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Copper Price Today (Dec. 16, 2025): LME Retreats From Record High as China Data Weighs; Goldman and Morgan Stanley Update 2026 Outlook
16 December 2025
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Copper Price Today (Dec. 16, 2025): LME Retreats From Record High as China Data Weighs; Goldman and Morgan Stanley Update 2026 Outlook

Copper prices eased on Tuesday, December 16, 2025, extending the market’s pullback from last week’s record highs as traders weighed weaker signals from China’s economy, year-end liquidity conditions, and shifting expectations around U.S. trade policy.

After surging to an all-time high of $11,952 per metric ton on the London Metal Exchange (LME) last Friday, copper has turned more volatile—moving sharply on every new data point and headline about inventories, tariffs, and demand from AI-related infrastructure. 

Copper price today: where copper is trading on Dec. 16, 2025

Copper is traded globally across several benchmarks, and prices can differ by exchange and contract month. Here are the key reference points from today’s coverage:

  • LME three-month copper slipped in early trade and remained softer later in the session, with reports showing it down to around $11,550/ton in Asian hours  and around $11,592/ton by 09:43 GMT in London trading. 
  • LME’s official page showed a three‑month closing price (day‑delayed) of 11,655.50, up 1.22%, with the site indicating pricing data valid through Dec. 16, 2025
  • Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE): the most‑traded copper contract was reported down 1.29% to 91,380 yuan/ton as of 03:15 GMT
  • U.S. COMEX copper futures (active contract) were trading around $5.37/lb, down roughly 0.77% on the day, with the session range cited between $5.3180 and $5.4090 in the historical table for Dec. 16. 

Why the numbers don’t perfectly match: LME “three‑month copper” is typically quoted in $/ton, SHFE in yuan/ton, and COMEX in $/lb. On top of that, outlets reference different timestamps (Asian open vs. London morning vs. close), and some feeds are delayed or contract-specific. Business Recorder+2Investing.com+2

What’s moving copper today: China’s factory signal, property pressure, and “AI bubble” jitters

The day’s dominant macro driver was renewed concern about demand in China, the world’s largest copper consumer.

Reuters reporting cited slower factory output growth to a 15‑month low in November, with new home prices continuing to decline—a reminder that the property sector remains a persistent drag. 

At the same time, copper’s pullback is not just about China. The market has been wrestling with a second narrative: whether part of the late‑2025 rally has become overly “crowded” and speculative, tied to the idea that AI data centers and electrification will overwhelm supply. Reuters noted that renewed fears of an “AI bubble” contributed to a sharp sell-off after the recent record high. TradingView

In plain terms: copper is being traded as both a growth metal and a theme trade. When investors feel confident about global growth and AI capex, copper can behave like a momentum asset. When doubts emerge—about China, tech valuations, or macro conditions—the market can snap back quickly.

Year-end market conditions: thin liquidity is amplifying swings

Another important piece of today’s copper story is market structure rather than fundamentals.

A separate Reuters update described cautious trading ahead of U.S. jobs data and thinning year‑end liquidity, warning that reduced depth can exaggerate intraday moves.  In that report, analysts flagged that base‑metals price action is becoming more jumpy into late December—making copper especially vulnerable given how far it has run this year.

That same Reuters dispatch also highlighted a key “real economy” indicator watched closely by metals desks: the Yangshan copper premium (often used as a proxy for Chinese import demand) has stabilized around $42, described as a two‑month highBusiness Recorder This doesn’t erase the weak macro prints from China, but it does suggest that physical market signals are not uniformly bearish.

Copper in 2025: up sharply, but increasingly headline-driven

Even after today’s dip, copper remains one of the standout performers of 2025.

Reuters reporting said copper is up about 33% year-to-date, on track for its biggest annual rise since 2009, driven by a mix of mine disruptionsU.S.-linked inventory flows, and expectations for AI and energy-transition demand

Those drivers matter because they help explain why copper has been able to set records even while some traditional demand signals (like parts of China’s property market) remain weak.

The U.S. tariff wildcard: why trade policy is shaping the global copper price

If there is one theme that repeatedly shows up in today’s copper news cycle, it is this: U.S. tariff risk is influencing real-world copper flows—and, by extension, the price discovery process.

Goldman Sachs raises its 2026 copper forecast to $11,400/ton

A Reuters item published today said Goldman Sachs raised its 2026 copper price forecast to $11,400 per metric ton(from $10,650). 

