Lead Monthly Price - Russian Ruble per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
May 2003 - Apr 2013: 49,200.890 (343.34%)
Chart

Description: Lead (LME), refined, 99.97% purity, settlement price

Unit: Russian Ruble per Metric Ton



Source: Platts Metals Week, Engineering and Mining Journal; Thomson Reuters Datastream; World Bank.

See also: Mineral production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Lead is a dense, soft, corrosion-resistant base metal traded on commodity markets as refined metal, typically quoted against the London Metal Exchange benchmark for lead of 99.97% purity in US dollars per metric ton. It is valued for its low melting point, ease of casting, and ability to form stable compounds and alloys. The metal is used primarily in lead-acid batteries, which remain the dominant end use because they provide reliable starting, lighting, and ignition power, as well as backup storage for stationary applications. Lead is also used in radiation shielding, cable sheathing, ammunition, weights, and certain chemical and industrial products. Because it is a by-product in many mining systems and is closely tied to battery recycling, lead pricing reflects both primary mining output and the availability of scrap feedstock. Its market structure is shaped by the balance between refined metal supply, recycling flows, and steady industrial demand rather than by highly seasonal consumption patterns.

Supply Drivers

Lead supply comes from two main sources: primary mining and secondary recovery from scrap, especially spent lead-acid batteries. Primary lead is commonly associated with zinc, silver, copper, and other polymetallic ores, so output often depends on the economics of those companion metals and on the operation of mines where lead is not the sole product. Major producing regions include China, Australia, Peru, Mexico, the United States, and parts of Europe, where geological endowment, mining infrastructure, and smelting capacity support long-lived production. Because lead is frequently recovered from complex ore bodies, supply can be constrained by ore grades, mine depletion, concentrate quality, and the need for smelting and refining capacity. Transport and environmental controls matter because lead-bearing concentrates and emissions require specialized handling. Secondary supply is structurally important because battery collection systems create a large recycling loop; this makes scrap availability, collection efficiency, and regional recycling infrastructure central to market balance. Production also responds with lags to mine development, permitting, and smelter maintenance, which can tighten supply when disruptions occur.

Demand Drivers

Lead demand is dominated by lead-acid batteries used in vehicles, industrial backup power, telecommunications, and energy storage systems. This end use gives the market a strong link to transportation fleets, replacement demand, and stationary power applications rather than to fast-growing consumer electronics. Battery demand is relatively stable because lead-acid technology is mature, inexpensive, and well suited to high surge power and recycling. The metal also has structural demand in radiation shielding for medical and industrial facilities, in ammunition, and in certain alloys and chemical applications. Substitution works in both directions: lithium-ion batteries compete in some storage applications, while lead-acid batteries retain advantages in cost, recyclability, and established manufacturing systems. Seasonal patterns can appear in vehicle servicing, construction, and industrial activity, but the main demand driver is the large installed base of batteries that must be replaced over time. Environmental regulation influences end use by restricting lead in some consumer products, yet recycling systems preserve demand for refined lead in closed-loop battery manufacturing.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Lead prices are influenced by broad industrial activity because the metal is closely tied to transportation, manufacturing, and battery replacement cycles. Like most base metals, lead is priced in US dollars, so exchange-rate movements affect purchasing power for non-dollar consumers and can alter import demand. Interest rates matter through inventory financing costs: when storage and carry costs rise, holding metal becomes more expensive, which can affect nearby versus deferred pricing. Lead can also exhibit contango or backwardation depending on the balance between prompt physical availability and warehouse stocks, especially because it is a storable industrial metal with established exchange inventories. As a base metal, it often moves with the wider industrial metals complex and with expectations for manufacturing demand, though its battery-centric demand gives it a somewhat different profile from metals tied more directly to construction or electronics.

