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Copper

Copper prices are vulnerable to the downside in the coming months on a narrowing global supply-demand deficit. We expect that copper prices will plummet by 15-20% from the current level. However, the lingering structural supply deficit will put a floor under copper prices after this correction.

CCP policy stimulus will boost growth in China this year. Copper prices breached $4.00/lb on COMEX this week, as expected. We continue to forecast $4.50/lb this year, with upside price risk dominating. Iron ore also will rise, but economic and regulatory policy uncertainty clouds the outlook. We remain long the COMT and XME ETFs. We are getting tactically long BRL/USD and AUS/USD on the back of our metals view, which is constrained by China’s reversion to absolute autocracy and ability to reverse policy suddenly and unpredictably.

Copper markets will remain tight on the back of growing physical deficits and pressure on capex. Policy-rate increases by central banks, uncertainty over re-opening in China and its fiscal-stimulus plans in the short run restrain risk taking. In the long run, the implications of China’s inward turn will keep supply-concentration risk for metals high, given its dominance of base-metals refining globally. Notwithstanding the disconnect between physical and futures markets, we remain bullish metals mining equities, and remain long the XME ETF.

Executive Summary EU Metal Industry Under Threat EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry Russia’s threat to cut off all remaining exports of natural gas to the EU via Ukraine will further imperil the bloc’s struggling metals industry, particularly aluminum smelting – where half of its capacity already has been shut – and zinc refining. The EU will have to prioritize energy security over its renewable-energy goals, given the challenges its manufacturing industries will confront for the next 3-5 years. Surging imports of raw copper concentrates and unwrought metal will consolidate the global dominance of China’s copper refiners, which sharply increased their treatment and refining charges this week. The US likely will see more investment in metals mining and refining on the back of the EU distress, which realistically cannot be addressed until gas and power prices fall to levels that allow them to sustain their operations. Bottom Line: Ongoing supply shocks to the EU’s base-metals industry will force the bloc to prioritize energy security over its renewable-energy goals. This will drive the bloc’s demand for liquified natural gas (LNG) and oil higher, even after short-term measures to increase LNG intake and distribution capacity are completed over the next 2-3 years. We expect the equities of oil and gas producers to outperform metals miners over this period. After being stopped out, we will be re-instating our long XOP ETF position at tonight’s close. Feature Earlier this month, Eurometaux, the EU metals lobbying group, published a memo to the European Commission drawing attention to “Europe’s worsening energy crisis and its existential threat to our future.”1 This is not hyperbole. At the heart of the industry’s woes is a chronic shortage of energy – in any form – for industrial use. Utilities are signing long-term LNG supply contracts to address this shortage, but they can expect to wait 3-4 years or more before gas arrives on Europe’s shores.2 Spot and one-off cargoes will become available over that time, but most of the existing LNG production is under long-term contract. Oil, coal, and nuclear energy are available for power generation, industrial applications and space-heating, and they increasingly are being used in the bloc, but these too are constrained.3 Measures to address the chronic energy shortage hammering the EU base-metals industry will take years to effect, and could come too late to meaningfully preserve existing refining capacity, which has been contracting for years (Chart 1).4 Most of the EU’s metals production is accounted for by aluminum, copper and zinc, which are extremely energy intensive, copper only less so (Chart 2). The surge in LNG prices following Russia's invasion of Ukraine propelled electricity prices higher, given gas is the marginal fuel for EU power generation (Chart 3). This crushed zinc and aluminum refining. Half of the EU’s aluminum smelter capacity – ~ 1mm MT – will be curtailed or shuttered this year, according to European Aluminum.5 Chart 1EU Metal Industry Under Threat EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry Chart 2EU Metals Are Extremely Energy Intensive EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry Chart 3EU Power Price Surge Crushes Metals Refining EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry The surge in European electricity prices and the resulting curtailment or shuttering of zinc refining paced the 2.6% y/y decline in global output in 1H22, which took global production down to 6.77mm MT, according to the International Lead and Zinc Study group. Europe accounts for ~ 15% of global zinc refining.6 Refined zinc consumption fell 3% y/y in 1H22 to 6.74mm MT. China Bingeing On Copper Global refined copper output in the January – July 2022 period slightly outpaced usage – with 3% growth in the former and 2.6% growth in the latter, according to the International Copper Study Group (ICSG). On the back of this report, we lowered our expected supply growth estimate to 3% this year, (Chart 4). This brings our estimate for total supply down by ~400k MT vs. our previous iteration to 25.3mm MT. We are keeping our estimate of 2023 supply growth rate at ~ 4.5%. Our copper demand estimate is a function of real GDP estimated by the World Bank, and remains at just under 26mm MT and 27.2 mm MT for 2022 and 2023 respectively. As a result of the lower 2022 production growth rate, our forecasted copper deficit has widened to ~ 605k tons in 2022 and 480k tons in 2023. The mismatch in supply and demand levels will keep inventories in China and the West under pressure (Charts 5A and 5B). Chart 4Copper Supply Estimate Lowered Copper Supply Estimate Lowered Copper Supply Estimate Lowered   Chart 5AChinese Copper Inventories Continue To Draw Chinese Copper Inventories Continue to Draw Chinese Copper Inventories Continue to Draw Chart 5BAs Do Stocks In The West As Do Stocks In The West As Do Stocks In The West China’s imports of copper condensates – the raw material used to make refined copper – surged to 16.65mm tons over January – August 2022, up 9% y/y. Imports of unwrought and semi-fabricated copper were up 8% over the same period at 3.9mm MT, according to Mysteel.com. As is to be expected, treatment and refining charges at Chinese smelters also moved higher: for 3Q22, refiners were charging $93/MT, up $13 from 2Q22 levels and $23/MT from 4Q21, according to Reuters. These charges increase when raw-material supplies increase, and vice versa. This is meant to be a floor charged for refining concentrates to produce refined copper. Real USD Matches US PPI After Re-Opening In an unusual turn of events, the USD Real Effective Exchange Rate (REER) has been moving higher along with the US Producer Price Index for all commodities. This trend started as the global economy accelerated its re-opening in 2021 (Chart 6). The USD has a profound affect on commodity prices: Most globally traded commodities are denominated in USD, funded in USD and invoiced in USD. This is the channel through which the Fed’s monetary policy impacts commodity buyers ex-US. A stronger dollar means commodities in local-currency terms are more expensive, and vice versa. It also means production costs in states that do not peg their currencies to the USD go down, and vice versa. Chart 6Real USD Gains With US PPI During Reopening Real USD Gains With US PPI During Reopening Real USD Gains With US PPI During Reopening Given the USD’s elevated level, copper prices in local-currency terms will continue to face a massive headwind on the demand side, and a massive tailwind on the production side. For households and firms buying commodities, or durable goods with a lot of metals in them (copper, stainless steel, etc.), Fed policy has a direct effect on how their budgets get allocated.7 In the short and long run macroeconomic variables such as the USD influence copper prices by increasing the cost of copper ex-US when the dollar rallies, and vice versa. Fundamental variables like tight inventories, which arise when demand is consistently above supply, impart an upward price bias to the copper forward curve (backwardation increases as inventories decrease). Domestic economic factors matter, too.  Copper prices have been pummeled by the meltdown of China’s property sector, which has been the growth engine for the country’s economy, accounting for ~ 30% of its copper demand. The USD has remained well bid following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, presenting a powerful headwind to commodity prices in general. This is particularly true for refined copper, given China accounts for more than 50% of total global consumption. China’s RMB dropped 11.4% vs. the USD from the start of the year to now. This has not stood in the way of a sharp increase in imports of the copper ore and refined metal this year, despite the country’s weak economic performance. Given China’s property-market slowdown and its zero-tolerance COVID-19 policy and its attendant lockdowns, it is difficult to pinpoint a cause for its increased copper demand. It may be opportunistic purchasing – buying the metal when prices are far lower than their peak earlier this year – or it could signal a post-Communist Party Congress increase in economic activity (e.g., more fiscal stimulus hitting the system) officials are preparing for. Investment Implications The EU’s metals-refining sector faces existential challenges as a result of the bloc’s energy crisis. Significant employers – not just the metal refiners – will be confronting limited energy supply and higher costs for years, given the tightness in conventional energy markets – oil, gas and coal. The renewable-energy sector also faces daunting challenges, as a result of difficulties faced by metals refiners and the energy crisis they presently confront. It is worthwhile noting that none of the renewables technology is possible without metals. Given the abundant lessons re reliance on a single supply source Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has provided, we expect investment in US metals mining and refining to increase, as consumers of copper, aluminum and zinc seek to diversify away from Chinese dominance of this sector. This will take time to build out, just as the increase in LNG supplies will take time. This likely will keep a bid under the USD, as manufacturing, mining and refining capex investment shifts to the US. We expect the EU’s drive to secure conventional energy will drive the bloc’s demand for liquified natural gas (LNG) and oil higher, even after currently planned short-term measures to increase LNG intake and distribution capacity are completed over the next 2-3 years. After being stopped out this past week, we will be re-instating our long XOP ETF position on tonight’s close, consistent with our view.   Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Ashwin Shyam Research Analyst Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com   Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen proposed additional economic sanctions against Russia yesterday including extending price caps on oil to third countries, following the call-up of reserves in Russia last week, and a veiled threat to use nuclear weapons against Ukraine. In a related matter, Gazprom, the state-owned gas producer and trading company, threatened to cut off the remaining gas sales to Europe via Ukraine – close to half the ~ 80mm cm /d still being sold via pipeline to the continent (Chart 7). It is apparent the EU has been anticipating a full shut-off of Russian pipeline gas shipments, which likely motivates von der Leyen’s proposal. Any proposal to increase sanctions on Russia would have to be unanimously approved. Base Metals: Bullish. In a boost to prospective Chile copper production, a BHP executive indicated he expects regulatory uncertainties in the largest copper producing state to ease. BHP mentioned earlier this year that legal certainty in Chile would be key to investing over USD 10 billion in the state. Earlier this month, Chilean voters rejected a constitution, which, among other things, could have curtailed mining operation by including new taxes and environmental regulations. Precious Metals: Neutral. In their Q2 platinum balances report, the World Platinum Investment Council (WPIC) expects FY 2022 surplus to rise more than 50% vs. its Q1 estimates to 974k oz. Weak platinum ETF demand resulting from a strong USD and rising interest rates is expected to outweigh operational constraints in South African and North American mining operations. Bolstering supply is the fact that Russian platinum – which constitutes ~11% of global supply – has been reaching buyers. However, this security of supply may not last. Once buyers’ long-term contracts for Russian platinum end, as in the case with aluminum, companies may self-sanction, turning to the spot market and other producing states instead. For palladium, SFA Oxford sees the metal's surplus dropping to ~92% y/y, as demand is expected to increase and production is forecast to fall (Chart 8). Chart 7 EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry EU Energy Crisis, Strong USD Imperil Bloc’s Metals Industry Chart 8 Palladium Balances Expected To Drop Palladium Balances Expected To Drop     Footnotes 1     Please see Europe’s non-ferrous metals producers call for emergency EU action to prevent permanent deindustrialisation from spiralling electricity and gas prices, posted by Eurometaux 6 September 2022. 2     See, e.g., Exclusive: German utilities close to long-term LNG deals with Qatar, sources say published by reuters.com 20 September 2022. 3    For additional discussion, please see Energy Security Rolls Over EU's ESG Agenda, which we published 28 July 2022.  It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 4    Please see Agenda for a resilient European metals supply for the green and digital transitions, posted by Eurometaux in mid-2020.   5    Please see Reconciling growth and decarbonisation amidst the energy crisis, posted by European Aluminium May 2022. 6    Please see Column: European smelter hits mean another year of zinc shortfall published by reuters.com 17 May 2022.  7    Please see "Global Dimensions of U.S. Monetary Policy" by Maurice Obstfeld, which appeared in the February 2020 issue of International Journal of Central Banking for an in-depth discussion and analysis. Investment Views and Themes Strategic Recommendations Trades Closed in 2022
Executive Summary China Copper Consumption Failed To Revive Post-Pandemic China Copper Consumption Failed To Revive Post-Pandemic China Copper Consumption Failed To Revive Post-Pandemic A greater-than-expected contraction in manufacturing and construction in China – evidenced by the latest PMI and home sales data – will keep pressure on copper prices. Higher inflation will continue to drive the cost of labor, fuels and materials higher. Lower copper prices and higher input costs will weaken margins, leading to reduced capex. This also will put pressure on the rate of spending on projects already sanctioned. Payouts to shareholders – buybacks and dividends – will fall, reducing the appeal of miners’ equities. Debt-service costs will rise as interest rates are pushed higher by central banks. Civil unrest in critically important metals-producing provinces is forcing some miners to suspend production guidance. This will be exacerbated in Chile by changing tax regimes, which likely will reduce capex as well. Bottom Line: As global demand for copper increases with the renewable-energy transition and higher arms spending in Europe, miners’ ability to expand supply is being seriously challenged. Falling prices and rising costs – along with higher tax burdens and civil unrest in key mining provinces – are forcing copper miners to lower production and capex guidance, which will redound to the detriment of supply growth. With demand expected to double by 2030-35, copper prices will have to move higher to keep capex flowing to support supply growth. We remain long the XME ETF as the best way to express our bullish, decade-long view. Feature Just as the world is scrambling to develop additional energy supplies in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, copper supplies – the critical element of the renewable-energy buildout – are being squeezed by an unusual convergence of fundamental, financial and social factors. Chart 1China Copper Consumption Failed To Revive Post-Pandemic China Copper Consumption Failed To Revive Post-Pandemic China Copper Consumption Failed To Revive Post-Pandemic Firstly, copper demand is weak, which, all else equal, is suppressing prices. This is largely down to China’s zero-tolerance COVID-19 policy, and uncertainty over whether the EU will be pushed into a massive recession, following the cutoff of its natural gas supplies from Russia. These are two of the three major pillars of the global economy, and their economies are entwined via trade in goods. China’s COVID-19 policy is hammering its critically important property market – sales were down almost 40% y/y in July – and forcing a contraction in manufacturing. Construction represents ~ 30% of total copper demand in China. Manufacturing is contracting, based on China’s official July PMI report, which showed the index fell below 50 to 49.0 for July.1 Related Report  Commodity & Energy StrategyOne Hot Mess: EU Energy Policy China accounts for more than half of global copper demand, and, because of its zero-tolerance COVID-19 policy, was the only major economy to register a year-on-year contractions in copper demand throughout the pandemic up to the present (Chart 1). The EU accounts for ~ 12.5% of global copper demand, which we expect will continue to be supported by the bloc’s renewable-energy and defense buildouts.2 We noted in earlier research the odds of the EU going into recession remain high as the bloc scrambles to prepare for winter, in the wake of its attempts to replace its dependence on Russian natural gas supplies.3 We continue to expect the EU will avoid a major recession, and that it will be able to navigate this transition, leaving it on a better energy footing in subsequent years.4 Lower Copper Prices Will Hurt Capex Chart 2Copper Price Rally Fades Copper Price Rally Fades Copper Price Rally Fades After bottoming in March 2020 at $2.12/lb on the COMEX, copper prices staged a 125% rally that ended in March of this year. This was due to the post-pandemic reopening of most economies ex-China, which was accompanied by massive fiscal and monetary stimulus that super-charged consumer demand. Copper prices have since fallen ~33% from their March highs on the back of a substantial weakening of demand resulting from China’s zero-tolerance COVID policy and a concerted global effort to rein in the inflation caused by governments’ largess (Chart 2). Most year-end 2021 capex expectations for 2022 and into the future among copper miners were drawn up prior to the price collapse in June. After that, fear of central-bank policy mistakes – chiefly over-tightening of monetary policy that pushes the global economy into recession – and weak EM demand took prices from ~ $4.55/lb down to less than $3.20/lb by mid-July. A strong USD also pushed demand lower during this time. Chart 3DRC Offsets Chile, Peru Weakness Copper Capex Under Pressure Copper Capex Under Pressure Following the copper-price rout, miners are re-thinking production goals, dividend policy and capex. Social and governance issues also are contributing to weaker copper output. Rio Tinto, for example, notified markets it would shave $500mm from its $8 billion 2022 capex budget. For 1H22, Rio cut its dividend to $2.67/share from $5.61/share in 1H21. Elsewhere, Glencore said copper output from its Katanga mine in the DRC now is expected to come in 15% lower this year, at 1.06mm MT, owing to geological difficulties. Separately, output guidance for Chinese miner MMG Ltd’s Las Bambas mine in Peru has been suspended, following a 60% drop in production. The company expected it would be producing up to 320k tons this year. Civil unrest at Las Bambas has been ongoing since production started in 2016, according to Reuters. Big producers like Chile and Peru – accounting for ~ 35% of global ore production – along with the DRC face multiple challenges. Chile accounts for ~ 25% of global copper ore production. Its output fell ~ 6% in 2Q22 vs year-earlier output due to falling ore quality, water-supply constraints, and rising input costs (Chart 3). Chile’s government expects copper ore output to decline 3.4% y/y in 2022, with many of the country’s premier mines faltering (Chart 4). Chart 4Chile Expecting Lower Copper Output Copper Capex Under Pressure Copper Capex Under Pressure Chile also is proposing to increase taxes and royalties, to raise money for its budget. However, this may have the effect of driving away investment in the country’s copper mining industry. Fitch notes, “Increased costs will decrease mining cash flows and discourage new mining investments in Chile, favoring the migration of investors to other copper mining districts.”5 BHP Billiton, on que, said it will reconsider further investment in Chile, if the new legislation is approved. Renewables Buildout Will Widen Copper Deficit Markets appear to be trading without regard for the huge increase in copper supply that will be required for the global renewable-energy transition, to say nothing of the upcoming re-arming of the EU and continued military spending by the US and China. In our modeling of supply-demand balances, we move beyond our usual real GDP-based estimates of demand, which estimates the cyclical copper demand, and include assumptions for the demand the green-energy transition will contribute. Hence, this additional copper demand for green energy needs to be added to the copper demand forecast generated by the model. Using projections for global supply taken from the Resource and Energy Quarterly published by the Australian Government’s Department of Industry, Science and Resources, we estimate there will be a physical refined copper deficit of 224k tons in 2022 and 135K tons next year (Chart 5). Among other things, we are assuming refined copper demand will double by 2030 and reach 50mm tons/yr by then. This is a somewhat more aggressive assumption than S&P Global’s estimate of demand doubling by 2035. If we assume refined copper production is 2% lower than the REQ’s estimate, we expect the physical deficit in the refined copper market rise to a ~ 532k-ton deficit in 2022 and ~ 677k-ton deficit in 2023. These results including renewables demand highlight the need to not only account for cyclical demand but also the new demand that will be apparent as the EU, the US and China kick their renewables investments into high gear. Importantly, this kick-off is occurring with global commodity-exchange inventories still more than ~ 35% below year-ago levels (Chart 6). Chart 5Coppers Deficit Will Narrow On Lower Demand Coppers Deficit Will Narrow On Lower Demand Coppers Deficit Will Narrow On Lower Demand ​​​​​​ Chart 6Exchange Inventories Remain Exceptionally Low Exchange Inventories Remain Exceptionally Low Exchange Inventories Remain Exceptionally Low ​​​​​​ Investment Implications Copper prices will have to move higher to keep capex flowing to support supply growth normal cyclical demand and renewable-energy demand will require over coming decades. Falling prices and rising costs – along with higher tax burdens and civil unrest in key mining provinces – are forcing copper miners to lower production and capex guidance, which will redound to the detriment of supply growth. This situation cannot persist unless governments call off their renewable-energy transition, and, in the case of the EU, their efforts to re-arm Europe’s militaries following the invasion of Ukraine by Russia. We remain bullish base metals, particularly copper. We remain long the XME ETF as the best way to express this decade-long view. Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish OPEC 2.0 agreed a token increase in oil production Wednesday of 100k b/d, partly as a sop to the US following President Biden’s visit to the Kingdom last month. KSA will be producing close to 11mm b/d in 2H22. We have argued this is about all KSA will be willing to put on the market, in order to maintain some spare capacity in the event of another exogenous shock. OPEC 2.0 spare capacity likely falls close to 1.5mm b/d in 2023 vs. an average of 3mm b/d this year, which will limit the capacity of core OPEC 2.0 – KSA and the UAE – to backstop unforeseen production losses. Separately, the US EIA reported total US stocks of crude oil and refined products rose 3.5mm barrels (ex SPR inventory). Demand for refined products in the US was down 28mm barrels in the week ended 29 July, or 4mm b/d. We continue to expect prices to average $110/bbl this year and $117/bbl next year (Chart 7). Base Metals: Bullish China flipped from a net importer of refined zinc in 2021 to a net exporter for the first half of 2022, despite a high export tax on the metal. This is indicative of the premium Western zinc prices are commanding over the domestic price. Chinese zinc demand has fallen, following reduced manufacturing activity and an ailing property sector. Thursday’s Politburo meeting did little to encourage markets of a Chinese rebound later this year. A subdued Chinese recovery, along with European zinc smelters operating at reduced capacity, if at all, could see this reversal in trade flow perpetuate for the rest of the year. Precious Metals: Bullish As BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy highlighted, US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan will increase tensions between the US and China but will not lead to war. For now. Increased uncertainty normally is good for gold and its rival, the USD. While geopolitical uncertainty from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine initially buoyed the yellow metal, gold has since dropped below the USD 1800/oz level. The greenback was the main beneficiary from the war (Chart 8). It is yet to be seen how this round of geopolitical risk will impact gold and USD, with the backdrop of increasing odds of a US recession and a hawkish Fed. Chart 7 Brent Backwardation Will Steepen Brent Backwardation Will Steepen Chart 8 Gold Prices Going Down Along With USD Gold Prices Going Down Along With USD   Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Ashwin Shyam Research Analyst Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com Paula Struk Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy paula.struk@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1      Please see China’s factory activity contracts unexpectedly in July as Covid flares up published by cnbc.com on July 31, 2022. The PMI summary noted contractions in oil, coal and metals smelting industries led the index’s decline. 2     Please see One Hot Mess: EU Energy Policy, which we published on May 26, 2022, for additional discussion. 3     Please see Copper Prices Decouple From Fundamentals, which we published on July 7, 2022. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 4     Please see Energy Security Rolls Over EU's ESG Agenda published on July 28, 2022. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 5     Please see Proposed Tax Reform Weakens Cost Positions for Chilean Miners (fitchratings.com), published by Fitch Ratings on July 7, 2022.   Investment Views and Themes Strategic Recommendations Trades Closed in 2022
Executive Summary   Copper prices still face substantial downside (15-20% from current levels). The global copper market is shifting from a deficit to a considerable surplus over the next 12 to 18 months. Global copper supply will likely grow by 4-4.5% year on year in both 2022H2 and 2023, surpassing global copper demand growth of 2-3% during the same period. Global copper ore output will increase thanks to a slew of new projects and expansions this year and next year. Regarding copper demand in 2022H2 and 2023, China will be the main driver due to a moderate boost in traditional infrastructure investment, an acceleration in the build-up of green sources of electricity generation and surging penetration of new energy vehicles (NEV). Global Copper Supply Balance: Shifting From A Deficit To A Surplus Global Copper Supply Balance: Shifting From A Deficit To A Surplus Global Copper Supply Balance: Shifting From A Deficit To A Surplus Bottom Line: According to our projections, the global copper market will move from a deficit to a material surplus later this year and in 2023. This will continue weighing on copper and related equity prices.     Even though copper prices have plunged over 30% from their peak, we expect them to fall further (Chart 1). Chart 1Copper Prices & Copper Mining Stocks: The Decline Is Not Over Copper Prices & Copper Mining Stocks: The Decline Is Not Over Copper Prices & Copper Mining Stocks: The Decline Is Not Over The main reason is that the global copper market will swing from a deficit to a surplus over the next 12 to 18 months (Chart 2). Global copper output growth is currently accelerating and will average 4% in 2022 and 4.5% in 2023. This will outpace the 2-3% annual growth in global copper demand during the same period. Chart 2Global Copper Supply Balance: Shifting From A Deficit To A Surplus Global Copper Supply Balance: Shifting From A Deficit To A Surplus Global Copper Supply Balance: Shifting From A Deficit To A Surplus Beware Of Rising Copper Supply In 2022-23 The global copper market balance is in the process of swinging from a 283,000-ton deficit at the end of 2021 to a 464,000-ton surplus at the end of 2023, based on our calculations. In comparison, the International Copper Study Group (ICSG) expects a smaller surplus of 350,000 tons next year. There are two key estimates for our global copper supply balance calculation. Supply We expect global copper output to grow at 4% in 2022 and a slightly faster rate of 4.5% in 2023 as many new mines/expansions are coming on stream. Table 1 lists 12 major global copper mines that will add new copper ore supply in 2022. The combined copper ore output of these projects will increase the global copper ore supply by about 4.5% this year. Table 1Major Global New Copper Ore Supply In 2022 Global Copper Market: No Bottom Yet Global Copper Market: No Bottom Yet Robust copper ore production growth in the Democratic Republic of Congo (Congo), Zambia, Peru and China will boost the global copper ore supply in the next 12 to 18 months. Congo has been the largest contributor to global copper ore growth, accounting for over 60% of the increase in global copper ore output during the past five years. This country has already become the third largest producer of copper ore in the world. Chart 3Congo, Zambia and Peru Will Continue Boosting Their Copper Ore Supply Congo, Zambia and Peru Will Continue Boosting Their Copper Ore Supply Congo, Zambia and Peru Will Continue Boosting Their Copper Ore Supply Its Kamoa-Kalula copper mine listed in Table 1 began producing copper concentrates in May 2021 and its production will increase exponentially into 2023 (Chart 3, top panel). Zambia is another country with substantial potential for copper ore output (Chart 3, middle panel). President Hakainde Hichilema, who was elected last year, expects to increase the country’s annual copper ore production from 800,000 tons to three million tons in terms of copper content in 10 years. This will translate into new supply of 220,000 tons per year and constitutes about 1% growth in global copper ore supply this year and next year.  Peru is the world’s second largest copper ore producer. Despite the number of strikes rising in past two years, the country's copper ore output has stayed at a near historical high level (Chart 3, bottom panel).  China, which is the world’s fourth largest producer, is also set to boost its copper ore output within the next few years. The increase in supply will be driven by the construction of Tibet's Qulong copper mine, the second phase expansion of the Duobaoshan and the Jiama copper mines, and the Chifeng Fubo project. Chart 4New Mines Are Also Coming On Stream In Chile, Australia and Canada New Mines Are Also Coming On Stream In Chile, Australia and Canada New Mines Are Also Coming On Stream In Chile, Australia and Canada Copper ore output in other top producers such as Chile, Australia and Canada have already declined considerably in the past several years due to lower ore quality, the pandemic, drought, and protests (Chart 4). Nevertheless, new mines coming on stream will likely prevent copper ore output from falling further in these countries. For example, the Australian government expects the country’s copper mine output to increase by 15% in the 2022-2023 financial year and by another 7% in the 2023-2024 financial year. Regarding Chile, the world’s largest copper ore producer (representing 26% of the world total), we expect copper ore output to increase over the next 12 to 18 months after declining for three consecutive years. The reason for this optimism is that the Quebrada Blanca Phase 2 (QB2) project is expected to begin production in the second half of 2022. The company estimates that QB2 copper output over the first five years will average 286,000 tons per year. This is equal to 1.3% of annual global copper output. The same company is also considering a third phase for the project, which could significantly boost capacity in the longer term. That said, investments in Chilean copper mining may struggle over the long term if the proposed mining royalties increase1 gets passed in September. Table 2The World’s Top 10 Copper Producing Companies’ Capex investment In 2022 & 2023 Global Copper Market: No Bottom Yet Global Copper Market: No Bottom Yet At a company level, Table 2 shows that the capex of the world’s top 10 copper producing companies has been planned to increase by 21% in 2022 and remain at an elevated level in 2023. Such large capex seems to support the strong copper ore output growth forecasts shown in Table 1.   