Key takeaways
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- Goldman says the base-metals rally is running into real-economy demand resistance, especially in China
- A copper-market survey showed fabricators’ order books down 10%–30% as end-users cut purchases
- Even traditionally steady Chinese demand from power-grid projects is slowing, a negative signal for copper
- The rally has been driven by fund flows, weaker dollar, and rate-cut expectations, but Goldman warns macro and fundamentals may be starting to diverge
What Happened?
Industrial metals have surged in early 2026, pushing the LMEX index up about 7% and lifting copper and aluminum toward multi-year or record levels. Goldman Sachs cautioned that the move is increasingly vulnerable because manufacturers are responding to higher prices by reducing orders, particularly in China. Goldman’s recent copper survey found fabricators’ order books fell 10% to 30%, with weakness spreading across downstream users and even slowing grid-related orders.
Why It Matters?
Base metals are highly sensitive to marginal changes in industrial demand, and China remains the critical swing consumer for copper and aluminum. If end-users pull back meaningfully, high prices can become self-limiting—triggering demand destruction and widening the gap between speculative positioning and physical consumption. For investors, this raises the risk of a sharp correction if fund flows reverse or if the macro narrative (weaker dollar, Fed cuts) stops reinforcing the tight-supply story. The warning is particularly relevant for copper because grid investment is a key pillar of demand; slowing there suggests broader real-economy cooling rather than a temporary pause.
What’s Next?
Watch near-term indicators of Chinese physical demand—fabricator order books, spot premia/discounts, exchange inventories, and grid-capex signals—for confirmation of whether this is a short pause or a deeper slowdown. Also monitor positioning and cross-asset catalysts: a shift in the dollar, rates expectations, or risk appetite could unwind the flow-driven component of the rally quickly. If fundamentals don’t re-accelerate, metals pricing may need to reset lower to re-engage end-user demand.















