Copper Goes Parabolic; Why A New Record High Price Could Be At Hand

 | Mar 08, 2021 23:45

  • The red metal soars to a decade high
  • Stockpiles are low, but manipulation is common
  • The case for new record highs in copper
  • Risk rises with the price
  • Levels to watch: Producers are golden, but costs are rising
  • Copper}, the red, nonferrous metal that is an excellent conductor of electricity, is a commodity with many industrial and construction applications. Copper is also the leader of the metals that trade on the London Metals Exchange in the commodity asset class’s base metals sector.

    Many market participants refer to it as “Doctor Copper” because its gyrations have often been seen as a 'tell' on where economic expansion may be headed—its price tends to rise during periods of global economic growth and fall when the economy contracts. Chile is the world’s leading copper-producing nation, and China is the demand side of the fundamental equation. Infrastructure building has spurred China’s almost unending appetite for copper and other base metals and industrial commodities.

    In March 2020, as the global pandemic caused risk-off price action in markets across all asset classes, copper’s price fell to its lowest level since June 2016 when nearby COMEX futures declined to a low of $2.0595 per pound. Since then, copper has been nothing short of explosive, with the price reaching the highest level in a decade at the end of February.

    Copper traded to $4.3755 per pound on the May COMEX futures contract on Feb. 25 and was above the $4 level at the end of last week. “Doctor Copper” has signaled that economic growth, inflationary pressures, or both, are rising quickly in the global economy.

    h2 The red metal soars to a decade high/h2

    The copper price has powered higher over the past four consecutive quarters after reaching a low of $2.5095 in March 2020.