Demand We expect global copper consumption to grow by 2.5% in 2022 and a slightly higher rate of 3% in 2023. Table 3 shows our growth estimates for this year and next year for China, the US, the EU, and the rest of world. This year and in 2023, red metal consumption will likely rebound in China and will experience a slowdown in the rest of the world (Chart 5). We expect copper demand growth in China to recover from last year’s contraction to post 3% growth this year and then accelerate to 4% in 2023. A detailed discussion of Chinese copper demand is presented below. Copper demand growth in both the US and the EU is set to slow as their pandemic-triggered overspending on goods ex-autos has run its course (Chart 6). Given that the US lags the EU in terms of NEV sales/production and new energy development, we expect a lower growth in the US (0-2%) versus in the EU (2-4%). The ongoing energy crisis in the EU has incentivized the bloc to expedite its transition to green sources of energy. As a result, its copper demand will rise faster than copper demand in the US. Chart 5Global Copper Consumption: A Moderate Rise Across Regions Global Copper Consumption: A Moderate Rise Across Regions Global Copper Consumption: A Moderate Rise Across Regions Chart 6Decelerating Copper Demand Growth In The US and The EU Decelerating Copper Demand Growth In The US and The EU Decelerating Copper Demand Growth In The US and The EU Using these economies’ respective shares in global copper consumption in 2021, we estimate global copper consumption growth of 2.5% for 2022 and 3% for 2023 (Table 3). We are well aware that global copper demand from green sources – electric vehicles, wind turbines, solar panels and charging poles – will continue booming. Yet, their share of global copper consumption is about 4.2% according to our estimates (Table 4). It is too small to have any substantial effect on global copper demand in next 18 months. Table 3Global Copper Consumption Growth Forecast For 2022 & 2023 Global Copper Market: No Bottom Yet Global Copper Market: No Bottom Yet Table 4Global Green Demand For Copper Global Copper Market: No Bottom Yet Global Copper Market: No Bottom Yet Bottom Line: Global copper demand growth will likely fall short of copper supply in the next 18 months. Consequently, we expect the global copper market to swing from a supply deficit to a supply surplus over the next 12 to 18 months. Chinese Copper Demand Why do we expect Chinese copper demand to grow at 3% in 2022 and 4% in 2023?  Table 5 illustrates our rough estimates of the copper consumption growth from China’s main sources of red metal consumption.  Table 5Chinese Underlying Copper Consumption: Growth Estimates For 2022 & 2023 Global Copper Market: No Bottom Yet Global Copper Market: No Bottom Yet The power sector is the largest copper user as this metal is among the best conductors of electricity. The metal is used in high-, medium-, and low-voltage power networks. Chart 7The Power Sector Will Be The Main Driver Of Chinese Copper Demand The Power Sector Will Be The Main Driver Of Chinese Copper Demand The Power Sector Will Be The Main Driver Of Chinese Copper Demand Authorities will ensure a rapid expansion of renewable energy like wind power and solar power, as well as continue construction of smart power grids as the country strives to achieve its ambitious targets for 2030 peak carbon dioxide emissions and 2060 net-zero carbon dioxide emissions. Investment in the new and old power sector grew by about 4% y/y in nominal terms in the past 12 months (Chart 7). Production of power generation equipment output has risen by 8% y/y in real terms during the same period. All together, we forecast that the copper consumption from the power sector will grow by approximately 5% year on year both this year and next year. Chart 8Mean-Reversion IN The Appliance Sector Mean-Reversion IN The Appliance Sector Mean-Reversion IN The Appliance Sector The output of air conditioner, freezer and refrigerator production are all currently in contraction (Chart 8). The global “stay-at-home” economy significantly boosted Chinese exports of air conditioners, freezers, and refrigerators in 2020 and 2021. These appliances are all durable goods, and consumers who had already purchased them are unlikely to buy again this year and next year. Thus, we expect a 3% contraction in copper use this year and a slight growth of 2% next year from this industry Capital expenditures in the transportation network will improve from current zero growth, and production of traditional automobiles may increase again (Chart 9). Meanwhile, NEV output and construction of charging poles will continue booming (Chart 10). NEV uses more copper per car than the traditional autos, and charging poles also use copper. Putting all this together, we forecast a 3% and 4% year-on-year growth of copper consumption in the transportation sector in 2022 and 2023, respectively. Assuming there will be two million more NEVs this year, copper use will increase by an additional 160,000 tons, equaling to about a 1.2% increase in Chinese copper consumption. Chart 9Copper Demand From The Transportation Sector: Supported By Rebounding Traditional Auto Sales... Copper Demand From The Transportation Sector: Supported By Rebounding Traditional Auto Sales... Copper Demand From The Transportation Sector: Supported By Rebounding Traditional Auto Sales... Chart 10...As Well As Surging NEV Sales ...As Well As Surging NEV Sales ...As Well As Surging NEV Sales Copper or copper base alloys are used in printed circuit boards, electronic connectors, as well as in many semiconductor products. The tech-related new infrastructure, which includes information transmission, software, and information technology services, such as 5G networks, industrial internet, and data centers, will remain the government’s focus in the coming years. Tech-related new infrastructure investment increased by 20% year on year in the January – June period (Chart 11). We expect year-on-year copper usage growth in this sector to be 15% in 2022 and 12% in 2023. Chart 11Copper Demand Will Benefit From Strong Tech Investment Copper Demand Will Benefit From Strong Tech Investment Copper Demand Will Benefit From Strong Tech Investment Chart 12Chinese Property Market Is Negative For Copper Demand Chinese Property Market Is Negative For Copper Demand Chinese Property Market Is Negative For Copper Demand   The Chinese property market is in deep trouble. Our broad measure of China’s building construction activity/building area starts contracted 15% year on year in the second quarter of this year, and completions grew only moderately at 5% during the same period (Chart 12). Assuming half of this sector’s usage is in building area starts and the other half in completions, we expect the copper consumption in this sector to contract by 10% y/y in 2022. Next year, we expect the contraction to narrow to 5% as the government implements policies to support completions. Bottom Line: Chinese copper demand will increase moderately by 3% in 2022 and 4% in 2023. Investment Implications The global copper market is moving towards a surplus. This is one of reasons behind the red metal’s 30% price plunge since March 4, 2022. Copper inventories on global exchanges are low. Yet, that is not a sufficient reason to be bullish on copper prices as we elaborate in Box 1. Box 1 What About Copper Inventories? We believe inventory data released by exchanges – LME, COMEX and Shanghai Futures Exchange - do not provide a full picture of copper inventories. First, troughs in copper inventories – often but not always – coincide with peaks in copper prices and tops in inventories with bottoms in their prices (Chart 13). Hence, low inventory levels are not a reason to be bullish on copper prices. Chart 13Level of Copper Inventories In Exchanges Is Not A Good Forward-looking Indicator For Prices Copper Inventories In Exchanges: These Do Not Provide A Full Picture Of Copper Inventories Copper Inventories In Exchanges: These Do Not Provide A Full Picture Of Copper Inventories Second, inventory data from commodity exchanges may overstate the supply tightness as there might have been some build-up in unreported inventories. The basis is that many end-users (companies) around the world might purchase copper for the purposes of hoarding and speculation. These inventories are not counted in the data published by commodity exchanges.   Chart 14Copper: Bearish Sentiment Is Not Extreme Yet Copper: Bearish Sentiment Is Not Extreme Yet Copper: Bearish Sentiment Is Not Extreme Yet Net speculative positions of copper in the US as a share of total open interest have already tanked to near multi-year low levels (Chart 14, top panel). However, bearish sentiment is still far from the extreme level (Chart 14, bottom panel). Putting all together, copper prices are vulnerable to the downside over the next 6 to 12 months. We expect a 15%-20% downside in copper prices from the current level. Shares prices of copper miners always move closely with red metal prices. Equity portfolios should underweight copper miners.   Ellen JingYuan He Associate Vice President ellenj@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1     The proposed tax reform applies to copper producers of more than 50,000 tons and combines the ad-valorem component based on the copper price with a tax based on mining operating margins (MOM). The ad-valorem component has two regimes depending on whether the production volume is above or below 200,000 tons. For the larger producers, the effective rate applied will move in a range of 1% to 4% of revenue depending on the copper price, while below 200,000 tons the rate will be between 1.0% and 1.6% of revenue. Source: "Proposed Tax Reform Weakens Cost Positions for Chilean Miners,” Fitch Ratings, July 7, 2022, www.fitchratings.com. Strategic Themes Cyclical Recommendations
