Copper Nears Record as US-China Optimism Adds to Supply Woes 
  ca.finance.yahoo.com
    Bloomberg News   Mon, October 27, 2025 at 7:22 a.m. PDT 2 min read     (Bloomberg) --  Copper advanced toward a record as optimism over an imminent US-China  trade deal added steam to a rally driven by a slew of disruptions at  some of the world’s biggest mines.
    Signs the  world’s top two economies are set to reach an accord this week improve  the outlook for consumption of the industrial metal at a time of  heightened concerns over production setbacks from South America to  Indonesia.
  Prices on the London Metal Exchange rose as much as 1.2% to $11,094 a ton, roughly $10 shy of a record reached in May 2024.
    Copper  has rallied by a quarter this year — recovering from a deep selloff  triggered by President Donald Trump’s trade war escalation — as  investors focus on a tenuous balance for supplies of the metal that’s  key to global electrification efforts. BHP Group, the world’s biggest  miner, sees global demand increasing by around 70% by 2050.
  Over  the past few months, flooding at Ivanhoe Mines Ltd.’s Kamoa-Kakula  complex in the Democratic Republic of Congo, a rock blast at Codelco’s  top mine in Chile and a massive fatal mudslide at Freeport McMoRan  Inc.’s Grasberg mine in Indonesia propelled prices higher. The  constraints brought home doubts that producers will be able to keep up  with the growing use of copper in electric cars, data centers and other  applications in the coming years. 
    Meanwhile,  demand for the metal used in wires, batteries and pipes stands to  benefit from easing friction between Washington and Beijing. Trump  walked back his threat of 100% tariffs against China while Beijing  paused plans to expand rare earth export controls for a year, according  to US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent
      
  
        Copper  wavered after Washington and Beijing recently staked out tough  positions in the run-up to trade talks and resumed its rally as tensions  eased. Underpinning the increase, Freeport cut its copper sales  guidance in September after the accident at the giant Grasberg mine.
    The  dollar’s decline this year has added further momentum to metals, making  commodities priced in the US currency more attractive. A gauge of the  greenback’s strength has fallen around 8% since mid-January as investors  bet the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates further. Expectations  that lower interest rates will boost economic growth has also given the  raw materials a boost.
     LME copper gained 0.2% to $10,981.50 a metric ton as of 3:20 p.m. On the LME. Most other metals advanced. |