Quarterly Outlook
Equity outlook: The high cost of global fragmentation for US portfolios
Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Head of Commodity Strategy
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Key points:
The copper market continues to trade within a wide range, with some of the price action being driven by market participants trying to preempt what tariff level, if any, the US Commerce Department eventually will recommend the Trump administration apply on US imports. Just like steel and aluminium, Trump has threatened to impose a 25% duty on all copper imports—a move that could roil the global market for one of the world’s most important metals—not least considering a robust demand outlook, recently further enhanced by an energy transition which is expected to increase demand for a key conductor of power towards EVs, AI-related data centres, and cooling as parts of the world continue to get warmer. The spread is currently coming down amid strong demand in China, reflected by an ongoing slump in stockpiles monitored by the Shanghai Futures Exchange and the highest premium for imported copper since December 2023. Overall, an ongoing decline in copper stocks monitored by the futures exchanges in London and Shanghai has only been partly offset by a rise in New York, albeit stockpiles there has risen to a six-year high driven by hoarding ahead of the mentioned tariff announcement. China has seen the biggest reduction during the past ten weeks, with SHFE-monitored stockpiles down 67% to just 89 kt.
The tariffs, designed to protect local producers and foster increased US production and refining capacity, would, however, leave US manufacturers paying much more for their metal than rivals overseas. The probe launched in February under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act is now expected to be ready within weeks, well ahead of the 270-day deadline, and the eventual announcement is very likely to trigger a major price adjustment in the market—not least in the spread between London and New York copper—which reflects the market's attempt to guess the eventual tariff level. Following a slump in early April to 6%, the spread has been hovering around 15% before declining to a current level around 8.5%.
The market worries that the current flow of copper heading towards the US ahead of the tariff announcement will be left stranded there until consumed, thereby exacerbating an already tight global market into the second half of 2025. By Q3 2025, Goldman Sachs estimates 45-60% of global reported copper inventories could be in the US, which accounts for just 6% of global refined demand—leaving the rest of the world with very low stocks of this important transition metal.
This tightness, albeit a function of trade dislocation, may in the coming months discourage new short positions driven by trade war-related growth worries from entering the market, thereby limiting the downside to the copper price through 2025.
The high-grade copper future has settled into a wide range, with USD 4 per pound having proved to offer support on numerous occasions, while the latest upside spike was mostly related to the tariff probe briefly driving the HG premium over London above 16%. In the short term, the London Metal Exchange (LME) contract offers a better insight into the global supply and demand outlook, which, according to Zijin Mining Investment Shanghai, a unit of China’s top copper miner, is currently being underpinned by the mentioned strength in China, where apparent demand growth is running near double-digit levels this year, driven by strong orders from State Grid Corp, the world’s single largest buyer of copper, and rising production of copper-intensive goods such as air-conditioning units to electric vehicles.Recent commodity articles:
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