Palladium is trading at $1,233.81, down 0.39% today. Last updated 7:50 PM ET.
Palladium is platinum's lighter, more reactive sister metal, and roughly 80% of its consumption goes into a single application: gasoline-engine catalytic converters that scrub emissions from light vehicles. That concentration makes the palladium price unusually sensitive to global auto-production trends and to shifts toward electric vehicles, which don't need a catalyst at all. Production is dominated by Russia (Norilsk Nickel) and South Africa, and supply disruptions from either region — sanctions, mine shutdowns, or labor strikes — tend to produce sharp price moves.
US investors get direct exposure through PALL (Aberdeen Standard Physical Palladium Shares), the only physical-tracking palladium ETF, or via SPPP for a combined platinum-palladium basket. Most platinum miners — including Sibanye Stillwater (SBSW) and Platinum Group Metals (PLG) — also produce palladium as a co-product, so their share prices give equity-leveraged exposure to both metals. Palladium's high industrial concentration means it usually moves with — not against — platinum.