Copper Rises to Record High
2026-05-11 14:32
By
Andre Joaquim
1 min. read
Copper futures in the US surged to $6.4 per pound on Monday, the highest on record, as concerns about supply and the speculative longer-term demand outlook drove bidding volumes to surge.
The ongoing conflict between the US and Iran in the Middle East has all but suspended exports of sulphur and sulphuric acid from the key region since March.
The tight supply for the commodity, which is used by refiners through heap leaching and purifying copper to produce anodes, drove China to suspend exports.
Consequently, the shortage in top copper producer Chile forced major refiners to cut capacity and lower supply.
Meanwhile, major tech companies continued to sign agreements that exponentially increase datacenter construction, supporting the outlook for copper due to its utility in electrification and grid technology.
Broader manufacturing demand was also underpinned by robust manufacturing activity in China, with the broader manufacturing PMI rising to an over five-year high.