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ASIA COPPER WOMEN'S WEEK - The copper bull of Mercuria predicts new price records in the future

By Dylan Duan Amy Lv, and Lewis Jackson

SHANGHAI (Nov 26) - The global copper market will be squeezed again next year. This will push prices of refined metal and concentrate to new heights, said the head of Mercuria's metals research on Wednesday. Nicholas Snowdon, the high-profile copper bear at Mercuria in Geneva, predicted that next year's global copper market, where copper concentrate is melted down to metal, would be in deficit by 500,000 tons, similar to 2025. He said that the improved estimate from his forecast in May of a 700,000-ton deficit was due to a limited growth of supply and increased demand from new smelters located outside China.

Snowdon said at the World Copper Conference Asia2025 in Shanghai, China's commercial center. "It is a market which has experienced a significant shock to supply this year. It's a shock that's... likely to continue into next year." He said that the rush to import copper to the United States before tariffs was causing a large stockpile of cathode, which could reach 90% in the first quarter next year.

Snowdon stated that the London Metal Exchange prices for refined copper will have to increase to bring metals back onto global markets which are susceptible to low inventories. Snowdon stated that the cathode markets are now surplus between 350,000 and 400,000 tonnes, which is a significant revision to his forecast in May of a shortfall of 300,000 tons. Mercuria, along with other energy traders like BGN and Gunvor are expanding into the metals market, betting on structural changes to global energy systems. Snowdon reported that Mercuria had invested almost $2 billion in the last 12 months and traded 1 million tons metal and 1.5 millions tons of concentrate. (Reporting and editing by Clarence Fernandez, Amy Lv, and Dylan Duan from Shanghai)

(source: Reuters)