Executive Summary Caught In Risk-Off Selling Copper Testing Support Copper Testing Support Weak Chinese and European economies are suppressing copper demand and helping to temper prices in a market that remains fundamentally tight. Weaker US GDP growth could put the three largest economies in the world in or close to recession in 2H22/1H23, which would contribute to demand-side weakness in copper markets. The odds manufacturing and base-metals refining will be curtailed in Europe are rising. Although a strike in Norway has been averted by government intervention, maintenance on Russia’s Nord Stream 1 pipeline scheduled to begin next week likely will serve as a pretext for longer and deeper natgas supply cuts to the EU. Bottom Line: Despite fundamental tightness in global copper markets, prices are being restrained by fears weaker Chinese and European economic performance will lead to a global recession. Early reads of US GDP pointing to negative growth in 2Q22 stoke these fears. Heightened economic policy uncertainty globally exacerbates them. We remain fundamentally bullish copper and will re-establish our long SPDR S&P Metals & Mining ETF (XME) – down ~ 40% from its highs in April – at tonight’s close. In addition, we went long the XOP oil and gas ETF at Tuesday’s close, after prompt Brent breached the buy-trigger we set last week of $105/bbl during this week’s crude-oil sell-off.   Feature   Lower GDP growth expectations in China and the EU – along with a wobbly US economy being flagged by an Atlanta Fed GDPNow forecast pointing to negative growth in 2Q22 – are stoking fears of a global manufacturing and industrial recession. This prompted a rout in industrial commodities – base metals and oil – this week, which still has markets on edge. This slow-down in the world’s three largest economies – accounting for almost 50% of global GDP expressed in purchasing-power terms – is the only thing keeping the level of global copper demand close to supply at present (Chart 1).1 At least for the time being, this is keeping the threat of sharply higher copper prices, which would be more in line with the low levels of supplies and inventories globally, at bay (Chart 2). As of the week ended May 27th, global copper stocks stood at just above 562k tons, which is ~ 31% lower y/y. Chart 1World’s Biggest Economies Slowing Copper Prices Decouple From Fundamentals Copper Prices Decouple From Fundamentals Chart 2Copper Prices Disconnect From Fundamentals Copper Prices Disconnect From Fundamentals Copper Prices Disconnect From Fundamentals   Uncertainty Weakens Copper Prices Energy and metals markets remain extremely tight on a fundamental supply-demand basis.2 The sharp sell-off this week in oil and metals prices is, in our view, evidence industrial-commodity prices have decoupled from fundamentals.  This makes traders – hedgers and speculators – extremely risk-averse, which reduces liquidity and increases volatility. On the back of these concerns, markets exhibit the sort of volatility associated with economic collapse, despite still-strong underlying fundamentals. Chart 3Rising Global Policy Uncertainty Copper Prices Decouple From Fundamentals Copper Prices Decouple From Fundamentals Volatility is on the rise due to increasing economic uncertainty in these markets. This makes it extremely difficult to assign probabilities to different price outcomes (i.e., true uncertainty). The BBD Global Economic Policy Uncertainty is approaching levels seen during the early pandemic (Chart 3).  We put this rising uncertainty down to poor policy and communication from central banks and governments; a pig’s breakfast of energy policy globally that increasingly adds nothing but confusion to markets; and a muddled public-health policy in China, which produces random shut-downs in global supply chains as covid infections randomly crop up in important port cities.  Lastly, the East and West are moving toward a new Cold War, which already is having profound effects on all markets, trade flows and capital availability in the short- and medium-term. This keeps markets on edge and forces them to parse every geopolitical development that hits the tape.3 Re-forging supply chains, re-building basic industrial infrastructure as the West moves away from outsourcing to China and other EM states will be costly and volatile, especially as embargoes and sanctions increase between these blocs.    This political and economic evolution will require increased investment in base metals production and exploration, along with similar commitments to oil and gas. Low and volatile prices will not support this, as they disincentivize investment, and set markets up for continued shortage and scarcity going forward. In the metals markets, years of underinvestment by major mining companies will keep copper supplies and inventories tight going forward (Chart 4). This will hinder and delay the global renewable-energy transition, which cannot be realized without higher base-metals supplies.  Chart 4Structural Underinvestment In Mining Fundamentally Bullish Copper Copper Prices Decouple From Fundamentals Copper Prices Decouple From Fundamentals Recession Fears Haunt Metals Globally … The proximate causes of the persistent weakening of copper prices is the demand destruction arising from the lockdown in China, and an increasing concern over the economic prospects of the EU as it prepares for a possible shut-off of Russian natgas exports. Should Russian supplies be cut off, the EU will be pushed into recession as natural-gas rationing – and the attendant prioritization of human needs going into winter – will constrict economic activity, particularly in manufacturing.  This leaves two of the three largest economies in the world either in recession or not growing at all. Added to this is the fear of a wobbly US economy, which has been slowed by higher energy prices and the Fed’s hawkish tightening of monetary policy. The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow forecast for 2Q22 estimates a 2.1% contraction in US GDP. This would be the second consecutive quarter of negative growth and would meet a widely held rule-of-thumb indicator or recession.4  In our modelling, we estimate the income elasticity of copper demand in DM economies like the EU and US (1.39) and EM-ex-China (0.87) states is higher than that of China (0.37). This means that a 1% contraction in p.a. Chinese real GDP would translate to a 0.37% p.a. fall in copper demand, all else equal. A contraction of real incomes – i.e., real GDP – in the EU and EM-ex-China will cause a larger relative adjustment in copper demand than in China, even though the level of copper demand in China is far greater in absolute terms (Chart 5).  A recession in the EU will reduce import demand for China’s manufactured output in these markets (Chart 6). As China’s trade volumes fall, Chinese manufacturing PMIs will contract. Similarly, exports to China from the EU will weaken as manufacturing weakens and real GDP moves lower. We believe this will put more pressure on the Chinese government to provide fiscal and monetary stimulus to counter such a downdraft.  Chart 5Copper Demand Sensitive to Real GDP (Income) Copper Demand Sensitive to Real GDP (Income) Copper Demand Sensitive to Real GDP (Income) Chart 6Trade Channel Effects Follow GDP Weakness Trade Channel Effects Follow GDP Weakness Trade Channel Effects Follow GDP Weakness … But China Worries Dominate The Chinese economy is showing signs of further slowing.5 Weakness in credit levels, infrastructure investment, manufacturing, the property sector, and exports all indicate the covid-policy lockdowns, high commodity prices, and parsimonious credit and fiscal policies have produced a dramatic slowing in economic activity. In our modelling, we find evidence that each of these components exhibits a long-run inverse relationship with Chinese copper inventories, which in turn exhibits a long-run inverse relationship with COMEX copper prices.  Roughly 10 days after the initial Shanghai lockdown, copper prices went into contango (Chart 7). This occurred despite continuous declines in Chinese copper inventories during the lockdown months (Chart 8). Such anomalous behavior – i.e., as inventories fall markets become more backwardated – makes it difficult to connect prices and supply-demand-inventory fundamentals. Chart 7Copper In Contango For Most Of China’s Lockdown Copper In Contango For Most Of Chinas Lockdown Copper In Contango For Most Of Chinas Lockdown Chart 8Chinese Copper Inventories Continue To Draw In Lockdown Chinese Copper Inventories Continue To Draw In Lockdown Chinese Copper Inventories Continue To Draw In Lockdown BCA’s China Investment Strategy expects a muted 2H22 recovery for the Chinese economy. Rolling lockdowns due to China’s COVID policy will reduce the potency of fiscal and monetary stimulus. The stop-start nature of economic activity will stymie growth in disposable income and job creation, which in turn will translate to weaker aggregate demand. The knock-on effect of weaker business activity due to the lockdown earlier this year has been a higher propensity to save by households (Chart 9). Household surveys conducted by the PBoC show that, since 2017, household savings have been increasing, suggesting a precautionary sentiment (Chart 10). Chart 9Chinese Economic Slowdown Reduced Credit Demand Chinese Economic Slowdown Reduced Credit Demand Chinese Economic Slowdown Reduced Credit Demand Chart 10Rising Precautionary Savings... Rising Precautionary Savings... Rising Precautionary Savings... Chart 11...Will Impact Domestic Property Market ...Will Impact Domestic Property Market ...Will Impact Domestic Property Market We do not expect the property market to recover in a manner similar to what occurred following China’s re-opening after the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. Depressed household purchasing power will keep housing demand subdued, while the “three red lines” policy, which limits the amount property developers can borrow, will keep supply low (Chart 11).6 Housing accounts for ~ 30% of copper consumption in China, which means weak property markets will remain a drag on copper demand. Investment Implications Continued weakness in China’s economy and a potentially deep recession in the EU will continue to restrain demand for copper globally. In addition, with the US economy looking wobbly, the third global pillar of economic strength also will be weakening going into 2H22. These fundamental demand-side effects will lower pressure on tight copper inventories and keep prices subdued, in our view. This does not, however, signal an all-clear for copper supply or inventory tightness. Weaker demand is the only thing keeping prices from rising sharply, given the tight supply and inventory position of global copper markets. On the supply side, governance issues in copper-rich Latin American states, which are in the process of revising their social contracts with copper producers and consumers, will increase mining costs for companies, disincentivizing long-term and large-scale investments in new mines.7 These costs ultimately will be borne by consumers as supply shortages mount and the need to increase capex grows. Ultimately, this will feed into longer-term inflation and inflation expectations. Chart 12Caught In Risk-Off Selling Copper Testing Support Copper Testing Support We remain long-term bullish copper, as fundamentals remain tight and will get tighter. That said, over the short term, aggregate-demand weakness in the three major economic pillars in the world makes us leery of getting long copper futures, particularly as prompt COMEX prices test support (Chart 12).  Persistently weak copper prices will disincentivize the needed investment in new supply the world will need to effect a transition to renewable energy in coming decades. For this reason, we are comfortable re-establishing our long XME metals and mining ETF at tonight’s close, as copper prices are down 40% from their April highs. Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Ashwin Shyam Research Analyst Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com Paula Struk Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy paula.struk@bcaresearch.com   Commodity Round-Up Energy: Bullish. A strike by Norwegian energy-sector workers that would have hit the natural gas market in Europe particularly hard was averted earlier this week.8 This still leaves the EU and UK (Europe) at risk of additional losses of Russian natgas exports beginning next week when Nord Stream 1 (NS1) maintenance is due to start. These threats have pushed Dutch Title Transfer Facility (TTF) natural gas prices up close to 93% since 1 June, and close to 400% y/y as of Tuesday. For the first five months of this year, Europe’s been importing just under 15 Bcf/d of LNG, with ~ 8.5 Bcf/d of those volumes coming from the US, based on EIA data. The EIA expects US LNG exports to average ~ 11.9 Bcf/d this year and 12 Bcf/d in 2023. Europe accounted for just under 75% of US exports in January – April of this year, and we expect that to continue going forward. The IEA expects Russia to supply 25% of EU demand this year, the lowest in 20 years. Last year, Russian imports covered ~ 40% (~ 7 TCF) of EU demand. Base Metals: Zinc stocks are depleted but prices are dropping on recession fears (Chart 13). Smelting operations were hit last year following the power-supply crunches in China and Europe. While China has recovered its energy security, Europe, which accounts for ~15% of global refined zinc supply, has not. Reduced natgas supply from Russia will make the smelting shortage in Europe even more acute, especially if power and fuel rationing occur. In April, China was a net exporter of zinc for the first time since 2014, as low demand in the state and low European zinc supply incentivized Chinese smelters to ship metal to the West despite high outbound tariffs. Precious Metals: Markets switched from inflation to growth fears, as central banks, notably the Fed began hiking interest rates aggressively to curb inflation. Investors have been flocking to the USD, which hit a 20-year high on recession fears this week (Chart 14). This has happened at the expense of the yellow metal, which, since breaking through the USD 1800/oz mark last week, has continued to drop, hitting an 8-month low as of yesterday's close. Chart 13Global Copper Inventories Remain Tight Global Copper Inventories Remain Tight Global Copper Inventories Remain Tight Chart 14 Copper Prices Decouple From Fundamentals Copper Prices Decouple From Fundamentals   Footnotes 1     Please see China, US and EU are the largest economies in the world, which was published by Eurostat 19 May 2020. 2     For additional discussion of oil-market fundamentals, please see Recession Unlikely To Batter Oil Prices, which covers our expectation for global oil balances and prices. It was published 16 June 2022. 3    Please see Hypo-Globalization (A GeoRisk Update) published by BCA Research’s Geopolitical Strategy 30 July 2021. See also Commodities' Watershed Moment, which we published 22 March 2022.  4    Please see GDPNow, published by the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta 1 July 2022. 5    Please see Third Quarter Geopolitical Outlook: Thunder And Lightning, published by BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy 24 June 2022. This report notes, “China’s political crackdown, struggle with Covid-19, waning exports, and deflating property market have led to an abrupt slowdown this year. The government is responding by easing monetary, fiscal, and regulatory policy, though so far with limited effect … . Economic policy will not be decisive in the third quarter unless a crash forces the administration to stimulate aggressively.” 6    In August 2020, the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development and the People’s Bank of China proposed to implement a policy which kept a ceiling on companies’ asset to liability ratio at 70%, net debt to equity ratio at 100%, and cash to short-term borrowings ratio at 1. Developers whose liabilities are within these requirements may increase their liabilities by less than 15%. These were known as the “three red lines.” Per that policy, if one or more of these ceilings are surpassed, maximum liabilities growth is capped at a lower percentage. 7     Please see Add Local Politics To Copper Supply Risks, which we published 25 November 2021. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. See also Chile sticks to plan for new mining profit tax up to 32% linked to copper price, published by reuters.com via mining.com 1 July 2022. 8    Please see Norway’s government halts oil and gas strike published by ft.com 5 July 2022. Investment Views and Themes Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Trades Closed In 2022
Next Thursday May 26, we will hold the BCA Debate – High Inflation: Here To Stay,Or Soon In The Rear-View Mirror? – a Webcast in which I will debate my colleague, Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist, Bob Ryan on the outlook for inflation, and take the side that inflationary fears will soon recede. I do hope you can join us. As such, the debate will replace the weekly report, though we will renew the fractal trading watchlist on our website. Dhaval Joshi Executive Summary The second quarter’s synchronised sell-off in stocks, bonds, inflation protected bonds, industrial metals and gold is an extremely rare star alignment. The last time that the ‘everything sell-off’ star alignment happened was in early 1981 when the Paul Volcker Fed ‘broke the back’ of inflation and turned stagflation into an outright recession. In 2022, the Jay Powell Fed risks doing the same. If history repeats itself, then the template of 1981-82 could provide a useful guide for 2022-23. In which case, bond prices are now entering a bottoming process.  Stocks would bottom next. While the near term outlook is cloudy, we expect stock prices to be higher on a 12-month horizon, especially long-duration stocks that are most sensitive to bond yields. But just as in 1981-82, the biggest casualty will be industrial metals, which are likely to suffer at least double-digit losses over the coming year. Fractal trading watchlist: FTSE 100 versus Stoxx Europe 600, Czech Republic versus Poland, Food and Beverages, US REITS versus Utilities, CNY/USD. 2022-23 Could Be An Echo Of 1981-82 2022-23 Could Be An Echo Of 1981-82 2022-23 Could Be An Echo Of 1981-82 Bottom Line: The 1981-82 template for 2022-23 suggests that bonds will bottom first, followed by stocks. But steer clear of gold and industrial metals. Feature Investors have had a torrid time in the second quarter, with no place to hide.1  Stocks are down -10 percent. Bonds are down -6 percent. Inflation protected bonds are down -6 percent. Industrial metals are down -13 percent. Gold is down -6 percent. To add insult to injury, even cash is down in real terms, because the interest rate is well below the inflation rate! (Chart I-1) Chart I-1The 'Everything Sell-Off' In 2022 Last Happened In 1981, When Stagflation Morphed Into Recession The 'Everything Sell-Off' In 2022 Last Happened In 1981, When Stagflation Morphed Into Recession The 'Everything Sell-Off' In 2022 Last Happened In 1981, When Stagflation Morphed Into Recession Such a star alignment of asset returns, in which stocks, bonds, inflation protected bonds, industrial metals, and gold all sell off together, is unprecedented. In the eighty calendar quarters since the inflation protected bond market data became available in the early 2000s there has never been a quarter with an ‘everything sell-off’. Everything Has Sold Off, But Does That Make Sense? The rarity of an ‘everything sell-off’ is because there are virtually no economic or financial scenarios in which all five asset-classes should fall together (Chart I-2 and Chart I-3). Chart I-2An 'Everything Sell-Off' Is Extremely Rare An 'Everything Sell-Off' Is Extremely Rare An 'Everything Sell-Off' Is Extremely Rare Chart I-3An 'Everything Sell-Off' Is Extremely Rare An 'Everything Sell-Off' Is Extremely Rare An 'Everything Sell-Off' Is Extremely Rare A scenario dominated by rising inflation is bad for bonds, but good for inflation protected bonds, especially relative to conventional bonds. Yet inflation protected bonds have not outperformed either in absolute or relative terms. A scenario of rising inflation should also support the value of stocks, industrial metals and certainly gold, given that all three are, to varying degrees, ‘inflation hedges.’ Yet the prices of stocks, industrial metals, and gold have all plummeted. The rarity of an ‘everything sell-off’ is because there are virtually no economic or financial scenarios in which all asset classes should fall together. Conversely, a scenario dominated by slowing growth is bad for industrial metal prices, but good for conventional bond prices – as bond yields decline on diminished expectations for rate hikes. Yet conventional bonds have sold off. What about a scenario dominated by both rising inflation and slowing growth – which is to say, stagflation? In this case, we would expect inflation protected bonds to perform especially well. Meanwhile, with the economy still growing, the prices of industrial metals should not be collapsing, as they have been recently.  In a final scenario of an imminent recession we would expect stocks, industrial metals and even gold to sell off, but conventional bonds to perform especially well. The upshot is there are virtually no economic scenarios in which stocks, bonds, inflation protected bonds, industrial metals, and gold plummet together, as they have recently. So, what’s going on? To answer, we need to take a trip back to the 1980s. 1981 Was The Last Time We Had An ‘Everything Sell-Off’ Inflation protected bonds did not exist before the late 1990s. But considering the other four asset-classes – stocks, bonds, industrial metals, and gold – to find the last time that they all fell together we must travel back to 1981, the time of Margaret Thatcher, Ronald Reagan, and the Paul Volcker Fed. And suddenly, we discover spooky similarities with the current Zeitgeist. Just like today, the world’s central banks were obsessed with ‘breaking the back’ of inflation, which, like a monster in a horror movie, kept appearing to die before coming back with second and third winds (Chart I-4). Chart I-4In 1981, Just As In 2022, Central Banks Would 'Do Whatever It Takes' To Kill Inflation In 1981, Just As In 2022, Central Banks Would 'Do Whatever It Takes' To Kill Inflation In 1981, Just As In 2022, Central Banks Would 'Do Whatever It Takes' To Kill Inflation Just like today, the central banks were desperate to repair their badly damaged credibility in managing the economy. As the biography “Volcker: The Triumph of Persistence” puts it: “He restored credibility to the Federal Reserve at a time it had been greatly diminished.” And just like today, central bankers hoped that they could pilot the economy to a ‘soft landing’, though whether they genuinely believed that is another story. Asked at a press conference if higher interest rates would cause a recession, Volcker replied coyly “Well, you get varying opinions about that.” 2022 has spooky similarities with 1981. In fact, in its single-minded aim ‘to do whatever it takes’ to kill inflation, the Volcker Fed hiked the interest rate to near 20 percent, thereby triggering what was then the deepest economic recession since the Depression of the 1930s (Chart I-5 and Chart I-6). With hindsight, it was a price worth paying because the economy then began a quarter century of low inflation, steady growth, and mild recessions – a halcyon period for which the Volcker Fed’s aggressive tightening in the early 1980s have been lauded. Chart I-5In 1981, The Fed Hiked Rates To Near 20 Percent... In 1981, The Fed Hiked Rates To Near 20 Percent... In 1981, The Fed Hiked Rates To Near 20 Percent... Chart I-6...And Thereby Morphed Stagflation Into Recession ...And Thereby Morphed Stagflation Into Recession ...And Thereby Morphed Stagflation Into Recession Granted, the problems of 2022 are a much scaled down version of those in 1981, yet there are spooky similarities – a point which will not have gone unnoticed by the current crop of central bankers. It is no secret that Jay Powell is a big fan of Paul Volcker.   