Copper: As Bears Claw The Red Metal, Could It Slip Below $4?

 | Aug 06, 2021 03:46

Two months after copper's worst selloff in more than a year, longs in the so-called red metal are still finding it hard to catch a break. 

And both fundamentals and technicals suggest things could get worse for copper bulls, before they get better.

The price of copper has trended mostly lower since June’s 8% tumble, the metal’s worst for a month since March 2020. 

The slump came as top consumer, China slowed buying and shrewdly used copper stockpiled from previous imports to force down prices after they reached record highs in May. China imports enormous amounts of the metal for its building and infrastructure needs and pricey copper was beginning to fuel inflation concerns in Beijing.

The bearish sentiment since June has culminated in another steep red tick for copper this week, with futures on New York’s COMEX down 2.6% for the sharpest weekly decline in seven.

Again, China is in the news—this time not so much for price suppression as for new COVID cases which are mushrooming from the Delta variant of the virus.

Saxo Bank commodities expert Ole Hansen said on Thursday that copper has "got forces pulling in opposite directions."

The longer term bullish narrative hasn't changed much ... (but) the market's a bit worried about the Chinese slowdown" in demand, Hansen added.

COMEX copper’s front-month contract, September, closed on Thursday at $4.3480 per lb. It is down 11% from the record high of $4.888 on May 10, although it remains up 24% on the year.

The point to watch is whether the price falls to $4.20, Tom Essaye, founder of Sevens Report Research, said in a note. 

Copper has dropped to roughly that level four times since April, and it has promptly rebounded each time, Essaye said, adding:

“A drop below $4.20 would raise concerns about the sustainability of the [economic] recovery.”

So what do copper’s technicals show? How low can it go?

Sunil Kumar Dixit of SK Dixit Charting in Kolktata, India, breaks it down for us.