Investigate the 1989 rhodium panic, where a sudden Soviet export halt of a microscopic metal brought the global automotive industry to its knees.
How did a microscopic, virtually unknown precious metal manage to bring the entire global automotive manufacturing industry to its knees in a matter of weeks? The 1989 Rhodium Blackout is a terrifying masterclass in the absolute fragility of international industrial supply chains.
Rhodium is the crucial chemical catalyst required to scrub toxic emissions from car exhausts. In the late 1980s, the Soviet Union controlled a massive percentage of the global supply. Due to severe bureaucratic incompetence and chaotic political restructuring, the Soviets abruptly and entirely halted their rhodium exports. Auto manufacturers, desperate to meet strict new environmental laws, panicked. They engaged in a blind, aggressive hoarding war, driving the price of rhodium up by an astonishing 500% almost overnight, completely destabilizing the profitability of global automotive assembly lines.
This sharp financial history explores the danger of single-point resource reliance. It documents the ruthless panic buying of corporate procurement officers, the chemical impossibility of substituting rhodium, and the eventual market crash once the Soviet shipping delays were finally resolved.
Protect your supply chain from the shadows. The Rhodium Blackout demonstrates that the most advanced manufacturing empires in the world can be completely paralyzed by the absence of a single ounce of dust.
Sean Everett
Author
rhodium price spike 1989 catalytic converter metals soviet export halt automotive supply chain platinum group metals commodity hoarding macroeconomic shocks