Copper Price Today (Dec. 15, 2025, 3:30 PM EST): Copper Holds Near $5.42/lb as LME Prices Stay Close to Record Highs and 2026 Forecasts Shift

Copper Price Today (Dec. 15, 2025, 3:30 PM EST): Copper Holds Near $5.42/lb as LME Prices Stay Close to Record Highs and 2026 Forecasts Shift

Copper prices are back in focus heading into the final stretch of 2025, with the “red metal” hovering near record territory after a sharp run-up and an equally sharp bout of volatility late last week.

As of the latest mid‑afternoon pricing available, benchmark COMEX copper futures (most‑active contract) traded around $5.4185 per poundup about 1.1% on the day, with the day’s range roughly $5.3433–$5.5192, according to Investing.com’s derived real-time feed.  Investing

In London, copper is still being priced like a market wrestling with two competing stories: (1) tightness and inventory distortions linked to U.S. stockpiling and (2) macro and China-demand anxiety that can knock prices around quickly. On Monday, Reuters reported LME three‑month copper up about 1.4% to $11,678 per metric ton by late afternoon in Europe.  Reuters

Below is what’s moving copper today, the biggest headlines from Dec. 15, 2025, and where major forecasts are landing for 2026.


Copper price now: the key levels traders are watching

Copper is being quoted differently depending on the benchmark and venue, but the message is consistent: prices are elevated, and the market is moving in big, fast increments.

  • COMEX (U.S.) copper futures: around $5.4185/lb+1.11% on the session in the latest update, with heavy volume for the day and a wide intraday range.  Investing
  • LME (London) three‑month copper: $11,678/mt+1.4% in Reuters’ session update.  Reuters
  • LME three‑month (SMM/Metal.com feed): last quoted around $11,686/mt+1.16%, with a reported daily range up to $11,890.5/mtMetal

The market is also still digesting Friday’s record-setting spike. Reuters noted copper hit a record high of $11,952/mt on Friday before volatility returned.  Reuters


What’s driving copper today: dollar moves, short covering, and a China tug-of-war

1) A weaker dollar is offering near-term support

Copper is priced in dollars globally, so a softer greenback can mechanically make dollar‑denominated metals more attractive for non‑U.S. buyers. Reuters specifically pointed to a weaker dollar supporting copper on Monday even as China concerns lingered.  Reuters

2) Traders are repositioning into settlement and year-end

One of the more “market microstructure” drivers today is positioning. Reuters described short (bearish) positions being cut or rolled ahead of midweek settlement.  Reuters
That matters because when positioning becomes crowded, price can jump quickly on relatively ordinary headlines.

3) China’s mixed signals still cap enthusiasm

Copper can rally hard on supply tightness, but it’s still tethered to end-demand expectations—especially from China.

Reuters highlighted that China’s factory output growth slowed to a 15‑month low in November, while new home prices extended a decline, underscoring persistent property‑sector pressure.  Reuters
That combination—slower industrial momentum and fragile real estate—keeps the market wary of extrapolating high prices into a straight line.


Inventories are the pressure point: LME stocks vs U.S. stockpiling

If there’s a single structural theme running through today’s copper market, it’s the inventory and flow story—particularly the idea that metal is being “pulled” into U.S. warehouses.

Reuters reported that about 39% of 165,875 tons of copper in LME‑registered warehouses was marked for delivery out(i.e., earmarked to leave), a statistic traders watch because it can signal tightening availability.  Reuters

At the same time, Reuters said daily inflows into COMEX copper stocks continued, with inventories already at record highs, driven by higher U.S. prices and arbitrage incentives.  Reuters

This is why copper can feel “tight” even when macro data (especially from China) looks soft: where the metal sits—and where it’s moving—can dominate the price action.


Fresh forecasts and outlook changes dated Dec. 15, 2025

Goldman Sachs lifts its 2026 copper forecast

A major headline for Dec. 15 is Goldman Sachs raising its 2026 copper price forecast to $11,400/mt from $10,650/mt, according to a Reuters item carried by TradingView.  TradingView

The reasoning is explicitly linked to trade policy probabilities and affordability politics: Goldman cited reduced odds of a refined copper tariff being implemented in the first half of 2026—not “no tariff risk,” but a shifting timeline.  TradingView

Goldman also put numbers around tariff scenarios, saying there is a 55% chance of a 15% tariff on copper importsbeing announced in the first half of 2026, with implementation slated for 2027 and the possibility of higher rates laterTradingView

Just as importantly, that same Reuters/TradingView update frames the tariff narrative as a global pricing engine: the prospect of future tariffs could keep U.S. copper trading at a premium, encourage stockpiling, and tighten supply outside the U.S.  TradingView

