Copper inventories on the exchanges have exceeded one million tons for the first time in 21 years. Meanwhile, smelter activity has slowed, demand from China has softened, but the price remains elevated despite having retreated from January highs.
The answer lies in the lack of confidence in long-term supply. The market has entered an era of electric intensity. Therefore, copper is no longer simply a cyclical industrial input but a fundamental infrastructure for the 21st century economy.
At a recent BMO global mining conference, Teck Resources Ltd. (NYSE: TECK) CEO jonathan price He framed copper as “at the heart of electrification.” He pointed to three structural factors that are reshaping demand: electrification, digital infrastructure and rapid urbanization.
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Electric vehicles need approximately 4 times more copper than internal combustion vehicles. Solar parks, wind turbines and the grid extensions that connect them contain a lot of copper. Meanwhile, hyperscale data centers, the physical backbone of artificial intelligence and cloud computing, are being deployed at unprecedented speed.
“A disconnect is emerging between the time needed to generate new mining supply and underlying demand drivers,” Price warned, according to Mining Weekly. He clarified that a new data center can be built in just nine months, while a new mine could take more than 20 years.
Major miners are responding with scale and focus. Teck’s $53 billion merger with anglo american plc (OTCQX:AAUKF) would create “anglo teck”, one of the top five copper producers in the world with more than 70% exposure to the metal.
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Others are doubling down organically. After failing to acquire Anglo American, BHP Group Limited (NYSE:BHP) is prioritizing growth in Hidden, North Pampaand the vicuna project rather than pursuing large acquisitions.
Rio Tinto Plc (NYSE:RIO) has allocated 85% of its exploration budget to copper, leading with Oyu Tolgoi expansion in Mongolia. Glencore Plc (OTCPK: GLCNF) is expanding in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, with the goal of producing 300,000 tons annually in Kamoto Copper Company and outline plans to nearly double production over the next decade.
Supply-side numbers are tightening as existing mines face an increase in capital spending just to maintain current production. According to Kitco, a veteran investor Rick’s rule puts that figure at $250 billion over the next 10 years. Attention has therefore shifted to emerging markets.