New Normal Yet to Come for Metals Prices: BMO Mining Panel
-
bookmark
-
print
Prices for base and industrial and precious metals are flying high, but experts gathered at this year's BMO Global Metals and Mining Conference said we have yet to meet the new normal as the world embarks on an energy transition that represents the largest realignment of the global economy in living memory.
That is especially the case with copper, a key input metal for renewable energy applications - from electric vehicle batteries to solar panels to basic cabling and wiring - as we define a new energy future, panelists said.
“We have markets that are supply-constrained at the present time, and if we think about some of the themes we’ve seen in the presentations thus far, we are seeing, obviously, a good, long-term demand trend,” BMO Commodities Analyst Colin Hamilton said as he opened the Commodities and Critical Materials panel that also featured Duncan Hobbs, Research Director at Concord Resources Ltd., Andrew Cole, MD and CEO at OZ Minerals, Jeremy Weir, Executive Chairman and CEO of Trafigura Pte and Randy Smallwood, President and CEO at Wheaton Precious Metals.
On the same day that the Bloomberg Commodities Index hit its highest point since 2014, and the metals subindex hit its highest since 2011, producers, investors and metals traders said that the drivers for higher prices, from booming demand to lack of new supply, far outnumber factors that might mitigate prices, like inflation-driven demand destruction.
A Different Kind of Cycle
By all accounts, the demand cycle that has seen many metals hover at their highest in a decade is distinct from past commodities super-cycles, where demand was delimited within geographies, from reconstruction after the Second World War to systemic changes in the U.S., Japan’s industrialization and, most recently, China’s industrialization.
“What we are seeing now is basically a global change where growth is not necessarily only coming from China,” said Trafigura’s Jeremy Weir, whose multinational commodity trading company is the world’s largest private metals trader and second-largest oil trader.
“It’s coming globally via the decarbonization process. It’s all about construction, electrical grids and many other patterns in our lifestyles,” he said, noting that supply is not keeping up, despite high metals prices.
Geological Inflation and Development Challenges
With demand being so high, and projected to boom to far greater heights, the mining industry will be hard pressed to supply even the metals needed in these nascent stages of electrification and other decarbonization trends.
The issue, panelists said, lies in finding the resources and bringing them to market in an environment where shareholders are hesitant to permit mining companies the capital budgets to find and develop new deposits which in most cases won’t start producing until a decade or more, and which can often cost much more than anticipated.
“I think that is one of the reasons that many companies don’t have growth pipelines, because they don’t get the support to actually do it,” said Andrew Cole at the Australian mining company OZ Minerals. “You see it in reduced exploration spend, you see it in reduced development spend and reduced capital build spend.”
Randy Smallwood, president and CEO at Canada’s Wheaton Precious Metals, characterized the problem as “geological inflation”.
“It’s getting tougher and tougher to find the deposits, and when you find them it’s also getting tougher and tougher to actually move them forward,” he said, pointing to projects that make it through exploration and a proving out of the resource but then get turned back at the permitting stage amid community opposition.
“And so, we have this other, overriding inflation impact that is going to continue to pushing prices up higher and higher.”
Commodity Prices – Not Yet at the New Normal
Metals prices, panelists said, are and will be subjected to the opposing forces of demand on the one hand and potentially, demand destruction on the other, as consumers begin to balk at the cost of discretionary spending on goods containing metals.
When asked by panel moderator Colin Hamilton whether current prices that are well above the cost curve at the present time represent the new normal, panelists were unanimous in predicting that higher prices will prevail over the long run.
“I’m not sure we’ve hit the new normal yet,” said Weir, echoing the sentiment of his fellow panelists.
Duncan Hobbs of Concord Resources Ltd, a commodity merchant trader with a focus on non-ferrous metals and associated minerals, said that while inflation may hurt demand in the short term, longer term metals prices would benefit as investors looked to metals as an inflation hedge.
If investors in sectors like technology, for example, were to reallocate just a tiny portion of that to metals and mining investments, the impact could be significant.