The Echoes Of 1981-82 In 2022-23 The answer to why everything sold off in early 1981 is that central banks took their economies from stagflation to outright recession, and the risk is that the same happens again in 2022-23 (Chart I-7). Chart I-7The Echoes Of 1981-82: Aggressive Rate Hikes In 2022-23 Will Morph Stagflation Into Recession The Echoes Of 1981-82: Aggressive Rate Hikes In 2022-23 Will Morph Stagflation Into Recession The Echoes Of 1981-82: Aggressive Rate Hikes In 2022-23 Will Morph Stagflation Into Recession In the transition from stagflation fears to recession fears, everything sells off because first the stagflation casualties get hammered, and then the recession plays get hammered. This leaves investors with no place to hide, as no mainstream asset is left unscathed. Just as in 1981, a transition from stagflation fears to recession fears likely explains the recent ‘everything sell-off’ because the sell-off in April was most painful for the stagflation casualties – bonds. Whereas, the sell-off in May has been most painful for the recession casualties – industrial metals and stocks.  In a stagflation that morphs to recession, everything sells off. What happens next? The template of 1981-82 could provide a useful guide. Bond prices bottomed first, in the late summer of 1981, as it became clear that the economy was entering a downturn which would exorcise inflation. Of the three other asset classes – all recession casualties – stocks continued to remain under pressure for the next few months but were higher 12 months later. Gold fell another 30 percent, though rebounded sharply in 1982. But the greatest pain was in the industrial metals, which fell another 30 percent and did not recover their highs for several years (Chart I-8). Chart I-82022-23 Could Be An Echo Of 1981-82 2022-23 Could Be An Echo Of 1981-82 2022-23 Could Be An Echo Of 1981-82 2022-23 could be an echo of 1981-82, with bond prices now entering a bottoming process.  Stocks would bottom next, with one difference being a quicker recovery than in 1981-82 because of their higher sensitivity to bond yields. While the near term outlook is cloudy, we expect stock prices to be higher on a 12 month horizon, especially long-duration stocks that are most sensitive to bond yields. But just as in 1981-82, the biggest casualty of a stagflation that morphs into a recession will be the overvalued industrial metals, which are likely to suffer at least double-digit losses over the coming year. Fractal Trading Watchlist This week’s new additions are Czech Republic versus Poland, and Food and Beverages versus the market, which appear overbought. And US REITS versus Utilities, and CNY/USD, which appear oversold. Finally, our new trade recommendation is to underweight the FTSE 100 versus the Stoxx Europe 600. The resource heavy FTSE 100 is especially vulnerable to our anticipated sell-off in commodities, and its recent outperformance is at a point of fragility that has marked previous turning points (Chart I-9). Set the profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 5 percent. Chart I-9FTSE 100 Outperformance Is Near Exhaustion FTSE 100 Outperformance Is Near Exhaustion FTSE 100 Outperformance Is Near Exhaustion Fractal Trading Watchlist: New Additions Chart I-10Czech Outperformance Near Exhaustion Czech Outperformance Near Exhaustion Czech Outperformance Near Exhaustion Chart I-11Food And Beverage Outperformance Near Exhaustion CHART 1 Food And Beverage Outperformance Near Exhaustion CHART 1 Food And Beverage Outperformance Near Exhaustion CHART 1 Chart I-12US REITS Are Oversold Versus Utilities CHART 12 US REITS Are Oversold Versus Utilities CHART 12 US REITS Are Oversold Versus Utilities CHART 12 Chart I-13CNY/USD At A Support Level CNY/USD At A Support Level CNY/USD At A Support Level Chart 1The Strong Trend In The 18-Month-Out US Interest Rate Future Is Fragile The Strong Trend In The 18-Month-Out US Interest Rate Future Is Fragile The Strong Trend In The 18-Month-Out US Interest Rate Future Is Fragile Chart 2The Strong Trend In The 3 Year T-Bond Is Fragile The Strong Trend In The 3 Year T-Bond Is Fragile The Strong Trend In The 3 Year T-Bond Is Fragile Chart 3AUD/KRW Is Vulnerable To Reversal AUD/KRW Is Vulnerable To Reversal AUD/KRW Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 4Canada Versus Japan Is Reversing Canada Versus Japan Is Reversing Canada Versus Japan Is Reversing Chart 5Canada's TSX-60's Outperformance Might Be Over Canada's TSX-60's Outperformance Might Be Over Canada's TSX-60's Outperformance Might Be Over Chart 6US Healthcare Providers Vs. Software At Risk of Reversal US Healthcare Providers Vs. Software At Risk of Reversal US Healthcare Providers Vs. Software At Risk of Reversal Chart 7A Potential Switching Point From Tobacco Into Cannabis A Potential Switching Point From Tobacco Into Cannabis A Potential Switching Point From Tobacco Into Cannabis Chart 8Biotech Is A Major Buy Biotech Is A Major Buy Biotech Is A Major Buy Chart 9CAD/SEK Reversal Has Started CAD/SEK Reversal Has Started CAD/SEK Reversal Has Started Chart 10Financials Versus Industrials To Reverse Financials Versus Industrials To Reverse Financials Versus Industrials To Reverse Chart 11Norway's Outperformance Could End Norway's Outperformance Could End Norway's Outperformance Could End Chart 12Greece's Brief Outperformance To End Greece's Brief Outperformance To End Greece's Brief Outperformance To End Chart 13BRL/NZD At A Resistance Point BRL/NZD At A Resistance Point BRL/NZD At A Resistance Point Chart 14The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Healthcare Is Vulnerable To Reversal The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Healthcare Is Vulnerable To Reversal The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Healthcare Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 15The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Biotech Has Started To Reverse The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Biotech Has Started To Reverse The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Biotech Has Started To Reverse Chart 16Cotton's Outperformance Is Vulnerable To Reversal Cotton's Outperformance Is Vulnerable To Reversal Cotton's Outperformance Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 17Homebuilders Versus Healthcare Services Has Turned Homebuilders Versus Healthcare Services Has Turned Homebuilders Versus Healthcare Services Has Turned Chart 18Switzerland's Outperformance Vs. Germany Has Started To End Switzerland's Outperformance Vs. Germany Has Started To End Switzerland's Outperformance Vs. Germany Has Started To End Chart 19The Rally In USD/EUR Could End The Rally In USD/EUR Could End The Rally In USD/EUR Could End Chart 20The Outperformance Of MSCI Hong Kong Versus China Is Vulnerable To Reversal The Outperformance Of MSCI Hong Kong Versus China Is Vulnerable To Reversal The Outperformance Of MSCI Hong Kong Versus China Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 21A Potential New Entry Point Into Petcare A Potential New Entry Point Into Petcare A Potential New Entry Point Into Petcare Chart 22FTSE100 Outperformance Vs. Euro Stoxx 50 Vulnerable To Reversal FTSE100 Outperformance Vs. Euro Stoxx 50 Vulnerable To Reversal FTSE100 Outperformance Vs. Euro Stoxx 50 Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 23Netherlands Underperformance Vs. Switzerland Close To Exhaustion Netherlands Underperformance Vs. Switzerland Close To Exhaustion Netherlands Underperformance Vs. Switzerland Close To Exhaustion Chart 24The Sell-Off In The 30-Year T-Bond Is Approaching Fractal Fragility The Sell-Off In The 30-Year T-Bond Is Approaching Fractal Fragility The Sell-Off In The 30-Year T-Bond Is Approaching Fractal Fragility Chart 25The Sell-Off In The NASDAQ Is Approaching Fractal Fragility The Sell-Off In The NASDAQ Is Approaching Fractal Fragility The Sell-Off In The NASDAQ Is Approaching Fractal Fragility Chart 26Czech Outperformance Near Exhaustion Czech Outperformance Near Exhaustion Czech Outperformance Near Exhaustion Chart 27Food And Beverage Outperformance Near Exhaustion CHART 1 Food And Beverage Outperformance Near Exhaustion CHART 1 Food And Beverage Outperformance Near Exhaustion CHART 1 Chart 28US REITS Are Oversold Versus Utilities CHART 12 US REITS Are Oversold Versus Utilities CHART 12 US REITS Are Oversold Versus Utilities CHART 12 Chart 29CNY/USD At A Support Level CNY/USD At A Support Level CNY/USD At A Support Level   Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The returns are based on the S&P 500, the 10-year T-bond, the 10-year Treasury Inflation Protected Security (TIPS), the LMEX index, and gold.   Fractal Trading System Fractal Trades Markets Echo 1981, When Stagflation Morphed Into Recession Markets Echo 1981, When Stagflation Morphed Into Recession Markets Echo 1981, When Stagflation Morphed Into Recession Markets Echo 1981, When Stagflation Morphed Into Recession 6-Month Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed   Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations  
Executive Summary Copper Will Remain Tight Even In Recession Copper Will Remain Tight Even In Recession Copper Will Remain Tight Even In Recession Supply-chain disruptions arising from Russia's invasion of Ukraine and demand hits from lockdowns in Shanghai are increasing the odds of a global recession, which can be seen in the WTO's latest economic forecast. Cyclical base-metals demand, particularly copper's, will slow in a recession. Still, markets will remain physically short and well bid, as incremental demand from the global renewable-energy and defense buildouts gathers strength. Global GDP growth will return to trend in 2024. Renewables and defense-related demand will continue to power ahead. Physical deficits will persist. Copper-supply growth increasingly is tied to local political risk – e.g., Chile's government sued miners over water-use disputes this month. Miners now are seeking assurances investment will be protected before committing to higher capex. The environmental stain arising from the global competition for metals will redound to the benefit oil and gas E+Ps involved in natural gas and hydrogen production. Bottom Line: A higher likelihood of a global recession will not diminish the drive to secure base metals critical to renewables and defense, particularly copper. This will keep metals bid and inventories strained. Stagflation likely ensues. We remain long commodity-index exposure expecting longer-term backwardation, and ETFs with exposures to the equity of miners. We continue to expect copper prices to average $5/lb on the COMEX this year, and $6/lb in 2023. Feature The World Trade Organization (WTO) released a sharply lower expectation for global growth this week – from a robust 5.7% rate in 2021 to 2.8% this year and 3.2% next year.1 This effectively translates into a global recession arriving this year. The