Industrial Metals Intelligence
About This Report Category
Metals move quietly until they don't. For most planning teams, steel, copper, and aluminum costs are negotiated annually and largely invisible between contract cycles — until a tariff announcement, a mining disruption, or a demand surge from infrastructure spending sends prices sharply in a direction that no one's operating plan assumed.

This report tracks five metals markets that collectively function as both direct cost inputs and economic condition indicators. Steel, copper, and aluminum are industrial workhorses whose prices reflect real-world demand for manufacturing, construction, and electronics, flowing directly into the cost of components, equipment, packaging, and facilities. Gold and silver occupy a different role: they are financial condition signals, revealing something important about how markets perceive inflation risk, currency stability, and economic stress. That is intelligence that belongs in any serious planning conversation regardless of whether a business touches metals directly.

The SignalRadar Industrial Metals Intelligence report gives you early visibility into where metals-driven cost pressure — or economic stress — is building, before it shows up in supplier quotes or the re-forecast conversation.
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How to read this guide
Each variable below is described in plain terms — no metals trading experience required. For each one you'll find: what it measures, who publishes the data, how often it updates, and most importantly, what a meaningful move in that variable likely means for planning assumptions based on cost structures and other impacted metrics. This report is organized in two groups: industrial metals (direct cost signals) and precious metals (economic and financial condition signals). Both matter to the planning conversation, in different but complementary ways. Use this as a reference when reading your weekly Industrial Metals report and want to understand the "so what" behind a signal.
Industrial Metals — Direct Cost Signals
US Midwest Hot-Rolled Coil Steel
Also known as: HRC Steel, Midwest HRC, Flat-Rolled Steel Benchmark
Daily Yahoo Finance · NYMEX
What it is
Hot-Rolled Coil (HRC) is a form of flat-rolled steel produced by passing heated steel slabs through a series of rollers to create wide, thin coils of metal. It is the foundational steel product from which most downstream steel items are made — including cold-rolled steel, galvanized steel, auto body parts, appliances, construction materials, industrial equipment, and metal packaging. The US Midwest price is the primary benchmark for domestically produced steel in North America, priced in dollars per short ton.
Who publishes it
HRC steel futures are traded on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX). Physical steel pricing is also surveyed and published by trade publications including Platts (S&P Global) and CRU Group, which produce widely used price assessments. Because US steel operates under significant trade protection (tariffs, quotas, and anti-dumping duties), the Midwest HRC price can diverge substantially from global steel benchmarks during periods of trade policy change.
Trade policy sensitivity
US steel prices are uniquely sensitive to trade policy. The Section 232 tariffs implemented in 2018 (25% on most imported steel) created a persistent premium for US Midwest HRC over global benchmarks. Policy changes such as new tariffs, tariff exclusions, or quota adjustments can move domestic steel prices significantly and rapidly, independent of underlying supply and demand fundamentals. This makes steel the variable in this report most directly affected by government action.
Update frequency
NYMEX futures prices update daily. Physical market price assessments from Platts and CRU update weekly. The futures market provides the most timely daily signal; physical assessments confirm where actual transaction prices are settling.
What a move means for planning
Steel is the most broadly applicable direct cost signal in this category. It matters to any business that buys metal components, equipment, vehicles, structural materials, appliances, or metal packaging — directly or through suppliers who do. Because steel is purchased in contracts that are often set annually or semi-annually, a sustained price move creates a predictable contract-reset event: the next renewal will price at current market levels, not the levels the operating plan assumed. A steel price that has risen 20 to 30% from the planning baseline is a reliable leading indicator of a component or equipment cost conversation arriving at the next contract cycle. For capital-intensive businesses, rising steel also increases the cost basis for new equipment, facility expansions, and infrastructure projects, a planning consideration that often gets underweighted until a project is already in procurement.
Copper
Also known as: "Dr. Copper," COMEX Copper Futures, HG Futures, High-Grade Copper
Daily Yahoo Finance · COMEX
What it is
Copper futures track the price of high-grade copper, priced in dollars per pound on the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. Copper is one of the most electrically conductive metals and is essential in wiring, motors, electronics, plumbing, HVAC systems, electric vehicles, renewable energy infrastructure, and industrial machinery. Its ubiquity across nearly every sector of the economy has earned it the informal title "Dr. Copper," a reference to its reputation as an economic health indicator.
Who publishes it
Copper futures are traded on COMEX (part of CME Group) in New York and on the London Metal Exchange (LME), which is the global benchmark for base metals. Chile is by far the world's largest copper producer (roughly 25–30% of global supply), making Chilean mining output, labor conditions, and energy costs significant price drivers. China is the world's largest copper consumer — accounting for roughly 50–55% of global demand — meaning Chinese economic activity is the dominant demand-side factor.