“It wouldn’t take a lot,” he said. “Just a small move of assets from other markets to commodities could have a very powerful, upward impact on commodity prices in my view,” he said.
Cumulous Copper
While many metals are seen benefiting from the demand boom of the energy transition and electrification, likely the most referenced is copper, a metal that is used so much in so many applications.
“The demand for copper is real and the supply is not there, and it’s getting challenging,” said Smallwood.
“It’s one of the very few commodities that every country on the planet requires in increasing quantities, it doesn’t matter if you are industrializing or if you are trying to decarbonize,” said Cole. “I am a fundamental believer of the copper market. I think supply is incredibly challenged and it’s getting more so, and demand is only heading in one direction.”
New Normal Yet to Come for Metals Prices: BMO Mining Panel
Commodities Analyst, BMO Capital Markets Ltd.
Colin Hamilton is a commodities analyst for BMO Capital Markets. Based in London and with over 15 years of experience in commodity markets, he leads BMO’…
Colin Hamilton is a commodities analyst for BMO Capital Markets. Based in London and with over 15 years of experience in commodity markets, he leads BMO’…
VIEW FULL PROFILE- Minute Read
- Listen Stop
- Text Bigger | Text Smaller
Prices for base and industrial and precious metals are flying high, but experts gathered at this year's BMO Global Metals and Mining Conference said we have yet to meet the new normal as the world embarks on an energy transition that represents the largest realignment of the global economy in living memory.
That is especially the case with copper, a key input metal for renewable energy applications - from electric vehicle batteries to solar panels to basic cabling and wiring - as we define a new energy future, panelists said.
“We have markets that are supply-constrained at the present time, and if we think about some of the themes we’ve seen in the presentations thus far, we are seeing, obviously, a good, long-term demand trend,” BMO Commodities Analyst Colin Hamilton said as he opened the Commodities and Critical Materials panel that also featured Duncan Hobbs, Research Director at Concord Resources Ltd., Andrew Cole, MD and CEO at OZ Minerals, Jeremy Weir, Executive Chairman and CEO of Trafigura Pte and Randy Smallwood, President and CEO at Wheaton Precious Metals.
On the same day that the Bloomberg Commodities Index hit its highest point since 2014, and the metals subindex hit its highest since 2011, producers, investors and metals traders said that the drivers for higher prices, from booming demand to lack of new supply, far outnumber factors that might mitigate prices, like inflation-driven demand destruction.
A Different Kind of Cycle
By all accounts, the demand cycle that has seen many metals hover at their highest in a decade is distinct from past commodities super-cycles, where demand was delimited within geographies, from reconstruction after the Second World War to systemic changes in the U.S., Japan’s industrialization and, most recently, China’s industrialization.
“What we are seeing now is basically a global change where growth is not necessarily only coming from China,” said Trafigura’s Jeremy Weir, whose multinational commodity trading company is the world’s largest private metals trader and second-largest oil trader.
“It’s coming globally via the decarbonization process. It’s all about construction, electrical grids and many other patterns in our lifestyles,” he said, noting that supply is not keeping up, despite high metals prices.
Geological Inflation and Development Challenges
With demand being so high, and projected to boom to far greater heights, the mining industry will be hard pressed to supply even the metals needed in these nascent stages of electrification and other decarbonization trends.
The issue, panelists said, lies in finding the resources and bringing them to market in an environment where shareholders are hesitant to permit mining companies the capital budgets to find and develop new deposits which in most cases won’t start producing until a decade or more, and which can often cost much more than anticipated.
“I think that is one of the reasons that many companies don’t have growth pipelines, because they don’t get the support to actually do it,” said Andrew Cole at the Australian mining company OZ Minerals. “You see it in reduced exploration spend, you see it in reduced development spend and reduced capital build spend.”
Randy Smallwood, president and CEO at Canada’s Wheaton Precious Metals, characterized the problem as “geological inflation”.
“It’s getting tougher and tougher to find the deposits, and when you find them it’s also getting tougher and tougher to actually move them forward,” he said, pointing to projects that make it through exploration and a proving out of the resource but then get turned back at the permitting stage amid community opposition.
