of Angel Publishing’s Bull and Bust Report newsletter. There, he helps investors in leveraging the future supply-demand imbalance that he believes could be key to a cyclical upswing in the hard asset markets. For more on Luke, go to his editor’s page.

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