All Eyes On Copper As Global Economy Contracts

 | Aug 11, 2019 12:27AM ET

Copper is a fairly strong measure of the strength and capacity of the global economy and global manufacturing. Right now, Copper has been under quite a bit of pricing pressure and has fallen from levels above $4.50 (near 2011) to levels near $2.55. Most recently, Copper had rotated higher, to levels near $3.25, after President Trump was elected on November 2016, yet has recently fallen as trade and global economic concerns become more intense.

This should be viewed as a strong warning sign that institutional traders and investors are very concerned that the future economic and manufacturing activities throughout the world are continuing to contract. Copper is used in various forms throughout all types of manufacturing and consumer products, such as computers, building and infrastructure, electronics, chemical and medical use as well as automobile and aircraft manufacturing. It makes sense that copper prices would be a leading indicator for much of the global economy and relate to economic output and capacity.

h3 Copper Monthly Long Term Chart/h3

As the U.S./China trade war continues and we enter the final stretch of the U.S. Presidential election cycle, we believe that copper will break down below the $2.50 level and attempt to identify past support levels slightly below $1.50 over the next 6 to 12+ months. We believe the next big move in commodities will be a contraction move where certain commodities (mostly manufacturing and industrial related) will collapse as the world focuses on two of the most important events that are about to conclude in 16+ months: the U.S. Presidential elections and the Global Trade/Economic issues.