A global copper surplus currently in the making is expected to get worse in the next 18 months as market disruptions have created greater uncertainty in the factors affecting supply and demand for the metal, a market’s insider report shows.
According to the International
Wrought Copper Council (IWCC), which represents copper and copper alloy producers,
supply is expected to surpass demand by 285,000 tonnes this year as a result of
coronavirus-related disruptions. The figure would likely rise to 675,000 tonnes
in 2021, the industry body said.
Unlike gold, considered a safe haven asset, copper remains largely ruled by laws of supply and demand. With mines shutting down or curtailing operations and global economic growth projections being tossed aside amid the coronavirus pandemic, both supply and demand of the red metal continue to be severely affected.
On May 19 prices for the metal hit their lowest since January 2016, with three-month copper futures on the London Metal Exchange (LME) touching $4,371 per tonne. That’s down from a high of around $6,340 per tonne in mid-January.
Plot twist
“These are unprecedented times and
the copper industry is not immune from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic,”
the IWCC said.
The report confirms a plot twist for copper, which was supposed to thrive this year amid a projected supply deficit.
Demand for the metal, widely used
in construction and increasingly in the electric vehicles (EVs) sector, is
forecast to fall by 5.4% this year, the IWCC said. The industry body, however, believes
demand could rebound by 4.4% in 2021.
Refined copper production this year
is forecast to be 22.91 million tonnes against demand of 22.625 million tonnes.
In 2021 output seen climbing to 24.3 million tonnes, with demand at 23.625
million tonnes.
In China, the world’s largest consumer
of the metal, refined copper demand will slide 2.8% to 11.87 million tonnes
this year. In 2021, however, should rise by 2.6% to 12.175 million tonnes in
2021, according to the IWCC.
In Europe, refined copper
consumption is seen falling 6.4% in 2020 before climbing 5.4% to 2.927 million
tonnes next year.
In North America, including the
United States, Canada and Mexico, refined copper demand this year is expected
to slip 6.9% to 2.223 million tonnes before registering a 5.3% upturn in
2021.
IWCC based its estimates on publicly
available information and input from the International Copper Study Group
(ICSG), a global research and marketing body.