The same report described the bank’s view that the market is increasingly centered on the timing and design of potential U.S. copper import tariffs. Goldman discussed a scenario framework including:

  • 55% chance the Trump administration announces a 15% tariff on copper imports in the first half of 2026,
  • Implementation in 2027, with a possible increase to 30% in 2028

Goldman also noted that the possibility of future tariffs can keep U.S. copper prices at a premium to the LME benchmark and encourage stockpiling, tightening availability outside the U.S. 

COMEX inventories and “trapped” metal: why the U.S. matters beyond the headline

Reuters reported that daily inflows to COMEX copper stocks have continued, with inventories already at record highs, a dynamic linked to the price premium and tariff uncertainty. 

A Business Insider analysis published today makes a similar point in plain language: large U.S. inventories can become effectively “stuck” in-country, leaving the rest of the world with a tighter tradable pool—one reason the market can feel squeezed even when broader forecasts point to surplus conditions. Business Insider

2026 outlook: deficit or surplus? The forecasts diverge sharply

One reason copper is so volatile right now is that major institutions disagree on the 2026 balance.

Goldman: higher forecast price, but a bigger surplus estimate

In the same Reuters piece on Goldman’s forecast, the bank lifted its forecast for the 2026 global market surplus to 300,000 tons (from 160,000 tons)

That combination—a higher price forecast alongside a larger surplus estimate—sounds contradictory at first glance. But it becomes more coherent if you think in terms of regional dislocations: copper can be “surplus” globally while still feeling tight in the places that matter most for deliverable exchange stocks and spot premiums, especially if U.S. flows continue to distort availability elsewhere.

Morgan Stanley: widening deficits and low inventories outside the U.S.

A separate Reuters excerpt on Morgan Stanley said the bank expects copper to post a 260,000‑ton deficit in 2025 and a much larger 600,000‑ton deficit in 2026

Morgan Stanley also flagged that copper inventories outside the United States are low and could shrink further if U.S. imports continue and data-center demand outpaces supply growth. 

Bottom line: On Dec. 16, the market is being pulled between two coherent—but different—stories:

  • “Structural tightness” story (deficit): constrained mine supply + accelerating electrification/AI demand + low visible inventories. TradingView+1
  • “Surplus with distortions” story: global balance may still show surplus, but tariffs and stockpiling can shift metal into the U.S. and tighten the ex-U.S. market, keeping prices elevated and volatile. TradingView+1

Corporate and policy headlines: consolidation and strategic importance

Copper’s record pricing is also feeding back into corporate strategy and politics.

A Financial Times report today said the Canadian government has approved the $60 billion merger between Anglo American and Teck Resources, creating one of the world’s biggest copper producers (with the merged entity set to be headquartered in Vancouver, according to the report). 

M&A of this scale matters for price watchers because it reflects a broader reality: high-quality copper assets are scarce, project timelines are long, and governments increasingly treat copper supply as strategic—especially with electrification, grid buildouts, and data-center expansion all competing for the same material.

What to watch next: the near-term catalysts that could swing copper again

Copper’s direction into late December is likely to depend on a short list of fast-moving variables:

  1. China demand signals
    Traders will keep parsing industrial and property indicators for confirmation of either stabilization or further weakening, after the latest factory-output slowdown and ongoing home-price declines. 
  2. U.S. macro data and risk appetite
    Markets have been positioned cautiously ahead of key U.S. jobs data and central-bank decisions, a tone that can spill into industrial metals. 
  3. Tariff timelines and policy messaging
    Any credible hint on whether copper tariffs are coming—and when—can change the incentive to stockpile metal in the U.S. and reshape spreads between COMEX and LME. 
  4. Inventories and premiums
    The tug-of-war between tightness and surplus often shows up first in “plumbing”: exchange stocks, cancellations, and physical premiums like the Yangshan premium cited at $42 this week. Business Recorder

The takeaway for Dec. 16, 2025

Copper price today is not being set by one single driver—it’s being set by the intersection of China’s uneven recoverytight supply narrativesAI- and electrification-linked demand expectations, and a uniquely powerful swing factor: U.S. trade policy and stockpiling.

That mix helps explain why copper can sit near record territory while still selling off hard on a weak China print, and why 2026 forecasts can disagree so widely—even among top-tier institutions—without either side sounding unreasonable. 

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