Break-even selling price per metal, per lot
Allocated = the workbook's method: purchase cost split across Pt/Pd/Rh, divided by recoverable ounces. Solo = the price at which selling 100% of that metal alone covers the lot's full cost + treatment/fees with the other two held at 0%. Solo is the number that matters if you are deciding which single metal to liquidate.
Required price for target profit at current sale blend
Holds every other input at its current value and solves the one price that hits the target, given each metal's current sale %. “—” means that metal's sale % is 0, so no price can carry the lot.
Global assumptions
Settlement prices ($/ozt) safe input
These are the prices the workbook's profit line actually uses (solved exactly from “The required amount”).
Reference / market prices ($/ozt) safe input
The workbook's side block (N16:O29) values the same ounces ~19% higher with these. The gap between decks is unexplained — see Accountant Review.
Returnable / recovery rates safe input
Back-solved from the workbook: 97.5% Pt/Pd, 91.5% Rh — standard refiner returnables. Verified on all nine metal/lot pairs.
Cost allocation used by the workbook's break-even rows safe input
Profit target solver
Lock sale percentages (the solver keeps these fixed)
Example: lock Rh at 100%, Pt and Pd at 0%, solve “required price of Rhodium” for your target — that is the Rh price you need if Rhodium carries the lot alone. If the target is unreachable, the solver says why and shows the closest achievable scenario.
Future price assumptions editable scenario inputs — not price forecasts or financial advice
Defaults follow your stated view: Rh flat (= today's settlement price), Pt +15%, Pd +12%. Change them to whatever you believe — every figure below recomputes.
Sell today vs hold to future
“Sell all today” prices every ounce at today's settlement deck. “Current blend + hold” sells your dashboard percentages today and values the remainder at the future deck. “Hold all” values everything at the future deck (ignores carrying cost and price risk — both are real).
Which metal to sell first
Ranking is pure arithmetic on your own assumptions: the metal with the lowest future-vs-today ratio costs you the least upside when liquidated first. It is not a market prediction.
Accountant review — discrepancies found in the workbook
What was verified and preserved
Dry weight = received − moisture (matches “Weight analyzer” on all lots). Ounces = dry lb × ppm ÷ 10⁶ × 14.58333 ozt/lb, rounded to 3 dp, × recovery (97.5/97.5/91.5%), rounded again — reproduces all nine ounce figures exactly. Gross, net, and profit reproduce the workbook to the cent on lots A and B, and on lot P after the $500 correction. Break-even rows 35–38 reproduce exactly. Market-deck side block reproduces exactly. 40 automated checks pass.