WTO forecast also calls for global merchandise trade volume to grow 3.0% in 2022 and 3.4% in 2023, which also will dampen cyclical aluminium demand. Related Report  Commodity & Energy StrategyCopper Will Grind Higher The WTO's forecast is one of the first among major agencies to incorporate the impact of the Ukraine war and supply-chain disruptions arising from lockdowns in Shanghai. If the WTO's forecast is realized, cyclical copper and base metals demand will slow, but markets will remain physically short – i.e., in deficit – and well bid, in our view (Chart 1). Incremental demand from the global renewable-energy and defense buildouts in the Big 3 military-industrial blocs – the EU, US and China – will gather strength and keep metals markets tight over the course of this decade (Chart 2). Chart 1Copper Will Remain Tight Even In Recession Copper Will Remain Tight Even In Recession Copper Will Remain Tight Even In Recession Chart 2Copper Inventories Will Remain Tight Copper Demand Will Ignore Recession Copper Demand Will Ignore Recession Global refined copper demand is highly sensitive to GDP growth: While not exactly a 1-for-1 correspondence, a 1% increase in global GDP translates into a 0.76% increase in refined copper demand. A 1% increase in EM GDP translates into a 0.54% increase in refined copper demand in these economies (Chart 3). Interestingly, our modeling finds DM GDP growth has had little if any effect on global refined copper demand, most likely because, historically, DM economies were not building infrastructure to the extent EM economies, particularly China and the Asian Tigers, has been building over past decades. Chart 3World, EM GDP Drive Copper Demand World, EM GDP Drive Copper Demand World, EM GDP Drive Copper Demand Estimating New Incremental Copper Demand The DM base metals demand profile – particularly for copper – is set to change dramatically following the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Russian aggression prompted the EU to double-down on its renewable energy build-out, and to restore a credible military to protect its borders and the safety of its citizens. Both of these efforts will be funded by new bond-issuance programs from the EU. Practically, this means the EU will join the US and Chinese military-industrial complexes in the global competition for critical materials required for the renewable-energy and defense buildouts. The EU and China already were active on the renewables side; it is the US that will be joining that race on a larger scale following the passage of legislation by the Biden administration to fund and incentivize renewables.2 The US and China have been in an intense competition to build military capacities; now the EU joins that race. None of these military-industrial complexes will provide actual spending estimates for these buildouts, which means markets have to continually revise their supply-demand estimates for base metals as data becomes available. Copper markets provide the best data for such an exercise – it is the bellwether market for base metals, with useful data to estimate supply and demand. As a starting point for our estimation of copper balances going forward, we assume global cyclical demand will remain a function of global GDP; EM demand also can be modelled using EM GDP as an explanatory variable. We also assume that the 10 years ending in 2030 will require refined copper production to double in order to meet demand for renewable-energy and from the military-industrial complex globally. We make some reasonable first approximations of what this will look like initially, and then will iterate as actual data becomes available. Chart 1 shows the evolution we expect for global consumption as a function of cyclical and incremental demand. On the supply side, we use estimated annual production for refined copper production from the Australian government's Department of Industry, Science, Energy and Resources, and the World Bureau of Metals Statistics. We note there are a few noteworthy projects due to come on line – e.g., Canada (Kena Gold-Copper project; Blue Cove Copper Project); Congo (Kamoa-Kakula project ramping up); Peru (Quellaveco) and Chile (Pampa Norte). We again note that copper supply in critically important states accounting for huge shares of global production – e.g., Chile (30% of global mining output) and Peru (10%) – increasingly is vulnerable to local political risks.3 Chile, in particular, is facing environmental and political challenges on the mining side: It is in the 13th year of a drought, which forced the government to institute water rationing in the capital Santiago this week. In addition, last week the federal government sued major mining companies over water-rights disputes. Our price view will evolve as we get data on cyclical and incremental demand, and supply additions.We would note in this regard major miners already are sounding the alarm on how difficult it will be to lift supply over the next 10 years given the likely demand markets will be pricing in. For now, we are maintaining our expectation COMEX copper prices will average $5/lb this year and $6/lb next year, and that markets will remain backwardated with inventories remaining under pressure (Chart 2).4 Investment Implications Base metals markets – copper included – are facing a moment of reckoning in terms of being able to support the global push for renewable energy. While the odds of a global recession in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine and China's lockdowns to address the COVID-19 outbreak in Shanghai are higher – which ordinarily would point to inventory accumulation, all else equal – we believe markets will remain tight. A recession will cause cyclical demand to soften, which, along with marginal new supply, will keep the COMEX forward curve relatively flat over the short term (3-9 months). However, over the next two years and beyond, supply will not be coming on fast enough to offset cyclical and incremental demand from the global renewables and defense buildouts (Chart 3). This will keep copper markets in physical-deficit conditions, and inventories will have to draw to meet demand (Chart 4). We expect this will translate into renewed backwardation in the COMEX forward curve. Chart 4Global Inventories Will Continue To Draw Copper Demand Will Ignore Recession Copper Demand Will Ignore Recession Chart 5Backwardation Will Re-emerge Backwardation Will Re-emerge Backwardation Will Re-emerge We remain bullish copper over the medium and longer terms, and remain long commodity index exposure expecting a return of backwardation in COMEX copper, and the XME ETF, which gives us exposure to base metals miners (Chart 5).   Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Ashwin Shyam Research Analyst Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com Paula Struk Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy paula.struk@bcaresearch.com   Commodity Round-Up Energy: Bullish US LNG exports hit record highs again in March, continuing a streak that began in December 2021. Exports averaged 11.9 Bcf/d for the month, on the back of new liquefaction capacity coming on line at the beginning of March. The US EIA is expecting LNG exports to average 12.2 Bcf/d this year, which would represent a 25% increase in shipments abroad. This US is accounting for the bulk of European LNG exports at present. European storage ended March at 26% of capacity, vs. a five-year average capacity of 34% at end-March. Separately, China became the largest importer of LNG in the world in 2021, displacing Japan for the top spot. According to the EIA, China’s LNG imports averaged 10.5 Bcf/d last year, which was close to 20% above 2020 levels. China's LNG imports exceeded Japan's , a 1.7 Bcf/d (19%) increase over its 2020 average, and 0.8 Bcf/d more than Japan’s imports. Base Metals: Bullish The Fraser Institute released a report assessing states’ and countries’ mining investment attractiveness for 2021. Investment attractiveness is measured by accounting for the mineral availability in the region and the effect of government policy on exploration investment. Western Australia topped the charts, while the copper-rich nations of Chile and Peru ranked 38th and 49th. This is telling of the policy adversity and uncertainty towards mining in these two countries and resonates with a BHP executive’s remarks a few weeks ago. Last week, the Chilean government sued mines operated by BHP, Albemarle, and Antofagasta over alleged environmental damage. One of the mines sued is BHP’s Escondida, the world’s largest copper mine. Precious Metals: Bullish According to Impala Platinum, palladium and rhodium prices are expected to rally for the next four-to-five years on tight market fundamentals. Low palladium supply coupled with an increase in the metal’s demand for catalytic converters, as pollution control regulations tighten, are causing the supply squeeze. On April 8 London’s Platinum and Palladium Market suspended Russian refiners from minting platinum and palladium for the London market, boosting the price of both metals (Charts 6 and 7). Russia supplies 10% and 40% of global mined platinum and palladium respectively. Depending on the period of the suspension, Europe may need to substitute Russian imports of the metals from South Africa. Chart 6 Copper Demand Will Ignore Recession Copper Demand Will Ignore Recession Chart 7 Copper Demand Will Ignore Recession Copper Demand Will Ignore Recession       Footnotes   1     Please see the WTO's "TRADE STATISTICS AND OUTLOOK: Russia-Ukraine conflict puts fragile global trade recovery at risk," released by the WTO on April 12, 2022. Revisions are subject to the evolution of the war in Ukraine following Russia's invasion in February 2022. 2     Worthwhile noting here the Biden Administration in the US invoked the Defense Production Act (DPA) to "to support the production and processing of minerals and materials used for large capacity batteries – such as lithium, nickel, cobalt, graphite, and manganese." In addition, the US Department of Defense will be tasked in implementing this authority. Lastly, the White House readout notes, "The President is also reviewing potential further uses of DPA – in addition to minerals and materials – to secure safer, cleaner, and more resilient energy for America." Practically, the US and China are treating access to critical materials as a defense issue. The EU likely joins this club in the very near future. 3    Please see our report from February 24, 2022 entitled Copper Will Grind Higher for additional discussion. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 4    Please see, e.g., Bigger investment in mining needed to meet climate goals, says LGIM, published by ft.com on  April 5, 2022. The article summarizes a study done by Legal & General Investment and BHP, which notes that without a significant increase in mining activity – which is itself a hydrocarbon-intensive undertaking – there will not be sufficient supplies to achieve the IEA's 2050 net-zero goals.     Investment Views and Themes Strategic Recommendations Trades Closed in 2021 Image  
Copper prices have followed a similar trajectory as other commodities since the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The price of COMEX copper jumped from $4.45/lb on February 24 to a peak of $4.92/lb on March 4 before backing down to a low of $4.50/lb…