“And so, we have this other, overriding inflation impact that is going to continue to pushing prices up higher and higher.”
Commodity Prices – Not Yet at the New Normal
Metals prices, panelists said, are and will be subjected to the opposing forces of demand on the one hand and potentially, demand destruction on the other, as consumers begin to balk at the cost of discretionary spending on goods containing metals.
When asked by panel moderator Colin Hamilton whether current prices that are well above the cost curve at the present time represent the new normal, panelists were unanimous in predicting that higher prices will prevail over the long run.
“I’m not sure we’ve hit the new normal yet,” said Weir, echoing the sentiment of his fellow panelists.
Duncan Hobbs of Concord Resources Ltd, a commodity merchant trader with a focus on non-ferrous metals and associated minerals, said that while inflation may hurt demand in the short term, longer term metals prices would benefit as investors looked to metals as an inflation hedge.
If investors in sectors like technology, for example, were to reallocate just a tiny portion of that to metals and mining investments, the impact could be significant.
“It wouldn’t take a lot,” he said. “Just a small move of assets from other markets to commodities could have a very powerful, upward impact on commodity prices in my view,” he said.
Cumulous Copper
While many metals are seen benefiting from the demand boom of the energy transition and electrification, likely the most referenced is copper, a metal that is used so much in so many applications.
“The demand for copper is real and the supply is not there, and it’s getting challenging,” said Smallwood.
“It’s one of the very few commodities that every country on the planet requires in increasing quantities, it doesn’t matter if you are industrializing or if you are trying to decarbonize,” said Cole. “I am a fundamental believer of the copper market. I think supply is incredibly challenged and it’s getting more so, and demand is only heading in one direction.”
Define the Future
PART 1
Brian Belski’s 2022 U.S. Market Outlook
Brian Belski December 09, 2021
In his 2022 U.S. market outlook, BMO Capital Markets’ Chief Investment Strategist Brian Belski explains why, even amid concerns aroun…
PART 2
The Current and Future State of the Global Supply Chain
Fadi Chamoun, CFA February 17, 2022
BMO recently held an event to discuss the current state of supply chain bottlenecks, strategies for managing the crisis and when we can exp…
PART 3
Why SLLs Have Only Just Begun to Roar
John Uhren March 01, 2022
When Enbridge Inc. launched its inaugural C$1bn Sustainability Linked Loan (SLL) in February 2021, it marked a milestone not only for the c…
PART 4
Amid the Pandemic, Market Structure Continues to Evolve
None April 01, 2022
Change is on the horizon for electronic trading as the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission revisits regulatory reforms in a market that…
PART 5
State of the Union: What Lies Ahead
Brian Belski, David Jacobson, Michael Gregory, CFA April 21, 2022
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has brought uncertainty to domestic and foreign policy as well as to the economy and the markets. It com…
PART 7
Amid the Supply Chain Woes, Supplier Wellness Takes Center Stage
Reg Butler June 02, 2022
There have been plenty of headlines about how backlogs in the supply chain are causing headaches for both companies and consumers. Those ch…
PART 8
Key Takeaways on Ag, Food, Fertilizer & ESG from BMO’s Farm to Market Conference
Dan Barclay May 26, 2022
Join BMO’s Dan Barclay, Bert Powell, Joel Jackson, Ken Zaslow and Doug Morrow in this special episode from BMO’s IN Tune Podcas…
PART 9
M&A Markets Active Despite Macroeconomic Backdrop
Warren Estey May 19, 2022
As much as deal-making has cooled in 2022 - dampened by market volatility, geopolitical uncertainty, the ongoing fight against COVID-19 and…
PART 10
Private Capital Seizing the Stage in U.S. Middle Market
Grant Thompson August 04, 2022
