Interesting commentary from mining analysts in the UK.
Copper prices push past two-year highs as Codelco struggles to ramp up production
- LME prices hit $10,215/t yesterday, before easing somewhat to $10,115/t today.
- The move was supported by more positive Chinese factory data, having climbed 15% in April on a concentrate squeeze.
- Rock bottom TC/RC fees have fuelled speculation of production cuts from China’s smelter groups, which produce over 50% of global refined copper.
- Concentrate availability has been thin owing to Cobre coming offline and production hits from Anglo American and MMG.
- Positivity is coming from China’s property sector, with developer equities climbing yesterday on rumours of easing home purchase restrictions in major cities.
- However, fabricators, a major downstream source of demand, are reporting thin margins, suggesting fundamentals still remain weak for Chinese copper buyers.
- This is reflected in weak Yangshan premiums, which hit zero last week as import demand remains stagnant.
- A PWC report suggests 54% of copper output is exposed to climate change-driven drought.
- Chile and Zambia have both recently suffered from water shortages, which weigh on processing plants and hydroelectric power availability.
- Codelco announced yesterday it is looking forward to a recovery in production, expecting a rise in production into H2 following a Q1 decline.
- Conversely, sliding inventories suggesting restocking has picked up as downstream users look to lock in supply as prices continue to rally.
Conclusion: While it is possible 3-month copper may dip below $10,000/t longer-term fundamentals appear to indicate markedly higher prices and the market can smell the blood of a number of short sellers.
- Copper demand is currently made up of:
- Construction 28%, Power 16%, Consumer goods 13%, Transport 13%, Industrial equipment 12%, HVAC ‘Heating Ventillation and Air conditioning’ 7.5% and Other 10%
- New demand drivers:
- AI Artificial Intelligence – use of energy requires bigger copper cables
- Datacentres for Gig economy continue to expand and to multiply 1GW = 25-50,000t est. of copper in cabling in total
- US may add 8GW in 2024, 12GW in 2025 and 16GW in 2026 after 3GW in 2023 according to GS.
- EVs – require Over two times as much copper 53.2kg vs 22.3kg according to the IEA
- EV chargers – a 200 kW charger uses 8kg of copper. Smaller 3.3kW charger uses 0.7kg of copper (ICA)
- Electric busses use 129-292kg of copper in their batteries representing 85% of the total vehicle content (ICA)
- Solar, wind, hydropower, nuclear power cabling
- Solar uses 2,450-6,985kg /MW of power generation (cuspuk)
- Hydropower 4,000 kg / MW
- Wind power, onshore 2,500 – 6,400 kg / MW
- Wind power, offshore 10,500 kg / MW
- Grid cabling – high tension overhead cables are made of aluminium, buried cables are almost always copper.
- China state stimulating the finishing of apartments. This should drive copper demand for domestic cabling and appliances
- China state also looking to stimulate demand for consumer goods. Again driving demand for a range of metals.
- Supply side disruption:
- Shortage of concentrates:
- Cobre Panama – shut down indefinitely
- Grasberg – export license runs out in May. Freeport’s new Indonesian smelter currently expected to commission by the year-end
- Copper concentrate Tc/Rcs have been seen at negative levels for the first time in our recollection.
- Shortage of new mines: There are no new large copper mines in development
- Existing giant copper mines struggling
- Increased risk of slope failure
- Falling grades
- Capacity being stretched as mines strain under the pressure to produce more copper.
- Zambia, drought, and lack of hydropower may curtail copper production in Zambia and DRC
- Peru – Las Bambas communities likely to disrupt supplies further on unapproved expansion of copper mine
- Chile – suffering lack of investment at Codelco and elsewhere due to government threats to raise taxes
- Other influences:
- Investors are generally long with many now focussed on copper as a longer-term investment on substantial expansion in demand
- China SRB ‘State Reserve Bureau’ may have dumped metal into Shanghai warehouses to suppress prices and to fulfil local demand
- Contango levels are easing in copper spreads, although remain in deep negative territory suggesting that spot demand is not as strong as current prices would suggest.
- We suspect a major driving force in copper’s recent move has been macro-economic speculators and momentum-driven CTA funds, with positioning extended on most major exchanges.
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