Copper prices jumped to a nine-year high on Thursday as Chinese investors returned from a week-long holiday, adding impetus to a rally that has almost doubled prices since the height of coronavirus worries last March.
Copper for delivery in March was up 2.1% to $3.9025 a pound (about $8,603.58 a tonne) by 1 p.m. in New York, after a slight pullback from the previous day’s trading. Earlier in the session, the contract had reached $3.931 ($8,666.42), its highest since September 2011.
The resumed rally came amid massive volumes. By lunchtime more than 4.3 billion pounds of copper, worth $17 billion at today’s prices had changed hands.
Other industrial metals also jumped, with aluminum at its highest since 2018, nickel its strongest since 2014, tin its strongest since 2012 and lead its highest since 2019.
Underpinning the rally is resurgent demand in China, the biggest metals consumer, expectations of tight supply, and a rush of speculative investment, with many analysts predicting a multi-year bull run.
The most-traded March copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange gained as much as 4.7% to 62,870 yuan ($9,747.29) a tonne, again a level not seen since September 2011.
But the market may be moving too fast, analysts at Commerzbank told Reuters.
“No new data is available to underpin the pronounced rise in metals prices, particularly in the last few weeks,” they said. “Metals prices are currently being driven to a large extent by speculation, and the upswing is beginning to look excessive.”
In January, when copper was already trading near eight-year highs, Wall Street banks were of the belief that the rally can go even further, telling CNBC the metal could reach record highs in the first half of 2022.
(With files from Reuters)