Citi’s bullish scenario gains attention: $13,000 early 2026 and $15,000 in Q2

Another widely circulated Dec. 15 read-through is Citi’s more aggressive upside case. AASTOCKS reported Citi’s view that copper could rise to $13,000/mt early next year and potentially reach $15,000/mt in Q2 2026, supported by limited mine supply and U.S. stockpiling dynamics.  AAStocks

AASTOCKS also emphasizes the thematic demand story—electrification, grid expansion, and data-center buildouts—as ongoing support for higher copper pricing into 2026.  AAStocks

“Expect choppy, volatile trade” into year-end

Even the near-term tone from market strategists is cautious on the path, if not the direction. Reuters quoted Marex senior metals strategist Alastair Munro warning that prices are likely to remain “choppy and volatile” into year-end and into the first quarterReuters

That’s an important cue for anyone following copper “price today” headlines: the market is not only high—it is fast.


Today’s market-structure headline: the LME’s position-limit rule changes

Not every Dec. 15 copper headline is about price prints. One is about how the world’s main base-metals marketplace plans to police positions in the future.

Reuters reported the London Metal Exchange outlined plans for new position‑limit rules from July 2026, as responsibility shifts from the UK Financial Conduct Authority to trading venues. The LME said the changes are intended to make limits more responsive to market dynamics and give the exchange a more holistic view of exposure.  Reuters

This matters for copper because, in extreme squeezes or dislocations, position rules can influence how quickly an imbalance can build—and how it is managed.


Supply chain moves in the background: a major U.S. smelter plan

Beyond trading and inventories, governments and companies are trying to “re‑plumb” critical-minerals supply chains—and copper is a core part of that effort.

Reuters reported on Dec. 15 that Korea Zinc plans a $7.4 billion smelter investment in the United States, intended to produce non‑ferrous metals including copper (with commercial operations rolling out gradually from 2027 to 2029).  Reuters

This isn’t a 2025 supply fix, but it’s part of the longer arc the copper market is pricing: new capacity is expensive, slow, and increasingly strategic.


What the derivatives tape is saying: volumes and open interest

For traders watching whether the move is “real” or just thin year-end flows, market activity is also getting attention.

The Associated Press reported that as of 10:00 AM (Dec. 15), estimated COMEX copper futures volume was 30,578 contracts, with open interest at 258,743, down modestly from prior levels.  AP News

That snapshot supports the broader narrative of a market actively repositioning after Friday’s whipsaw.


The big question for copper into 2026: is this a supply squeeze, a tariff trade, or a demand boom?

Right now, copper is being driven by a three-way tension:

  1. Physical tightness signals (like LME stocks marked for delivery and elevated price levels)  Reuters
  2. Policy and tariff uncertainty that can re-route global inventory flows and create regional pricing premiums  TradingView
  3. Demand confidence, especially in China, where weak property data remains a recurring headwind even as industrial and strategic demand themes (grids, electrification, data infrastructure) stay supportive  Reuters

That’s why today’s copper price action can look “inconsistent” at first glance: copper can rise on dollar weakness and positioning even while traders cite soft China numbers—because inventory dynamics and policy probabilities can dominate the daily tape.


Bottom line: copper remains near record levels, but volatility is the base case

Copper’s latest mid‑afternoon read shows the market still priced near the high end of the past year, with COMEX near $5.42/lb and LME copper near $11,700/mt in widely followed benchmarks.  Investing

But Dec. 15’s news flow makes one point clear: the next leg—up or down—may be decided less by a single macro print and more by how inventories move, how wide U.S.–ex‑U.S. pricing gaps stay, and what the market concludes about tariff timelinesTradingView

Copper Prices at New Record: Demand to Keep Outstripping Supply, BloombergNEF Says

Stock Market Today

  • Tariff ruling by Supreme Court could steer Friday's US stock market open
    January 9, 2026, 8:05 AM EST. U.S. stock futures opened flat to modestly higher on Friday as traders brace for back-to-back risk events. In pre-market trade, Dow futures ticked up about 0.0%, S&P 500 and Nasdaq-100 showed little movement. The focus is on a Supreme Court decision on whether the Trump-era tariffs can stand under the IEEPA, with a ruling expected later today that could redefine U.S. trade policy. Analysts warn the verdict could push markets sideways to lower, especially if tariffs are deemed unlawful, potentially feeding higher inflation and pressuring the dollar. Investors also await the payrolls data for clues on the Fed path. A ruling against tariffs could reverse some tariff windfalls, complicating fiscal calculations and potentially shaking risk sentiment into a cautious session.
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