MANIFOLD
Most expensive elemental prices decrease by end of year?
7
Ṁ575Ṁ313
Dec 31
59%
Beryllium (857 USD/KG)
55%
Neptunium (660k USD/KG)
55%
Rhodium (147k USD/KG)
55%
Caesium (61.8k USD/KG)
50%
Scandium (3.46k USD/KG)
50%
Thulium (3k USD/KG)
50%
Krypton (290 USD/KG)
45%
Iridium (144k USD/KG)
38%
Technetium (100k USD/KG)
38%
Osmium (30k USD/KG)
38%
Rubidium (15.5k USD/KG)
38%
Lutetium (643 USD/KG)
34%
Thallium (4.2k USD/KG)
34%
Xenon (1.8k USD/KG)
34%
Terbium (658 USD/KG)
34%
Dysprosium (307 USD/KG)
34%
Neon (630 USD/KG)
33%
Palladium (49.5k USD/KG)
28%
Platinum (69k USD/KG)
24%
Hafnium (12k USD/KG)

How will the prices of the most expensive elements change between now February 20th 2026, and the end of the year.

➡️ Specifically, which decrease in price in USD.

There shouldn't be ambiguity between different sources, so for now I'm using https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prices_of_chemical_elements

which is very detailed, but I'm interested in resolving according to the actual price and open to using a different source instead and being corrected and resolving accordingly if needs be.

I've selected the most expensive ones from the list that aren't specific isotopes, and had a nailed down price. The price when this market was created is included in each item.

If the price changes too little to notice at this resolution of recording the prices, then that item will resolve N/A.


Updated some previously inaccurate prices, as of market creation date.

Hafnium source, feb 23rd 2026:

https://strategicmetalsinvest.com/hafnium-prices


I may need to resolve these to N/A if the price today is genuinely unknown:

Neon Source 2016:

http://www.leonland.de/elements_by_price/en/list

Krypton Source, 1999:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prices_of_chemical_elements

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bought Ṁ10 NO

Cool market, can you add an example in the market description for clarity? For example if gold price increases how will it resolve? Yes or No?

@EstMtz If gold decreases then its market will resolve yes.

@AlanTennant thanks, the challenge with this market will be getting accurate up to date prices. Start with the more common metals. For example, goldprice.org could be a good source for gold price. Currently about 164k usd per kilogram. The other challenge is the old prices Wikipedia lists, everything has probably increased in price by now.

@EstMtz feel free to provide updates or better sources

@EstMtz One source says gold = 163k per KG, so that's even more unlikely to drop below 75.43k, I'll use historic data is available, and update here if I'm able to edit items with said historic data for market creation date.

@EstMtz fixed gold to be correct for market creation date :)

@EstMtz the wiki needs editing too

@EstMtz updated silver price (as of yesterday)

@EstMtz platinum fixed

@EstMtz hafnium fixed

bought Ṁ10 NO

@AlanTennant will you be providing the sources for each of the updated fixed prices?

@EstMtz which one do you want?

@EstMtz Hafnium updated from https://strategicmetalsinvest.com/hafnium-prices

20th feb price.

@AlanTennant Also put in the description.

@AlanTennant Thulium was an old price 2003

@EstMtz fixed now?

@AlanTennant On the Wikipedia chart the prices are from varying years. Two columns to the right of the price has the year and the next column has the source. Thulium at $3k per kg is from 2003. I'm not trying to be nitpicky for each of these, but it's challenging to place predictions when the starting price hasn't been defined for all of them.

Gold is rapidly gaining in value, even more than it usually does.

Silver and platinum are precious metals, used in jewellery.

Neon and Xenon are noble gasses, and can be used to make coloured lights for the outside of shops.

Caesium explodes when wet.

A lot of the rest of the options are radioactive.

As expensive as Lithium and Neodymium are, they don't even make the list, and are still cheaper than all these elements.

Changes to the price of the USD may also influence things.

removed accidental duplicate

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