BHP Sees Copper Surplus in Short Term Before ‘Fly-Up’ Prices

August 26, 2024 11:11 PM EDT | By EODHD
 BHP Sees Copper Surplus in Short Term Before ‘Fly-Up’ Prices
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(Bloomberg) -- BHP Group Ltd. offered a cautious near-term outlook for copper, while sticking to the widely-held view that the energy transition metal is eventually headed for severe shortages and much higher prices. Most Read from Bloomberg Sydney Central Train Station Is Now an Architectural Destination Nazi Bunker’s Leafy Makeover Turns Ugly Past Into Urban Eyecatcher Chicago Overcomes DNC Skeptics With Calm, Parties and Sun How the Cortiços of São Paulo Helped Shelter South America’s Largest City With Housing Costs High, Democrats Hone YIMBY Message The world’s second-biggest copper supplier cut its forecast for Chinese demand this year, and warned of a modest global surplus through the end of 2025, in an overview of commodities markets released with its full-year earnings. But it predicted a “fly-up pricing regime” later this decade, driven by a prolonged worldwide deficit. The commentary reflects softening expectations across metals markets as China grapples with slowing economic growth and a protracted property crisis.

Copper prices surged to a record in May before retreating as the Chinese demand outlook deteriorated. Consumption there will grow 1% to 2% this year, down from 6% in 2023, BHP said. “This is a downgrade to our prior expectations, which reflects the ongoing shift in the Chinese real estate market,” the miner said in the overview. There’s likely to be more volatility across commodity markets over the next 18 months, it said. BHP reiterated its view that, over the longer term, global copper supply will struggle to match a looming wave of demand from renewable energy, data centers and a vast expansion in power grids.

The metal has been the subject of eye-watering price forecasts because there are few major new mines in the pipeline. “With the deficit conditions we anticipate in the final third of the 2020s, it’s possible that we enter into a ‘fly-up’ pricing regime, whereby prices disconnect from the cost curve due to systematic excess of demand over supply amid inadequate inventory levels.” Copper rose 0.7% to $9,355 a ton on the London Metal Exchange as of 11:10 a.m. in Shanghai. It’s down around 16% from the all-time high in mid-May. Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek Losing Your Job Used to Be Shameful.

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