Copper has rallied roughly 3.8% over the week, and the move is better explained by physical tightness than by macro speculation.[12][31] Three forces are reinforcing one another.
Supply: the swing producer blinked
On the supply side, Codelco — the world’s largest producer — trimmed its 2026 output guidance, citing declining ore grades at flagship mines.[12][08] With few new projects due to ramp before 2027, the market has little buffer to absorb a downgrade from the swing producer.[19]
Demand: two buyers arrived at once
Demand has arrived from two directions simultaneously. Chinese grid operators accelerated procurement, and EV and renewable installers front-loaded orders ahead of scheduled quota changes.[31][27] Refined-copper imports rose for a third consecutive month.[44]
Macro: a tailwind, not the cause
The macro backdrop amplified both legs. A softer dollar following the Fed’s hold mechanically supports dollar-priced metals, and lower real yields reduce the cost of carrying inventory.[47][51]
The table decomposes the move by driver, with each figure traced to its source.
What would change the read
The clearest risk to the move is demand durability: if Chinese restocking is pull-forward rather than new consumption, inventories could rebuild quickly.[27] This analysis is context on what has happened and why — it is not a forecast or a recommendation.