The "Dr. Copper" signal
Copper's nickname reflects a genuine phenomenon: because copper demand spans construction, manufacturing, consumer electronics, and infrastructure investment simultaneously, sustained moves in copper prices tend to reflect real shifts in global economic activity rather than speculative or seasonal factors. A prolonged copper price rise signals genuine broad-based demand growth; a sustained decline can signal economic contraction before it appears in official statistics. This makes copper a useful macro context variable even for businesses with no direct copper exposure.
Update frequency
Futures prices update daily on both COMEX and LME. LME inventory data (published daily) provides additional real-time signal on whether physical supply is tightening or building.
What a move means for planning
Copper is a cost signal for any business buying electrical systems, motors, electronics, HVAC equipment, wiring, plumbing, or anything containing a circuit board or electric motor. It is also a direct input cost for businesses in construction, utilities, data center infrastructure, and the full electric vehicle supply chain. Rising copper has historically been a reliable leading indicator of cost increases in electrical components arriving 60 to 180 days later, the time it takes for spot price moves to work through supply contracts and manufacturing lead times. Beyond direct cost impact, copper's role as a global economic barometer means a sustained copper price move — up or down — is worth incorporating into the macro assumptions underlying the demand forecast, not just the cost model. Consider: if copper is signaling that global industrial demand is accelerating, what does that mean for the customers you serve?
Aluminum
Also known as: Primary Aluminum, COMEX Aluminum Futures, LME Aluminum
Daily Yahoo Finance · NYMEX
What it is
Aluminum futures track the price of primary aluminum — newly smelted metal as opposed to recycled aluminum. It is priced in dollars per pound and is the second most widely used metal in the world after steel. Aluminum's defining characteristics are its light weight, corrosion resistance, and versatility — properties that make it essential in transportation (aircraft, automobiles, trucks), packaging (cans, foil, food containers), construction (windows, curtain walls, roofing), and consumer electronics. Its production is extraordinarily energy-intensive, which creates a structural link between aluminum prices and energy costs.
Who publishes it
Aluminum futures trade on COMEX (CME Group) in the US and on the London Metal Exchange (LME), which is the global benchmark. China dominates global aluminum production — accounting for roughly 55–60% of world output. Chinese energy policy, production curtailments during power shortages, and export tariff changes therefore have an outsized influence on global aluminum prices. Russia is also a major producer, making geopolitical events a recurring price factor.
The energy cost link
Aluminum smelting requires enormous amounts of electricity: approximately 15,000 kilowatt-hours of power to produce a single metric ton of primary aluminum. This makes aluminum one of the most energy-intensive commodities in existence, and aluminum prices often move in tandem with electricity and natural gas prices. When energy costs spike, aluminum smelters face higher operating costs and may curtail production, tightening supply and pushing prices higher — meaning aluminum can compound energy cost pressure rather than simply reflecting it.
Update frequency
Futures prices update daily. LME inventory data provides daily visibility into whether global aluminum stocks are building or drawing down — a useful leading indicator of near-term price direction.
What a move means for planning
Aluminum is a direct cost signal for packaging-intensive businesses (beverage cans, food containers, foil), transportation manufacturers and their suppliers, construction and building products companies, and any business buying consumer electronics or appliances. Because aluminum is downstream of energy costs, a period of sustained energy price increases can produce a compounding effect, with energy and aluminum rising together, compressing margins from two directions simultaneously. For companies using aluminum packaging, a meaningful aluminum price increase typically flows into can and container pricing within one to two supplier contract cycles. For businesses not buying aluminum directly, rising aluminum is a useful proxy for the health of the global manufacturing economy and the cost pressures facing industrial suppliers throughout the value chain.
Precious Metals — Financial Condition Signals
Gold
Also known as: COMEX Gold Futures, XAU, Spot Gold
Daily Yahoo Finance · COMEX
What it is
Gold futures track the price of gold for delivery at COMEX specifications, priced in dollars per troy ounce. Gold is unlike every other variable in this report — it has very limited industrial demand relative to its price, and its value is driven almost entirely by its role as a store of value, safe-haven asset, and inflation hedge. Central banks hold gold as a reserve asset. Investors buy it when they distrust currencies, fear inflation, or anticipate financial instability. Gold price moves are therefore a direct read on what sophisticated market participants collectively believe about the stability of the monetary system.
Who publishes it
Gold futures are traded on COMEX (CME Group). The spot gold price — the price for immediate delivery — is determined in the over-the-counter interbank market and published by financial data providers globally. The London Bullion Market Association (LBMA) publishes an official daily gold price fix widely used as a reference benchmark in contracts and valuations.
What drives gold prices
Gold moves on a different set of drivers than industrial commodities. The primary factors are: real interest rates (when inflation-adjusted yields on government bonds fall or go negative, gold becomes relatively more attractive); dollar strength (gold is priced in dollars, so a weaker dollar typically lifts gold prices in dollar terms); geopolitical risk (uncertainty drives safe-haven demand); and central bank buying (sustained purchases by central banks — particularly from China, Russia, India, and other non-Western nations — have been a significant price driver in recent years).
