Nickel Monthly Price - Rand per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Dec 2017 - Jun 2025: 115,149.400 (75.61%)
Chart

Description: Nickel (LME), cathodes, minimum 99.8% purity, settlement price beginning 2005; previously cash price

Unit: Rand per Metric Ton



Source: Platts Metals Week, 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

Nickel is a corrosion-resistant industrial metal used mainly in stainless steel, specialty alloys, and battery materials. On commodity markets, it is commonly priced as nickel on the London Metal Exchange, quoted in U.S. dollars per metric ton, with the LME cash or spot contract serving as the standard benchmark for physical and financial reference. Nickel is valued for its ability to improve strength, toughness, heat resistance, and resistance to oxidation and corrosion. That makes it important in applications ranging from construction and chemical processing equipment to aerospace components and consumer goods.

The metal is also traded in refined forms and as intermediate products, but benchmark pricing generally refers to exchange-grade nickel deliverable against warehouse standards. Because nickel is an industrial input rather than a consumer good, its market is shaped by manufacturing activity, alloy demand, and the availability of suitable ore and refining capacity. Its role in stainless steel links it closely to broader metal fabrication cycles, while its use in rechargeable batteries connects it to the evolving materials mix of energy storage systems.

Supply Drivers

Nickel supply is shaped by geology, ore type, and the processing route required to make marketable metal. Two broad ore families dominate: sulfide ores, which are typically mined in underground or open-pit operations and can be processed into high-grade refined nickel, and laterite ores, which are more common in tropical regions and often require energy-intensive refining or smelting routes. This geological split matters because it affects capital intensity, operating costs, and the form of nickel produced.

Production is concentrated in regions with suitable deposits and established infrastructure, including Canada, Russia, Australia, New Caledonia, Indonesia, and the Philippines. Laterite deposits are especially sensitive to weather, mining conditions, and transport logistics, while sulfide operations are more exposed to depletion of higher-grade ore zones and the long lead times associated with new mine development. Nickel supply also depends on smelting, refining, and port capacity, so bottlenecks can arise even when ore is available.

A substantial share of nickel output is produced as a by-product or co-product in integrated mining and metallurgical systems, which can make supply less responsive to short-term price changes than in some other metals. Environmental permitting, energy availability, and the technical complexity of refining further shape long-run supply.

Demand Drivers

Nickel demand is dominated by stainless steel production, which uses nickel to improve corrosion resistance, ductility, and performance in demanding environments. This creates a strong link to construction, appliances, industrial equipment, transportation, and chemical processing. Because stainless steel is widely used across manufacturing and infrastructure, nickel demand tends to track broad industrial activity rather than a single end market.

A second important demand channel is specialty alloys, where nickel’s heat resistance and mechanical properties make it useful in turbines, aerospace components, and high-performance engineering applications. These uses are smaller in volume but often higher in value and more sensitive to technical specifications than to general commodity cycles.

Nickel also serves as a key input in some rechargeable battery chemistries, especially where high energy density is required. That creates a structural connection to electric mobility and energy storage, although stainless steel remains the core demand base. Substitution matters on both sides of the market: in stainless steel, nickel can be partly replaced by other alloying strategies such as chromium and manganese in certain grades, while in batteries the materials mix can shift among nickel, cobalt, manganese, and lithium depending on design. Seasonal effects are usually secondary, but construction and manufacturing cycles can influence consumption patterns.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Nickel prices are sensitive to global industrial growth, because the metal is tied closely to manufacturing, construction, and durable goods production. As with many base metals, a stronger U.S. dollar tends to weigh on dollar-denominated prices by making the metal more expensive for non-U.S. buyers, while a weaker dollar can support demand and pricing. Interest rates also matter through financing costs, inventory holding costs, and the valuation of future cash flows.

Storage and warehouse economics shape the futures curve. When physical stocks are ample relative to nearby demand, the market can move into contango, encouraging storage and financing trades; when deliverable supply is tight, backwardation can appear as buyers pay a premium for immediate metal. Nickel also tends to trade with broader industrial metals sentiment, so it often responds to changes in manufacturing expectations, risk appetite, and shifts in the outlook for global trade in manufactured goods.

