Copper Drops on Middle East Escalation
2026-07-08 12:26
By
Andre Joaquim
1 min. read
Copper futures fell toward the $6 per pound mark on Wednesday, the lowest in two weeks, and tracking the pullback in base metals after the escalation in the Middle East war strengthened the dollar and hampered the outlook on global manufacturing.
The US and Iran exchanged attacks, prompting Washington to block Iranian energy sales and President Trump to label the current ceasefire as invalid.
Energy costs rose and lifted credit costs across the globe, hampering the outlook for manufacturing activity.
The developments offset supply concerns for copper as the Middle East due to the shortage of sulphuric acid since the start of the conflict, essential in the copper refining process.
This is partly because of higher exports from alternative sources, with Canadian export volumes of non-metallic minerals, which are led by sulphur, rising 50% on the month in May.