Commodities analysts are forecasting bright futures for copper and aluminum, which are enjoying strong demand and pricing presently.
A New York-based analyst with Goldman Sachs predicts copper will approach $51,000 per metric ton, or $6.80 per pound, by 2025 in his analysis titled “Copper is the new oil.”
“You haven’t seen wider spreads as there is more demand than supply.” -- a contact with a scrap processing company in the Upper Midwest
According to the Business Insider website, Goldman Sachs’ Jeffrey R. Currie predicts that copper will be vital in replacing oil with renewable energy, and “a supply crunch” has the potential to increase pricing “by more than 60 percent in four years.”
Currie’s analysis focuses on the next five years and sees copper rising to as much as $11,000 per ton ($4.98 per pound) by mid-2022 and $15,000 per ton by 2025.
The global transition toward renewable energy could increase copper demand by up to 900 percent on an annual basis to 8.7 million tons by 2030 “if green technologies are adopted en masse,” according to Business Insider.
Currie says copper mining and production aren’t ready for such a rapid increase in demand, however. He adds that the strain already is visible, with copper pricing rising by nearly 80 percent over the last year, though output has not increased similarly.
Analysts say aluminum also will benefit from the transition to green energy and green mobility, with Julian Kettle of U.K.-based Wood Mackenzie saying demand will increase by about a third by 2040, while the World Bank says 6 million tons of the metal will be needed annually by 2050.
Aluminum’s outlook for the year ahead is more muted. Mining.com reports that Fitch Solutions has forecast an aluminum price of $1,850 per metric ton this year compared with $1,731 per metric ton in 2020, noting that increasing supply from China in the global market is expected to limit the rise in prices.
However, the London Metal Exchange (LME) aluminum price has exceeded the Fitch forecast so far in 2021. In March, the LME aluminum alloy settlement price averaged $2,187 per metric ton. In February, it was at $2,080, up from $1,960 in January. This terminal market strength has extended to aluminum scrap prices.
“All of the markets are really quite bullish in metals, whether ferrous or nonferrous,” a contact with a scrap metal processing company based in the Upper Midwest says.
He adds that industrial generation of nonferrous metals remains 20 to 25 percent softer than prepandemic levels, but scrap demand and pricing are strong, even among export consumers.
Scrap consumers have not been widening the spreads they are willing to pay relative to terminal market prices, he says, with the exception of export orders for birch/cliff, the mixture of No. 2 copper wire and No. 2 copper solids and tubing.
Prompt deliveries also are available with red metals and aluminum consumers. Scrap consumers are even looking for spot purchases of bare bright and No. 1 copper, which wasn’t the case in the fourth quarter of 2020 or in January of this year, the contact says. “Customers were working off past orders.”
He says the semiconductor issue in the automotive sector has created intermittent disruptions for the secondary aluminum producers his company supplies. “It doesn’t reduce their desire to get material, but their melt schedules have been affected.” Those affected have had to delay deliveries of some of their scrap orders.
Generation of stamping scrap also has been reduced as a result of the intermittent disruptions, he says.
Regarding export demand, China is showing more interest in clean copper grades, while Malaysia is buying red metal scrap more generally. India and Pakistan are buying twitch and zorba, the shredded aluminum grades.
Whether domestic or export, “Consumers are trying to buy only what they need in the short term,” the contact says. “They don’t want to go long, but they don’t mind paying the market price.”
He says he thinks red metals prices have the room to go much higher. “I think there are going to be high prices and that it will be difficult for consumers to buy enough to widen their spreads.”
When it comes to copper, he adds that the last time pricing was at this level, the spreads were wider for scrap. “You haven’t seen wider spreads as there is more demand than supply.”
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