Update frequency
Futures prices update continuously during market hours, daily. Gold is one of the most liquid commodities in the world and trades virtually around the clock across global markets.
What a move means for planning
Gold does not directly affect most businesses' cost structures — but it is one of the most honest real-time reads available on whether financial conditions are tightening, whether inflation expectations are rising, and whether global economic confidence is deteriorating. A gold price climbing steadily and setting new highs is markets communicating something important: that a meaningful number of sophisticated investors believe that the purchasing power of currency is under threat, that interest rate policy may not be sufficient to contain inflation, or that geopolitical or financial system stress is elevated. For planning purposes, sustained gold strength is a prompt to stress-test the inflation and interest rate assumptions embedded in your operating plan — particularly your cost escalation assumptions, borrowing cost assumptions, and your capital expenditure discount rates. If gold is signaling something, it is usually worth checking before the quarterly re-forecast conversation.
Silver
Also known as: COMEX Silver Futures, XAG, Spot Silver, "The Poor Man's Gold"
Daily Yahoo Finance · COMEX
What it is
Silver futures track the price of silver for COMEX delivery, priced in dollars per troy ounce. Silver is the most strategically unusual variable in this entire report: it is simultaneously a precious metal (sharing gold's safe-haven and inflation-hedge characteristics) and a significant industrial metal (with substantial real-world demand from electronics, solar panels, electric vehicles, medical devices, and photography). This dual identity means silver responds to both the financial condition signals that drive gold and the industrial demand signals that drive copper, making it a genuinely hybrid indicator unlike any other variable we track.
Who publishes it
Silver futures trade on COMEX (CME Group). Physical silver pricing is referenced through the London Bullion Market Association (LBMA) daily fix. Mexico, Peru, and China are the world's largest silver-producing nations. Unlike gold, where mine supply is relatively price-inelastic, silver supply is partially tied to the production of other metals (it is often extracted as a byproduct of copper, zinc, and lead mining) — meaning silver supply doesn't always respond to price signals the way a standalone commodity would.
The gold-silver ratio
Market analysts often track the gold-silver ratio — how many ounces of silver it takes to buy one ounce of gold. Historically this ratio has averaged in the 50–80x range. When it rises significantly above that range, silver is considered undervalued relative to gold; when it falls sharply, silver is outperforming gold. A narrowing ratio (silver rising faster than gold) often signals that industrial demand is becoming the dominant force in precious metals markets — a sign that economic activity and manufacturing confidence are strengthening.
The green energy demand factor
Silver is an essential component in photovoltaic solar panels — approximately 20 grams of silver are used per panel — making it a direct beneficiary of global solar energy expansion. As government infrastructure programs and corporate sustainability commitments accelerate solar deployment, silver demand from the energy transition is a structural tailwind that can sustain price levels independent of the financial market dynamics that typically drive precious metals.
What a move means for planning
Silver is worth watching for two distinct reasons depending on your business. For businesses with direct silver exposure — electronics manufacturers, solar suppliers, medical device companies, anyone using silver-containing components — price moves translate into direct input cost pressure, often with a lag of one to two supplier contract cycles. Silver's use in electronics means it appears in cost structures that most technology and consumer electronics businesses don't track explicitly until a spike forces the conversation. For businesses without direct silver exposure, silver functions as a hybrid economic signal: when silver is rising strongly alongside gold, it is confirming the financial stress narrative gold is telling; when silver is rising faster than gold and decoupling toward industrial drivers, it is signaling that global manufacturing and energy infrastructure demand is accelerating, intelligence worth incorporating into your demand and growth assumptions. Silver's dual nature makes it one of the most information-dense variables in the entire SignalRadar platform.
Data Sources Reference
New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) / COMEX
Both are divisions of CME Group. NYMEX hosts HRC steel and aluminum futures; COMEX hosts copper, gold, and silver futures — all five metals variables in this report.
cmegroup.com/markets/metals
London Metal Exchange (LME)

The global benchmark exchange for base metals including copper and aluminum. LME prices and daily inventory data are widely used as the international reference for metals pricing and physical supply conditions.
lme.com
London Bullion Market Association (LBMA)
Publishes the daily gold and silver price fixes — reference benchmarks widely used in contracts, valuations, and central bank reserves. The LBMA fix is the institutional standard for precious metals pricing.
lbma.org.uk
S&P Global Platts / CRU Group
Trade publication price assessment services widely used for physical steel transaction pricing in North America. Platts and CRU weekly assessments reflect actual market transaction levels and supplement futures pricing for HRC steel.
spglobal.com/commodityinsights
Yahoo Finance
Provides real-time and historical futures price data for all five metals contracts tracked in this report.
finance.yahoo.com