Today: 13 July 2026
Glencore Stock’s Six-Day Whipsaw Adds Up to 10.35 Percentage Points — Yet Shares Are Flat
13 July 2026
2 mins read

Glencore Stock’s Six-Day Whipsaw Adds Up to 10.35 Percentage Points — Yet Shares Are Flat

London, July 13, 2026, 12:10 BST

Glencore plc rose 0.5% to 513.1 pence around midday on Monday, against a roughly 0.2% fall in the FTSE 100, as Brent crude gained more than 3% after renewed U.S.-Iran attacks. Yet the shares remained 0.1% below their July 3 close — almost no net move after six sessions of abrupt reversals.

That matters because Glencore is both a miner and a commodity trader. Its marketing arm can benefit from wider price gaps and disrupted transport, while its mines and smelters pay more for diesel and sulphuric acid; those industrial costs were already rising in April, Reuters reported.

Market gaugeLatest readingSession move
Glencore shares513.1p+0.51%
FTSE 10010,478.7-0.18%
Brent crude$78.59 a barrel+3.39%
Copper futures$6.267 a pound-0.24%

Adding Glencore’s displayed daily moves from July 6 through Monday in absolute terms — counting gains and losses without offsetting them — produces 10.35 percentage points. The net change from July 3 was minus 0.10%. The stock has been volatile, not directional.

The near-term variable is the Strait of Hormuz. Vessel traffic fell to a five-week low on Sunday, with six ships crossing, while the route carried about one-fifth of global daily oil and liquefied natural gas before the conflict. UBS Group analyst Giovanni Staunovo said the market was carrying “a risk premium but as well a disruption risk supporting prices” — an extra price paid for uncertain supply. Reuters

Glencore’s own guidance puts operating execution beside trading. Chief Executive Gary Nagle said first-quarter marketing performance would put full-year adjusted EBIT — earnings before interest and tax — “comfortably exceeding the top end” of the company’s long-term $2.3 billion-to-$3.5 billion range. Using the midpoint of its annual production ranges and its stated first-half shares implies the following second-quarter volumes; these are calculations, not company forecasts. Glencore

ProductFirst-quarter outputImplied second-quarter outputChange from first quarter
Copper199.6 thousand tonnes203.6 thousand tonnes+2.0%
Steelmaking coal6.50 million tonnes7.58 million tonnes+16.6%
Energy coal22.90 million tonnes21.95 million tonnes-4.1%

Applies Glencore’s stated first-half weighting to the midpoint of its 2026 range, then subtracts first-quarter production.

The calculation makes steelmaking coal the harder near-term test. Second-quarter production would need to rise almost 17% from the first quarter to match the midpoint and stated first-half share, compared with a 2% increase for copper. A miss would not automatically break annual guidance, but it would leave more work for the second half.

That two-sided earnings mix sets Glencore apart from more mine-led Rio Tinto and Anglo American (LON:AAL), whose published portfolios centre on produced materials such as iron ore, copper, aluminium, lithium and crop nutrients. For investors, Glencore’s oil exposure is therefore not a simple energy bet. It is a contest between trading gains and industrial costs.

Glencore will release its half-year production report on July 29 at 7 a.m. UK time, followed by financial results on August 5. The first report should show whether second-quarter volumes cleared the hurdles above; the second should reveal whether marketing profit outran cost inflation.

But the balance can break in either direction. A quick restoration of Hormuz traffic could strip out oil’s risk premium and narrow trading opportunities; prolonged disruption could lift diesel, acid and freight costs faster than marketing profit. The downside case is a cost squeeze combined with delayed production, leaving less time to recover later in 2026.

For now, the share price says the benefits and costs nearly cancel. The volatility is real; a lasting valuation gain is not. July 29 will test whether that neutrality is too cautious or about right.

Mateusz Kaczmarek is a financial and technology journalist at TS2.tech, covering stocks, artificial intelligence, semiconductors and global market developments. A graduate of the Poznań University of Economics and Business, he previously worked in financial analysis before moving into business journalism. His reporting focuses on technology companies, market trends and the forces shaping global investment markets.

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