Copper’s Hold Near $3 Depends On Whether Virus Hits Output Or Demand

 | Aug 25, 2020 03:33AM ET

Is copper near $3 a lb something that's here to stay?

In a coronavirus world, the answer will depend on who’s working: the factory employee or the miner.

In a global mining outlook released Friday, Fitch Solutions wrote that production of copper ore, along with that of tin, will face the greatest COVID-19-induced reductions through 2020—due to the concentration of such mining projects in Asia and the Americas, where the virus was seeing a revival.

For instance, copper output in Peru, the third largest producing country, fell by 20.4% through the first half of the year, said Fitch Solutions, a unit of global credit rating group Fitch.

It added:

“Governments in Colombia, Chile and Brazil have allowed mining activities to continue with some health measures, such as reducing the number of personnel on site."

The three countries, all in South America, are among the top 10 coronavirus hotspots of the world, with Brazil coming in at number two just after the United States with 3.6 million cases, Colombia stands at number eight with over 550,000 cases and Chile in the tenth position with just under 400,000 cases.

A scaledown of mine work in these major minerals nations will help keep copper near last week’s highs, when it pierced the $3 per lb ceiling on New York’s COMEX the first time since June 2018.