MonthPriceChange
May 200314,329.93-
Jun 200314,261.41-0.48%
Jul 200315,628.129.58%
Aug 200315,070.86-3.57%
Sep 200315,950.525.84%
Oct 200317,699.5510.97%
Nov 200318,545.904.78%
Dec 200320,368.519.83%
Jan 200421,855.487.30%
Feb 200425,335.9515.92%
Mar 200425,285.91-0.20%
Apr 200421,669.24-14.30%
May 200423,456.898.25%
Jun 200425,267.137.72%
Jul 200427,328.728.16%
Aug 200426,935.96-1.44%
Sep 200427,334.371.48%
Oct 200427,103.50-0.84%
Nov 200427,661.842.06%
Dec 200427,186.15-1.72%
Jan 200526,701.76-1.78%
Feb 200527,337.942.38%
Mar 200527,757.691.54%
Apr 200527,412.25-1.24%
May 200527,625.470.78%
Jun 200528,114.711.77%
Jul 200524,521.51-12.78%
Aug 200525,269.333.05%
Sep 200526,480.624.79%
Oct 200528,697.578.37%
Nov 200529,307.602.13%
Dec 200532,379.9710.48%
Jan 200635,470.499.54%
Feb 200636,004.681.51%
Mar 200633,205.21-7.78%
Apr 200632,254.11-2.86%
May 200631,557.12-2.16%
Jun 200626,009.63-17.58%
Jul 200628,325.458.90%
Aug 200631,417.6410.92%
Sep 200635,904.8314.28%
Oct 200641,131.4614.56%
Nov 200643,213.665.06%
Dec 200645,352.914.95%
Jan 200744,201.67-2.54%
Feb 200746,843.025.98%
Mar 200749,972.376.68%
Apr 200751,625.583.31%
May 200754,255.675.09%
Jun 200762,853.3415.85%
Jul 200778,736.5825.27%
Aug 200779,943.121.53%
Sep 200781,424.491.85%
Oct 200792,570.7513.69%
Nov 200781,383.78-12.08%
Dec 200763,797.40-21.61%
Jan 200863,888.260.14%
Feb 200875,475.9518.14%
Mar 200871,409.85-5.39%
Apr 200866,389.60-7.03%
May 200853,021.34-20.14%
Jun 200844,036.73-16.95%
Jul 200845,410.553.12%
Aug 200846,528.182.46%
Sep 200847,221.981.49%
Oct 200839,121.43-17.15%
Nov 200835,325.69-9.70%
Dec 200827,137.73-23.18%
Jan 200937,187.3737.03%
Feb 200939,414.825.99%
Mar 200942,851.578.72%
Apr 200946,407.898.30%
May 200946,003.42-0.87%
Jun 200952,003.8213.04%
Jul 200952,898.281.72%
Aug 200960,199.6313.80%
Sep 200967,841.6312.69%
Oct 200965,966.54-2.76%
Nov 200966,750.291.19%
Dec 200969,946.094.79%
Jan 201070,614.770.96%
Feb 201064,068.52-9.27%
Mar 201064,199.370.20%
Apr 201066,096.992.96%
May 201057,433.22-13.11%
Jun 201053,161.64-7.44%
Jul 201056,309.405.92%
Aug 201063,087.9712.04%
Sep 201067,287.756.66%
Oct 201072,194.207.29%
Nov 201073,527.911.85%
Dec 201074,443.951.25%
Jan 201177,984.844.76%
Feb 201175,739.13-2.88%
Mar 201174,611.87-1.49%
Apr 201175,804.131.60%
May 201167,822.13-10.53%
Jun 201170,654.304.18%
Jul 201174,853.185.94%
Aug 201168,932.29-7.91%
Sep 201170,418.482.16%
Oct 201161,277.21-12.98%
Nov 201161,457.980.30%
Dec 201163,720.303.68%
Jan 201265,393.552.63%
Feb 201263,257.04-3.27%
Mar 201260,336.61-4.62%
Apr 201261,090.961.25%
May 201261,959.201.42%
Jun 201260,986.14-1.57%
Jul 201261,195.270.34%
Aug 201260,757.12-0.72%
Sep 201268,411.7112.60%
Oct 201266,602.24-2.64%
Nov 201268,576.272.96%
Dec 201270,121.432.25%
Jan 201370,563.970.63%
Feb 201371,383.701.16%
Mar 201366,835.46-6.37%
Apr 201363,530.83-4.94%

Top Companies

Hindustan Zinc
Website: http://www.hzlindia.com/
Location: Udaipur, India
Estimated Production: 1 million tonnes per year

Commodities Market

  • Buyers: Request price quotes
  • Sellers: List your products
Sign up to get an email when we update our commodities data

 


Your email will never be shared, sold, nor rented. We hate SPAM as much you do.
Coming Soon