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Live value-equivalence ratio between Iron Ore and Copper from public commodity-price data.
Delayed reference data, provided “as is”. Informational only — not investment advice.
1 dmtu IRONORE = 0.008 mt COPPER (by market value)
| IRONORE (dmtu) | COPPER (mt) |
|---|---|
| 1 dmtu | 0.008 mt |
| 5 dmtu | 0.04 mt |
| 10 dmtu | 0.08 mt |
| 50 dmtu | 0.38 mt |
| 100 dmtu | 0.77 mt |
| 500 dmtu | 3.83 mt |
| 1,000 dmtu | 7.66 mt |
It’s the value-equivalence ratio of their prices — how many units of Copper (COPPER) equal one unit of Iron Ore (IRONORE) by current market value. Relative-value ratios like this are tracked as spread metrics (e.g. the WTI/Brent spread, the gold/silver ratio, or the gasoline/crude “crack”).
From public commodity-price data: U.S. EIA daily spot prices (energy) and IMF Primary Commodity Prices (monthly; metals, agriculture, natural gas) — both public-domain. Prices are fetched live and cached server-side to keep request volume polite.
No. This page is informational and educational only. The data is delayed and provided “as is” without warranty, and nothing here is a recommendation to buy, sell, or trade. Energy markets are volatile — consult a licensed professional before making financial decisions.
The ratio history can support relative-value research, but genuine arbitrage requires real-time data, low-latency execution, and capital that this informational page does not provide. Treat it as a research aid, not an execution tool.
Energy prices (EIA) are published once per U.S. business day; metals, agriculture, and natural-gas prices (IMF) are published monthly. There is no update on weekends or U.S. holidays, so the figure shown reflects the most recent published price.
Commodity price data: U.S. EIA (energy) and IMF Primary Commodity Prices (metals/ag/natgas), public domain. Provided “as is” without warranty. Informational only — not investment advice.