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A yawning gap has emerged in views about copper between those counting on mine disruptions to send prices of the major industrial metal to fresh record highs and sceptics who say demand is weak and the market oversupplied.
The benchmark LME three month copper price hit $11,000 a metric ton last week, the strongest since it touched a record peak of $11,104.50 in May last year.
“I actually will disagree with probably every single analyst in this room,” Ken Hoffman of consultancy Traubenbach told the London Metal Exchange Seminar on Monday.
“I have a surplus of copper of around 126,000 metric tons (for 2026) after this year’s deficit of around 60,000 metric tons,” he said at one of the main events of industry gathering LME Week.
Mine disruptions
The LME price has gained 22% so far this year, with recent sharp gains largely due to mine disruptions, including at the world’s second biggest copper mine Gasberg in Indonesia, which has been closed for about a month after a mud-flow disaster.
Disruptions, including in Chile and Congo, have spurred several analysts to expect a surge to fresh record highs, including Citi, who forecast that prices will reach $12,000 a ton within three months.
Bank of America analyst Michael Widmer has pencilled in a market deficit of 350,000 tons for 2026 and has raised his forecasted LME prices to average $11,313 next year and $13,500 in 2027.
Surplus or deficits?
Other analysts were sceptical. A key source of disagreement among them is the impact of a massive shift of copper to the United States this year ahead of the imposition of tariffs, said Alice Fox at Macquarie.
Some 600,000 tons of copper flowed to the US, of which about a third ended up in warehouses registered to the Comex exchange, she said.
“What people are doing is ignoring basically that 400,000 (tons),” she told a briefing last week.
Those supplies, which some analysts do not include in their market balance calculations, are being stored privately, but the large amount means the US has no need for imports in the short term, she said.
Macquarie forecasts copper to average $9,525 in 2026.
“There are no physical signs of tightness other than in Europe where premiums are elevated, and you’ve got stocks growing in China at a time of year when they’re normally declining.”
Buying may dry up
David Wilson at BNP Paribas said high copper prices were being fuelled by speculators and physical buying was in danger of drying up in top metals consumer China.
“Funds can push an industrial metal up, but then the industrial consumers will just go, all right, we’re not buying.“
Hoffman said people underestimated the potential impact of US tariffs on demand.
“2026 will be the year where we see the emperor has no clothes, and that all of a sudden this tariff impact will have an absolutely massive impact on the US consumer and copper demand in the US.”
(By Eric Onstad and Polina Devitt; Editing by Bernadette Baum)