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Weekly Copper Brief – 17 April 2026

Copper Weekly Brief -8th May 2026

Copper Weekly Brief — Week Ending 8 May 2026 Copper ended the week firm but volatile, with LME cash copper at US$13.35/kg and LME 3-month copper at US$13.41/kg on 6…

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Copper Weekly Brief — Week Ending 1 May 2026

Copper ended the week firm but volatile, with geopolitical risk, concentrate tightness and mixed macro signals continuing to drive sentiment. Trading Economics showed COMEX copper at about US$13.18/kg on 1…

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Copper Weekly Brief — Week Ending 24 April 2026

Copper stayed elevated and volatile this week as geopolitical risk, tight concentrate conditions and policy uncertainty continued to support prices. The market is still being driven as much by supply…

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Weekly Copper Brief – 17 April 2026

Geopolitics are pushing up costs, but the clean energy transition and everyday demand for electricity and transport are keeping copper in strong demand worldwide.   Market overview Copper remains in…

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April 17, 2026 · General, Mining

Geopolitics are pushing up costs, but the clean energy transition and everyday demand for electricity and transport are keeping copper in strong demand worldwide.

 

Market overview

Copper remains in a high‑price, high‑volatility regime. LME cash copper is around 13,155 USD/t (15 April), with COMEX futures hovering near 6.0 USD/lb as prices recover much of their initial Iran‑war sell‑off. Sentiment has improved on hopes for de‑escalation and on continued confidence in long‑run demand from electrification and grid investment.

The Iran war is affecting copper mainly through higher energy, freight and consumables rather than a large direct loss of mine supply. Rising LME inventories point to some near‑term softening in physical tightness, but not enough to dislodge the view that the market remains structurally short high‑quality supply through this decade.

Strategy and outlook

Strategically, copper stays structurally bullish but cyclically noisy. Wood Mackenzie’s 2026 outlook emphasises a concentrate bottleneck, softer but not collapsing Chinese demand and a growing “strategic premium” as governments prioritise copper for decarbonisation, electrification and defence‑industrial capability. That means any easing in Middle East risk may trim the geopolitical premium but will not resolve underlying constraints in project pipelines, permitting and processing capacity.

Producers with strong brownfield optionality, robust cost positions and access to low‑carbon energy are best placed. Chinese smelters continue to face extremely weak treatment charges, underscoring how tight concentrate markets can coexist with elevated refined prices and shaping incentives for new smelting and refining capacity in stable jurisdictions.

Major producer and cost themes

Codelco has flagged one of the clearest quantified cost impacts from the war, estimating that disruptions could lift its copper production costs by about 5% via higher diesel, more expensive supplies and tax‑related changes, adding roughly 10 cents per pound to cash costs. Reuters reporting indicates that, despite this cost pressure, the company remains on track to meet its 2026 production targets.

Anglo American has reported a 10% decline in 2025 copper output and trimmed 2026 guidance, highlighting operational challenges at some large legacy assets. In contrast, Freeport has lodged plans for a 7.5 billion USD overhaul at El Abra in Chile to significantly increase production, while Ivanhoe’s Kamoa‑Kakula mine in the DRC has met 2025 targets and reaffirmed 2026 guidance as its new smelter ramps up. Antofagasta has maintained its 2026 production guidance despite lower recent output, but with an explicit assumption that fuel prices ease from war‑elevated levels.

Macro, demand and policy

Copper is trading as both a cyclical growth barometer and a strategic metal. Prices respond to shifts in US‑Iran ceasefire headlines, Chinese policy and global risk appetite, while being anchored by robust expectations for energy‑transition, grid and EV‑related demand. For Australia, this environment underscores the value of responsibly produced, low‑carbon copper and the importance of initiatives such as ICAA’s Roadmap to Zero Emission Copper Mine of the Future in keeping local supply competitive in a carbon‑constrained world.

 

ConnectOre and ICAA

ConnectOre is a digital knowledge platform designed to harness the collaborative intelligence of the base‑metals industry and aggregate insight to accelerate innovation, sustainability and the global resources industry of the future. It is being developed to bring together mining companies, OEMs, researchers and innovators to solve cross‑industry challenges in decarbonisation, productivity and social licence using shared data and analysis.

The International Copper Association Australia’s role is to convene the copper value chain in Australia and link operational decision‑making to global expectations on sustainability, electrification and responsible production. Through initiatives such as ConnectOre, ICAA aims to help members translate market, policy and technology signals into practical strategies for resilient, high‑value copper supply.

 

Featured

Copper Weekly Brief -8th May 2026

Copper Weekly Brief — Week Ending 8 May 2026 Copper ended the week firm but volatile, with LME cash copper…

Read More

Copper Weekly Brief — Week Ending 1 May 2026

Copper ended the week firm but volatile, with geopolitical risk, concentrate tightness and mixed macro signals continuing to drive sentiment.…

Read More

Copper Weekly Brief — Week Ending 24 April 2026

Copper stayed elevated and volatile this week as geopolitical risk, tight concentrate conditions and policy uncertainty continued to support prices.…

Read More

Weekly Copper Brief – 17 April 2026

Geopolitics are pushing up costs, but the clean energy transition and everyday demand for electricity and transport are keeping copper…

Read More

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