
Market Overview: Strong Dollar and Risk Reevaluation Cause Copper Prices to Drop from Highs
In the Asian early trading session, the London Metal Exchange (LME) three-month copper dropped to near $10,615 per ton, a decrease of about 0.5% for the day. Traders generally attribute this pullback to the strengthening U.S. dollar index and repricing of interest rates: with expectations of further easing cooling, support for the valuation of risk assets has weakened, putting pressure on basic metals as a whole. Short-term funds are being realized from high positions, pushing prices down to test previous densely traded areas.
Macro Drivers: "Evidence-Based" Monetary Policy and Valuation Premium Compression
Recently, market confidence in further interest rate cuts by major central banks this year has cooled, causing the "discount rate" for non-interest-bearing assets and cyclical commodities to rise, compressing copper's valuation premium simultaneously. For pro-cyclical assets, the shift in macro liquidity from "linear easing" to "data dependence" means prices are more sensitive to economic readings and inflation paths: if subsequent growth and manufacturing indicators fall short of expectations, funds may further reduce risk exposure.
Supply Side: Improved Production Forecasts in Chile, Supply Disruption Premium Recedes
Tensions on the supply side have eased temporarily. Major mining companies in Chile indicate that despite previous short-term disruptions, annual and next year's production is expected to be slightly above 2024 levels. This statement has marginally weakened market worries over "unexpected supply cuts," prompting the retraction of supply risk premiums. Combined with the ramp-up of some projects leading to the recovery of concentrate and smelting activities, the spot discount/premium structure may continue to rebalance.
Demand Side: Slowing Manufacturing Momentum and Cautious End-User Restocking
In the downstream sectors of cables, home appliances, and new energy chains, firms maintain rigid restocking under high interest rates and external demand uncertainty, with a weak willingness for proactive inventory buildup. Overseas manufacturing PMI remains near the contraction-expansion line, and the pull-through effect of infrastructure and real estate on copper has not significantly magnified. Amidst exchange rate fluctuations and rising financing costs, traders and end-user companies prefer "buy-as-needed," suppressing price elasticity.
Trading Structure: Declined Volatility with Range-Bound Thinking Prevails
From market observation, the cross-period price difference and implied volatility of options have fallen from previous highs, indicating that funds chasing price increases have exited, while hedging and selling on highs have increased. Technically, the $10,500-$10,800 per ton range forms the short-term observation framework: the upper limit is constrained by a strong dollar and macro interest rates, with frequent long-short turnover near the mid-band; if the lower limit is effectively breached, it may trigger programmed selling, pushing prices down to seek support at lower densely traded zones.
Risks and Variables: Three Clues Determine Direction
First, the Dollar and Interest Rates: If the dollar remains strong and real interest rates rise, the pressure on copper prices is difficult to change; conversely, a decline in interest rate expectations could provide a window for price recovery.
Second, Supply Fulfillment: The output realization, smelter operating rates, and maintenance arrangements in Chile and other major production areas will directly affect the deliverable supply and the spot basis.
Third, Demand Recovery: The global manufacturing new orders and inventory cycle inflection point; if investments in new energy and grids accelerate, terminal demand is expected to improve the marginal demand for copper.
Rebalancing Volatility, Fundamentals Await "Harder Evidence"
In the short term, copper prices are in a "strong dollar + relaxed supply tensions + demand observation" triple layer, with higher probability of range-bound fluctuations. In the medium term, if the global restocking cycle and energy transition investments resume traction, the structural gap logic for copper remains pivotal. However, before the "evidence chain" is complete, it is more suitable for trade to adopt a range-based thinking and dynamic hedging first, controlling positions, strictly maintaining stop-losses, and waiting for macro and fundamental confirmations in the same direction.

