Goldman Predicts Double Digit Decline in Copper Price over Year
Demand has been relatively robust with imports from China, responsible for nearly half of the global trade, hitting records during the first half of 2016.
Apart from below average disruptions at existing operations and relentless cost cutting by producers, investment bank Goldman Sachs warned on Friday in a note discussed on Bloomberg TV that the price of copper wouldn’t withstand an expected surge in additional supply through the rest of the year and in 2017: “Company guidance and our estimates suggest that copper is entering the eye of the supply storm”
Goldman tracks the top 20 copper mining companies accounting for roughly 60% of global output. These miners increased output 5% year-on-year in the first half of 2016, and are expected to up production as much as 15% in the coming quarters, according to the report.
Freeport’s Grasberg mine in Indonesia and Cerro Verde operation in Peru, BHP Billiton’s Escondida, the world’s largest copper mine and First Quantum’s Sentinel mine in Zambia are adding tonnes early next year, while Minmetal’s giant Las Bambas mine in Peru is also ramping up production.
The investment bank is now predicting a double digit decline in the price over the next 12 months hitting a low of $4,000 a tonne ($1.80 a pound) during this period.
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