MonthPriceChange
Dec 2017152,293.80-
Jan 2018157,187.203.21%
Feb 2018160,966.802.40%
Mar 2018158,390.60-1.60%
Apr 2018168,812.806.58%
May 2018180,183.406.74%
Jun 2018200,883.3011.49%
Jul 2018184,493.50-8.16%
Aug 2018189,007.402.45%
Sep 2018185,105.30-2.06%
Oct 2018178,378.70-3.63%
Nov 2018158,794.60-10.98%
Dec 2018153,801.30-3.14%
Jan 2019159,682.503.82%
Feb 2019175,137.809.68%
Mar 2019187,400.507.00%
Apr 2019180,670.50-3.59%
May 2019173,383.90-4.03%
Jun 2019173,997.400.35%
Jul 2019189,948.509.17%
Aug 2019238,691.8025.66%
Sep 2019261,788.609.68%
Oct 2019254,219.00-2.89%
Nov 2019224,595.90-11.65%
Dec 2019200,195.00-10.86%
Jan 2020194,565.60-2.81%
Feb 2020190,452.90-2.11%
Mar 2020196,596.403.23%
Apr 2020217,115.7010.44%
May 2020220,864.101.73%
Jun 2020217,993.30-1.30%
Jul 2020224,665.403.06%
Aug 2020250,144.0011.34%
Sep 2020248,136.80-0.80%
Oct 2020250,687.801.03%
Nov 2020246,148.60-1.81%
Dec 2020253,221.702.87%
Jan 2021270,028.506.64%
Feb 2021274,889.301.80%
Mar 2021246,001.20-10.51%
Apr 2021237,966.20-3.27%
May 2021247,608.104.05%
Jun 2021250,237.301.06%
Jul 2021274,258.309.60%
Aug 2021283,703.803.44%
Sep 2021282,246.10-0.51%
Oct 2021287,482.801.86%
Nov 2021308,572.007.34%
Dec 2021317,230.802.81%
Jan 2022346,504.409.23%
Feb 2022365,730.705.55%
Mar 2022508,845.7039.13%
Apr 2022498,457.00-2.04%
May 2022445,907.80-10.54%
Jun 2022405,076.80-9.16%
Jul 2022361,871.70-10.67%
Aug 2022368,380.801.80%
Sep 2022398,840.708.27%
Oct 2022399,342.300.13%
Nov 2022449,282.3012.51%
Dec 2022501,478.0011.62%
Jan 2023481,920.80-3.90%
Feb 2023478,100.60-0.79%
Mar 2023426,021.00-10.89%
Apr 2023434,353.101.96%
May 2023418,203.80-3.72%
Jun 2023399,077.40-4.57%
Jul 2023382,632.10-4.12%
Aug 2023383,379.500.20%
Sep 2023372,994.30-2.71%
Oct 2023348,038.80-6.69%
Nov 2023314,920.90-9.52%
Dec 2023307,955.40-2.21%
Jan 2024302,744.70-1.69%
Feb 2024310,437.602.54%
Mar 2024329,081.406.01%
Apr 2024342,865.204.19%
May 2024360,849.805.25%
Jun 2024322,792.60-10.55%
Jul 2024298,215.30-7.61%
Aug 2024293,774.20-1.49%
Sep 2024283,233.80-3.59%
Oct 2024294,362.303.93%
Nov 2024281,872.40-4.24%
Dec 2024278,677.50-1.13%
Jan 2025288,136.003.39%
Feb 2025282,853.30-1.83%
Mar 2025293,755.803.85%
Apr 2025285,402.50-2.84%
May 2025277,978.80-2.60%
Jun 2025267,443.20-3.79%

Top Companies

MMC Norilsk Nickel
Website: http://www.nornik.ru/en
Location: Moscow, Russia
Estimated Production: 244000 tonnes per year

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