Even Production Cuts Can’t Save Copper

 | Nov 16, 2015 06:30AM ET

While copper slid to a new six-year low last week, there is some discussion about exactly why.

Everyone can agree the market is oversupplied, demand has slowed in China, consumer of over 40% of the world’s copper and for Barclays (L:BARC) believes China is partially responsible for the latest fall.

h2 Barclay’s Note/h2

Chinese demand is a big part of the problem. The WSJ printed, last week, comments from the bank’s most recent note to investors. “There’s over a million tons of additional supply coming online next year and the year after during a time when demand is seeming to stall,” said Dane Davis, a metals analyst with Barclays in New York.

“Not only are prices going to be lower, they will be lower for a sustained period.” Global copper output is expected to reach a record 22.89 million metric tons this year, while demand is expected at 22.4 mmt, according to Barclays, that’s some half a million tons of overcapacity. Production cutbacks by the likes of Glencore (L:GLEN) and Freeport McMoran (N:FCX), however, should balance that excess but it is the extent to which this new capacity comes on stream that worries Barclays. Certainly, China’s consumer-price inflation decelerated in October, according to data released on Tuesday suggesting growth will continue to slow unless some currently unexpected stimulus measures are announced.