Move over public markets, because there’s a new kid in town - well, sort of. It’s called private capital, and while it may h…
PART 11
Supply Chain Disruption: Key Challenges and Opportunities
Fadi Chamoun, CFA September 01, 2022
New look, same great content! We’re proud to launch Markets Plus, our new podcast, where leading BMO experts share a wealth of timely…
PART 12
Achieving Returns in an Accelerating AI Environment
David Wismer October 19, 2022
From improvements in Machine Learning and the development of new database systems to the development of sector-specific tools, significant …
PART 13
North American Investment Strategy: 2023 U.S. Market Outlook
Brian Belski December 21, 2022
While 2022 has been “a year we’d like to forget,” 2023 will be the start of the multiyear trend toward normalization. In …
PART 14
Managing and Monetizing Your Transition to a Net Zero World with BMO and Radicle
Eric Jacks December 01, 2022
When Calgary-based Radicle Group Inc. was formed in 2008 in Alberta as the first North American compliance market, the climate change narra…
PART 15
The Importance of Financial Forecasting
February 22, 2023
Forecasting and predicting the future. They’re the same thing, right? Not really. We all make predictions at some point. Many of u…
PART 16
Why Water Access Should Be Part of Your Risk Metrics
April 20, 2023
In the current tally of key risks and mitigants it’s easy to feel that the risk side of the equation is having a banner era; with bus…
PART 17
Understanding the Link Between Cybersecurity and ESG
John Uhren, Andrew Matheou February 02, 2023
John Uhren is joined by Andrew Matheou, Head of BMO Capital Markets Global Transaction Banking, to discuss the topic of cybersecurity, and …
Conference
Feb. 23 - 26, 2025 | Hollywood, Florida
Email UsYou might also be interested in
The Globe and Mail: For Canada and its U.S. trade relationship, complacency equals sleepwalking
Private Equity Finds Comfort Amid Uncertainty in Agribusiness Sector
Inaugural BMO Obesity Summit Focuses on Therapeutics and Combating a Growing Epidemic
For Canada to Be a Mining Leader, Industry Collaboration With Government is Needed
With Changes, the Mining Industry Could Have a Larger Role in Addressing Climate Change: Ivanhoe Mines’ Friedland
Gold Expected to Shine Amid Uncertainty: World Gold Council at BMO Conference
Highlights from our 33rd Global Metals, Mining & Critical Minerals Conference
Our Industry-Leading Global Metals, Mining & Critical Minerals Conference
The Role of Responsible Mining in the Clean Energy Transition: ICMM CEO Rohitesh Dhawan in Conversation
Record Investor Attendance Expected at BMO's 33rd Global Metals, Mining & Critical Minerals Conference, February 25th to February 28th, 2024
Infrastructure is Key to a Competitive Market in North America – US-Canada Summit
Not All Carbon Credits Created Equal: BMO Global Metals, Mining & Critical Minerals Conference
The Most Valuable Commodity is Trust: ICMM to BMO Global Metals, Mining & Critical Minerals Conference
Rock Legends Reflect on Mining Hits and Misses: Global Metals, Mining & Critical Minerals Conference
Energy Transition Will Require Collaboration Between Miners and End-Users
Exploring North America’s Critical Minerals Advantage: Global Metals, Mining & Critical Minerals Conference
BMO Experts at our 32nd Global Metals, Mining & Critical Minerals Conference
Will 2023 be the Year of Gold: World Gold Council at BMO Conference
Global Finance Magazine Names BMO The World's Best Metals & Mining Investment Bank for 2023
ESG Trends in the Base Metal and Diversified Mining Industries: BMO Equity Research Report
Forging Ahead in the Energy Transition: Darryl White to Global Reserve and Asset Managers
The Market Transition from COVID-19 has Begun: Belski to BMO Metals and Mining Conference
Opinion: Canada and the U.S. have a shared interest in securing self-sufficiency in critical minerals
BMO Hosts World-Leading Farm to Market Conference for 16th Consecutive Year
Ian Bremmer in Conversation: The Pandemic and a Changing Geopolitical Landscape
BMO Capital Markets to host 2020 Prescriptions for Success Healthcare Virtual Conference