Copper's recent rally tells an interesting story—but not necessarily the one most bullish analysts want to hear. Tariff pressures, temporary supply disruptions, and strategic stockpiling have all fueled the upside move. Dig deeper, though, and the picture gets murkier. The underlying economics for long-term copper demand don't stack up to justify greenfield mining investments. Instead of breaking ground on new operations, industry players are consolidating through mergers and acquisitions. This consolidation-over-expansion pattern suggests the sector remains cautious about sustained demand growth. Whether energy transition narratives can eventually reignite genuine off-take demand remains the open question—but current momentum appears more cyclical than structural.
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RetroHodler91
· 18h ago
The merger wave is coming, indicating that no one in the mining circle truly believes copper can rise long-term...
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MetaMaximalist
· 01-17 05:06
ngl the copper consolidation play is just institutional risk-hedging dressed up as macro strategy... m&a over capex screams they don't actually believe the energy transition narrative they're selling us
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CantAffordPancake
· 01-17 05:06
Copper prices are rising sharply, but the bullish story doesn't quite add up... Basically, it's tariffs and hoarding causing trouble. Is there real demand? Not that strong.
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NFTArchaeologist
· 01-17 04:59
Copper prices are rising happily, but the underlying logic really doesn't support the construction of new mines... That's the key.
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Ser_APY_2000
· 01-17 04:44
To be honest, this wave of copper price increase feels a bit fake. It seems to be short-term speculation caused by tariffs and stockpiling, with no real long-term fundamentals backing it up.
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rekt_but_resilient
· 01-17 04:41
To be honest, the bullish trend of copper looks hot, but fundamentally it's supported by speculation and stockpiling, and genuine demand is not that strong. Mining companies are merging rather than opening new mines, which says a lot.
Copper's recent rally tells an interesting story—but not necessarily the one most bullish analysts want to hear. Tariff pressures, temporary supply disruptions, and strategic stockpiling have all fueled the upside move. Dig deeper, though, and the picture gets murkier. The underlying economics for long-term copper demand don't stack up to justify greenfield mining investments. Instead of breaking ground on new operations, industry players are consolidating through mergers and acquisitions. This consolidation-over-expansion pattern suggests the sector remains cautious about sustained demand growth. Whether energy transition narratives can eventually reignite genuine off-take demand remains the open question—but current momentum appears more cyclical than structural.