Copper Corrects; 3 Reasons This Is A Scale-Down Buying Opportunity

 | Jun 21, 2021 14:55

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • High-flying copper reaches a record high in May
  • Copper corrects: The Fed makes it a falling knife
  • Three reasons why copper’s move is a scale-down buying opportunity
  • FCX and SCCO correlate well with the red metal
  • JJC is a pure play on copper

Many market participants call the red nonferrous metal that leads the industrial commodities trading on the London Metals Exchange “Doctor Copper” because of its long tradition of moving higher with economic expansion and lower with contraction, thereby making it a generally reliable diagnostician for the health or infirmity of global economies.

Before 2005, Copper Futures on the CME’s COMEX division never traded above $1.6065 per pound. In 2006, the base metal rose to over $4 for the first time. In 2011, it reached a record peak at the $4.6495 level. In 2021, that high gave way to an even higher price.

After trading to a low of $2.0595 in March 2020 during the height of COVID-19 induced selling, copper took off on the upside. Shares of companies that extract the nonferrous metal from the earth’s crust exploded higher.

Mining companies tend to outperform the commodities they produce on the upside and underperform on the downside. Freeport-McMoran (NYSE:FCX) and Southern Copper Corporation (NYSE:SCCO) are two of the leading copper producers worldwide. The iPath Series B Bloomberg Copper Subindex Total Return ETN (NYSE:JJC), an ETF product, is a pure play on copper as it reflects the red metal’s price action.

Copper had a rough week in mid-June, but that could create another in a series of buying opportunities for Doctor Copper and mining companies as they continue to have the potential to reach higher highs over the coming months and years. The current selloff could be a blessing in disguise for value seekers.

h2 High-flying copper reaches a record in May/h2

2021 has been a very bullish year for the copper market. The price moved above the $4 per pound level for the first time since 2011 in February.