How AI and EVs Are Making Copper the New Gold

In This Article:

Hello, Reader.

I have something special in store for you. Today, we’re joined by Thomas Yeung. If you’re one of my paid-up subscribers, you might recognize him from Fry’s Investment Report (members can log in here), where he helps me keep readers updated on the recommendations in our model portfolio each week. He’s also a regular writer at InvestorPlace.com – our free news and analysis website – the former editor of Tom Yeung’s Profit & Protection, and a former Wall Streeter.

Starting today, he’s also joining me here at Smart Money to keep you updated about markets, investing… and everything in between.

InvestorPlace - Stock Market News, Stock Advice & Trading Tips

Not to worry – I’m not going anywhere. You’ll continue to get your regularly scheduled Smart Money e-letters from me.

With that, take it away, Tom…

Regards,

Eric Fry

In January, a couple of amateur thieves dismantled a 500-foot radio tower in southeastern Oklahoma.

Their goal? To steal the copper wiring in the structure.

The bandits only made off with several dozen pounds of the metal… but copper has become so in-demand that even fixed structures are no longer safe. According to the U.S. Department of Energy, copper theft now costs businesses more than $1 billion a year.

While that’s bad for people (and radio towers) victimized by theft, the rise in demand for copper and other metals been great for commodity stocks, including some of the companies I cover for Eric in my weekly Fry’s Investment Report updates.

In fact, Freeport-McMoRan Inc. (FCX) – the globe’s top copper-producing company – has risen 320% since Eric added it to his portfolio in 2020, thanks to rising copper prices.

Of course, Freeport-McMoRan isn’t the only miner that wants a piece of the copper action.

So, in today’s Smart Money, let’s take a look at why it’s been so difficult for competitors to cash in on this metals boom…

And at how investors can cash in…

Copper Shortages = Investor Profits  

Freeport’s most recent jump of about 5% earlier this month came after copper prices hit an all-time record on a short squeeze.

“Investors, traders and mining executives have warned for years that the world faced a critical shortfall of copper amid ballooning demand in green industries,” according to a Bloomberg analysis, “and the short squeeze on the Comex exchange in New York drove prices” to a record high.

This unusual “squeeze” – I go into more detail about what makes it so odd in my latest Fry’s Investment Report weekly update – tells us that there’s both immediate and long-term shortages of the red metal. The “squeeze” we saw last week wasn’t just traders attempting to close out their near-term positions on physical delivery issues… but they were also buying back copper years into the future.