Copper Supercycle Interrupted

Aug. 22, 2024 - 4 minutes 30 seconds
Spools of copper for manufacturing.

China Weakness, U.S. Recession Fears and Bank of Japan Unexpected Tightening Knocks Copper Off Highs

The outsized interest from speculative money managers such as specialist hedge funds, which was supported by copper’s long-term bullish narrative from the energy transition and projected deficit conditions for 2024, prompted the rally earlier this year. Prices rallied to a high of US$11,105/t in May and kept it trading in the US$10,000/t territory in July. Until quite recently, copper outperformed U.S. equities, the bond market, gold and other industrial metals.

This rally was despite the fact there was very little evidence of strong demand or tightness on the ground in China. Even with projections about an undersupply of the metal in the future, there seems to be more than enough of it available right now, in large part because China is copper’s biggest buyer. Data from bourses around the world, including the London Metals Exchange, Shanghai, and CME, show that aggregate inventories of the metal have been rising to their highest levels since May 2024.

However, Copper's outperformance has come to an end recently. Time spreads have collapsed since May, and the front end of the curve is quite depressed. With China not delivering the expected stimulus, which the market hoped would get it out of its housing and broader economic funk, fears are growing that along with a likely slowdown in the U.S., these developments will prompt a decline in copper demand growth.

Along with an unexpected hike in the Bank of Japan policy rate, these factors prompted investors to reduce their yen-carry exposure, which reduced leverage and thus sapped enthusiasm to hold long positions in the red metal and drove prices lower. This drop in prices precipitated a negative knock-on effect from technical traders and systematic trend following funds (CTAs).

Weak China, U.S. Economic Fears End Copper Outperformance

With economic weakness becoming a defining feature of the world's two largest economies, concerns are rising that demand (construction, industrial) will slow and that the copper market will not be tight next year. Indeed, we are projecting a modest surplus, which typically means that any price recovery will be much more muted than many in the market were projecting just a few weeks ago.

In addition to China’s economy sputtering, the U.S. is leaning into protectionism, imposing tariffs against Beijing on everything from electric vehicles to batteries and semiconductors to solar modules. The European Union announced tariffs on Chinese battery-only electric vehicles in July, with Canada also in a well-defined protectionist mode. At the same time, mine supply is set to peak in 2026 as output is expected to grow 4.6% and 4.8% in 2025 and 2026 respectively — much faster than demand, which is projected to increase on average at just over 3% over the next two years.

While we don’t anticipate a sustained correction, given a pending Fed easing and some cyclical demand improvements, we do project a relatively anaemic recovery from the current lows over the next 12 months. Prices will likely have a hard time breaking the US$10,000/t mark for a sustained period next year, delaying the oft-cited pending copper supercycle. But there is a risk of a serious rout should the U.S. fall into recession. Copper has historically dropped 10-60% peak-to-trough during a contraction.

Copper Supercycle Interrupted Not Eliminated

After mine supply peaks in 2026 and from then on, supply will be required from new projects to satisfy the demand that will be underpinned by the Energy Transition. Notwithstanding a period of above-average mine output growth over the near-term, copper still faces a structural deficit in the refined metal market. With stocks in days of consumption trending below the long-term average of 65 days through to 2033, this tightness should serve as significant price support according to Woodmac.

The challenge will be the industry's ability to construct new mines on schedule to match demand growth. With a poor economy over the next 12 months, we are likely to see a loss of appetite for new investment in mining capacity, suggesting that proposed projects are delayed or do not find investors. If demand grows and supply does not, prices may well shoot higher.

At the same time, poor ore quality, difficult geographies, skilled labor scarcities and high capital equipment costs all suggest that copper prices may need to be significantly higher to incentivize new mine construction.

In addition, miners are faced with resource nationalism that may take the form of much higher taxes or other royalties to governments, geopolitical disturbances such as war, or permitting issues (e.g., Panama's recent closure of a major copper mine). This suggests that these risks should add a premium to long- term copper prices in the more distant future, as they will limit primary growth and escalate costs.

There are risks that demand growth does not materialize as expected due to politics, a lack of social acceptance, high cost and infrastructure challenges. Overall, we do think that the risks point to higher prices for copper in the longer-term, but not before a period of weakness in the next year or so, as elevated inventories and weaker economic growth weigh on prices.

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Portrait of Bart Melek

Global Head of Commodity Markets Strategy, TD Securities

Portrait of Bart Melek


Global Head of Commodity Markets Strategy, TD Securities

Portrait of Bart Melek


Global Head of Commodity Markets Strategy, TD Securities

Bart provides commentary on commodity and various other financial markets and how they relate to the sectoral and macroeconomic outlook. Bart is a sought after media source for many leading print publications and business television programs. His forecasts are also part of the global consensus. Bart joined TD Securities in 2011 and has over 20 years of experience analyzing global precious metals, base metals, energy, and financial markets, as well as North American and global economies.