- Market overview
- Copper prices were volatile but ultimately firmed this week, with benchmark contracts around US$5.75–5.80/lb (roughly US$12,900–13,050/t) by 4–6 March.
- From the January record high near US$14,500/t, prices are still down about 10–15% but remain roughly 23–24% higher than a year ago.
- The recent pullback is still being read as a consolidation after January’s spike rather than a change in fundamentals, with modest inventory rebuilds on the LME and ongoing macro uncertainty (Fed path, China data) tempering near‑term enthusiasm.
- Strategy and outlook
- Market commentary continues to frame copper as tactically choppy but structurally tight, with several banks and consultants flagging deficits emerging from 2026 as demand from electrification, EVs, grids and data centres outpaces mine supply.
- Forecasts from groups such as the International Copper Study Group and independent analysts still point to refined copper demand growth of around 2% per year through 2026, with a deficit on the order of 150,000–330,000 tonnes depending on methodology.
- Wood Mackenzie and others emphasize that years of underinvestment, permitting delays and cost inflation mean incentive prices for new greenfield projects remain well above current spot levels, reinforcing a constructive medium‑ to long‑term price outlook even if 2026 remains volatile.
- Major producer and project updates
- In Chile, authorities are fast‑tracking a pipeline of roughly a dozen copper projects worth close to US$15 billion, aiming to lift national output towards 5.6 Mt over the coming years, although analysts note most will not reach full capacity immediately.
- Industry commentary highlights that, even with new Chilean, Peruvian and North American projects, overall mine capacity additions are modest relative to projected demand, and several existing operations continue to underperform expectations.
- Producers and investors are increasingly focused on “sure‑bet” brownfield expansions and high‑quality districts, with juniors and near‑construction developers highlighted as key beneficiaries of any sustained price strength into the late‑2020s.
- Macro and regional themes
- Analysts continue to describe an “inventory paradox”: visible stocks on exchanges have rebuilt from extremely low levels, but this is occurring alongside signs of concentrate tightness and regionalized storage, including “economically trapped” metal in the US that cannot easily move given current arbitrage and premium structures.
- Policy risk remains a key near‑term driver, with attention on trade measures, tariffs, and industrial policy in major consuming regions, while monetary policy (especially the timing and pace of Fed cuts) is shaping broader appetite for risk assets and industrial metals.
- Traditional exporters such as Chile and Peru, along with emerging producers in the Americas and Africa, continue to be flagged as long‑term winners from elevated copper prices, but community, water and permitting constraints are central to how much of the project pipeline will be delivered.
ConnectOre
The ICAA has released an early version of the ConnectOre digital knowledge platform on this site . This platform will initially harness the collaborative intelligence of the copper industry to accelerate knowledge sharing , connections, innovation , sustainability and to assist the global resources industry to increase operational efficiency and resource optimization and lower future emissions
Go to https://connectore .org