National Post

Copper hits highest price since 2011

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Copper climbed to the highest in almost a decade as the global recovery from the pandemic extended a rally in metals markets.

Aluminum is surging and iron ore jumped to a fresh high as commoditie­s advance toward the highs of the last supercycle. Metals are benefiting as the world’s largest economies announce stimulus programs and climate pledges as they rebuild from the coronaviru­s shock.

The U.S. recovery is accelerati­ng and President Joe Biden’s Us$2.25-trillion infrastruc­ture plan will highlight sectors like electric cars, driving further gains in commoditie­s critical to the green-energy transition. That’s coming alongside a continued economic boom in China, where a push to reduce emissions is filtering through to supply cuts for some metals just as demand is picking up.

“The super part of the copper supercycle is happening right now,” Max Layton at Citigroup Inc. said by phone. “The bullish outlook is decarboniz­ation-led, and I’m totally onboard with that for the next three to four years, but the super part of this cycle is actually more related to the scale of global stimulus.”

Copper rose as much as 2.4 per cent to US$9,780 a tonne in London, the highest since August 2011, and settled at US$9,751 at 5:51 p.m. local time. The metal has gained 26 per cent on the London Metal Exchange this year. Iron ore in Singapore jumped to the highest since contracts launched in 2013, while Chinese steel futures reached fresh highs.

Copper’s integral role in everything from wiring to motors is fanning expectatio­ns for further gains as nations roll out aggressive climate targets. Goldman Sachs and trader Trafigura Group expect the metal to top 2011’s record of US$10,190 and surpass US$15,000 in the coming decade as demand outstrips supply.

“Copper could hardly peak and pull back with this backdrop,” said Harry Jiangwith Yonggang Resources Co. Tightness in markets outside China may lead to a supply squeeze, which will offset current weakness in Chinese demand, he said.

Investors are signalling appetite for metals futures. Aggregate open interest in SHFE copper is at the highest in more than a year, and positions in aluminum have climbed.

Still, risks to the rally are building in the short term. A rise in coronaviru­s cases and new variants threaten to derail reopening plans in some regions such as India, while investors are concerned about a possible pullback in Chinese stimulus. Prices could become overly extended for industrial uses, according to Xiao Fu at BOCI Global Commoditie­s.

“I’m not in the $15,000 copper camp. There will be some automatic stabilizer­s before we approach those kinds of levels, and there will be some demand adjustment,” Xiao said by phone from London. “And let’s not forget: the pandemic is not over, and cases are still surging in many parts of the world.”

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