11/13/2025
COPPER DOWN LAST WEEK; GLOBAL ECONOMIC GROWTH CONCERNS
London Metal Exchange copper futures and the rest of the base metals declined during the week to Friday November 7 while prices consolidate after the previous week’s rally and amid concerns of economic growth slowing down in China, US and Europe.
COPPER lost almost 1.3% week on week to $10,724.50 per tonne after scaling record highs last week.
The metal traded within a narrow range during the week with the bullish narrative that buoyed last week’s rally seemingly softening amid concerns of economic growth slowing in China and the US.
“It has been the macro letting some air out of the tires which has really weighed on copper this week,” Marex analyst Alastair Munro said. “Or at the very least the current uncertainty perhaps renders discretionary risk appetite more muted until we get the December [US] Fed rates decision out of the way.”
A less rosy economic growth picture was amplified last week after China’s GDP slowed to 4.8% in the third quarter, while its manufacturing index declined to 49 in October from 49.9 the preceding month.
“Despite booming equity market indices, US growth appears to be slowing and there is very little growth in Europe,” Fastmarkets analyst William Adams said.
Copper may be facing “conflicting signals” marked by tight underlying supply but insufficient fundamental demand support, after pulling back from the record high, according to Sucden Financial analysts Daria Efanova and Viktoria Kuszak.
