- Citigroup has raised its short-term copper price forecast from $13,000 per ton to $14,500 per ton, indicating a significant increase in bullish sentiment among major financial institutions towards core commodity assets.
- The bank simultaneously raised its medium to long-term price expectations, significantly increasing the copper price estimate for the next six to twelve months from the previous $12,000 per ton to $15,000 per ton, suggesting that the marginal changes in supply and demand tightness are continuing.
- There is ongoing market concern about the potential policy risk of the U.S. imposing tariffs on refined copper, with expectations that this external variable will provide key support for bullish sentiment before the review deadline at the end of June.
Tariff Premium Expectations Dominate Short-term Market Sentiment
According to the latest industry data and market report released by Thomson Reuters on June 1, 2026, Citigroup's strategy analysis team has comprehensively raised the price center for core non-ferrous metals. The core marginal variable leading to this model revision lies in the potential policy interventions facing global trade flows. Currently, commodity market traders are closely monitoring potential changes in manufacturing costs, especially the U.S. government's possible new round of tariff increases on refined copper. This policy-induced uncertainty has led downstream buyers in the supply chain to adopt defensive restocking strategies before key time nodes, thereby accumulating a large amount of premium funds in the spot and near-month contract markets.
Long-term Price Model Records Unexpected Revision
In terms of specific adjustment data, Citigroup has shown a rare hawkish pricing stance in recent years. Its short-term copper price forecast has jumped directly from the original $13,000 per ton to $14,500 per ton. Of more interest to macro hedge funds is that the institution has raised the medium to long-term copper price center, spanning six to twelve months, from $12,000 per ton to $15,000 per ton in one go. This overall upward shift in the forward curve not only reflects the pulse-like upward momentum brought by short-term policy frictions but also suggests deep concerns from the sell-side research team about the continued expansion of the global refined copper supply gap within the next year, indicating a fundamental shift in valuation logic.
Key Review Deadline Becomes Focus of Bull-Bear Game
In its officially disclosed research report, Citigroup explicitly mentioned that a clear timetable has been set for the review process surrounding refined copper tariffs. As the review deadline at the end of June approaches, the chip game between bulls and bears is expected to reach a fever pitch. Analysts point out that at least until the official final review conclusion is announced, the premium caused by policy expectation gaps is difficult for the market to easily disprove. This means that throughout June, the downside space for copper prices will be strongly hedged by tariff expectations, and any phase-out of spot inventories is likely to be amplified in sentiment, thereby turning into a catalyst for a new round of price surges.
Restructuring of Macro Variables Triggers Forward-looking Reassessment of the Supply Chain
From a global macroeconomic perspective, refined copper, as an indispensable industrial machine for electrification transformation and high-tech infrastructure, is bound to squeeze the profit margins of downstream manufacturing industries due to its sharp price fluctuations. If subsequent core inflation indicators rebound due to a surge in commodity prices, the policy paths and market pricing of major global central banks may be forced to reassess. Citigroup's forward-looking forecast indicates that the current global distribution of refined copper capacity and trade routes is in an extremely fragile balance. If the future U.S. tariff policy is finally implemented, the global supply chain will inevitably undergo structural reorganization, and the $15,000 forward target price may just be the starting point of a new normal in this commodity cycle.