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Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing. The London Metal Exchange (LME) is a futures and forwards exchange in London, United Kingdom with the world's largest market [citation needed] in standardised forward contracts, futures contracts and options on base metals. The exchange also offers contracts on ferrous metals and precious metals. [1]
As of 2020, the most expensive non- synthetic element by both mass and volume is rhodium. It is followed by caesium, iridium and palladium by mass and iridium, gold and platinum by volume. Carbon in the form of diamond can be more expensive than rhodium. Per-kilogram prices of some synthetic radioisotopes range to trillions of dollars.
Price Per Pound of Aluminum. Alabama. $0.49. Alaska. $0.23. Arizona. $0.40. Arkansas. $0.36. ... Scrap metal prices are determined by current market conditions and will increase and decrease based ...
Zinc sale prices were 80 cents per pound in July 2008, [109] which was typical of its 2004–2008 pricing levels. [109] By January 2009 it had bottomed out and was worth 45 cents per lb. [109] A spectacular bull market and increased Chinese interest in galvanised construction steel caused prices to top off at $1.20 per pound of metal by January ...
London Metal Exchange (LME) three-month metal fell to a one-year low of $30,405 per tonne on Monday, extending a precipitous slide from March's record high of $51,000. Tiny tin has been caught up ...
The contracts prices are quoted in US dollars per tonne. LME prices have minimum tick sizes of $0.50 per tonne (or $12.50 for one contract) for open outcry trading in the LME Ring and electronic trading on LMEselect, while minimum tick sizes are reduced for inter-office telephone trading to $0.01 per tonne (or $0.50 for one contract).
At $37,350 a tonne LME three-month tin is up 77% since the start of the year, far outstripping aluminium, which is the second-strongest performer with a gain of "only" 26%.
ITC dissolved soon afterward, and the price of tin, now in a free-market environment, fell to $4 per pound and remained around that level through the 1990s. [69] The price increased again by 2010 with a rebound in consumption following the 2007–2008 economic crisis, accompanying restocking and continued growth in consumption. [56]