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Platinum

Platinum Price in Chinese Yuan Today

Live platinum price in Chinese yuan per troy ounce and per gram. Real-time CNY/USD conversion with Shanghai Gold Exchange reference pricing, updated in real-time.

Interactive Chart

Price Chart

Data Methodology

Where does this price data come from?
Platinum spot prices are sourced from Metals.Dev, a professional metals data provider, with automatic fallback to gold-api.com for redundancy. Prices are updated in real-time during market hours, ensuring you always see the latest data. All prices reflect the latest available mid-market spot rate.
How is the platinum spot price determined?
The platinum spot price is derived from the most actively traded futures contracts on NYMEX (CME Group) and the London Platinum and Palladium Market (LPPM). The spot price represents the current market price for immediate delivery, calculated from near-month futures contracts adjusted for carry costs. During off-hours, prices reflect OTC (over-the-counter) trading across global markets, providing continuous 24-hour price discovery.
How are prices converted to CNY?
All base metal prices are quoted in US Dollars (USD). Prices shown in CNY are converted using real-time exchange rates from ExchangeRate-API with fallback to Open Exchange Rates. Currency rates are updated multiple times per hour. The conversion is applied as: Price in CNY = USD spot price x current USD/CNY exchange rate.
When are precious metals markets open?
COMEX futures trade Sunday through Friday, 6:00 PM to 5:00 PM ET (23 hours per day with a 1-hour break). The London Bullion Market (LBMA) operates Monday to Friday with two daily fixings: AM fix at 10:30 AM London time and PM fix at 3:00 PM London time. Outside of formal exchange hours, precious metals continue to trade on OTC markets globally, meaning prices can move 24 hours a day, 5 days a week. Our data reflects these continuous market movements.

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All-Time High

Platinum in the Chinese Market

China is the world's largest consumer of platinum jewelry, accounting for a significant share of global platinum jewelry fabrication demand. The Chinese platinum jewelry market, centred in manufacturing hubs like Shenzhen and retail networks spanning every major city, has established platinum as a premium metal associated with modernity and sophistication. Major Chinese jewelry brands including Chow Tai Fook, Luk Fook, and Chow Sang Sang maintain extensive platinum collections, and the metal is particularly popular for engagement rings and wedding bands among younger urban consumers.

The Shanghai Gold Exchange (SGE) operates platinum contracts that serve as the primary pricing benchmark for physical platinum in China. The SGE's Pt99.95 contract trades in yuan per gram and provides a transparent, exchange-regulated mechanism for price discovery. The Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE) also offers platinum futures for hedging and speculative purposes. These exchanges ensure that Chinese platinum pricing reflects both international spot prices and local supply-demand dynamics, with premiums or discounts to London prices fluctuating based on import flows and domestic demand.

China's automotive industry, the world's largest by volume, represents a massive source of platinum demand for catalytic converters. While China is aggressively pursuing electric vehicle adoption, the country still produces tens of millions of internal combustion engine vehicles annually that require PGM-containing emissions systems. China's increasingly stringent emissions standards, comparable to Euro 6, have actually increased the PGM loading per vehicle, partially offsetting the gradual shift toward electrification.

A key emerging driver of Chinese platinum demand is the government's ambitious hydrogen fuel cell strategy. China's national hydrogen roadmap targets one million fuel cell vehicles by 2035, supported by substantial subsidies for fuel cell trucks and buses. Each fuel cell vehicle requires approximately 30 to 60 grams of platinum as a catalyst, roughly ten times the amount used in a catalytic converter. Major Chinese companies including SAIC Motor, Great Wall Motor, and Weichai Power are investing heavily in fuel cell technology, positioning China as potentially the largest single source of new platinum demand growth globally.

The People's Bank of China (PBOC) regulates precious metals imports through a licensing system, and platinum imports require approval from authorized banks. This regulatory framework can create periods of constrained supply that push domestic premiums above international prices. Chinese investors access platinum through SGE physical contracts, bank-offered precious metals accounts, and retail purchases of bars and jewelry. While gold remains the dominant precious metal for Chinese savers and the central bank, platinum's industrial profile and relative undervaluation compared to gold have attracted increasing attention from sophisticated investors.

Top jewelry consumer: China is the world's largest market for platinum jewelry, led by major brands like Chow Tai Fook
SGE platinum contracts: Shanghai Gold Exchange Pt99.95 contract provides the domestic yuan pricing benchmark
Massive auto sector: World's largest car market drives catalytic converter platinum demand despite EV growth
Hydrogen fuel cells: China targets 1 million fuel cell vehicles by 2035, each requiring 30-60g of platinum
Import licensing: PBOC-regulated import system can create supply constraints and domestic price premiums
Manufacturing hub: Shenzhen is the global centre for platinum jewelry fabrication and export

Data provided by MetalCharts, a free precious metals tracking platform offering real-time prices, interactive charts, historical data, and portfolio tools for gold, silver, platinum, palladium, and copper. Prices sourced from major global exchanges including COMEX, LBMA, and LME, updated continuously during market hours.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How is the platinum price in yuan calculated?
The platinum price in CNY is derived from two sources. The Shanghai Gold Exchange publishes direct yuan-per-gram pricing through its Pt99.95 physical delivery contract, which reflects domestic supply and demand. Alternatively, the international dollar spot price (XPT/USD) can be converted using the PBOC daily fixing rate or the offshore USD/CNH rate. The SGE price may trade at a premium or discount to the converted international price depending on import flows, domestic demand strength, and regulatory conditions.
Why is China so important to the platinum market?
China dominates platinum demand from multiple angles. It is the world's largest platinum jewelry market, the world's largest automobile producer (driving catalytic converter demand), and the most ambitious country in hydrogen fuel cell vehicle development. China's jewelry fabrication demand alone accounts for a major portion of global platinum consumption. Additionally, China's hydrogen strategy, targeting one million fuel cell vehicles by 2035, could generate substantial new platinum demand since each fuel cell uses 30 to 60 grams of platinum catalyst.
Can I buy physical platinum in China?
Yes. Chinese consumers can purchase physical platinum through several channels. The Shanghai Gold Exchange offers physical delivery platinum contracts for institutional and qualified individual investors. Major Chinese banks sell platinum bars and coins through their retail networks and online platforms. Jewelry retailers across the country offer platinum pieces, with Shenzhen being the primary wholesale and manufacturing centre. Purity is typically marked as Pt950 (95% platinum) for jewelry or Pt999.5 for investment-grade bars.
How will China's hydrogen fuel cell plans affect platinum demand?
China's hydrogen roadmap could be transformative for global platinum demand. The government targets one million fuel cell vehicles, primarily trucks and buses, by 2035 with substantial subsidies and infrastructure investment. Each fuel cell vehicle requires approximately 30 to 60 grams of platinum as a proton exchange membrane catalyst, roughly ten times the loading in a gasoline catalytic converter. If China achieves even half its target, this would represent tens of tonnes of new annual platinum demand, potentially tightening global supply significantly.