Copper Collapse Looms as Iran Tensions | Analysis by Brian Moineau

A fragile wire: Goldman Warns on Copper as Iran War Threatens Global Economy

Copper is a bellwether for the global economy — and now that bell is ringing with alarm. Goldman Warns on Copper as Iran War Threatens Global Economy was the blunt headline echoing through markets, and for good reason. With the Strait of Hormuz intermittently closed and diplomatic deadlines looming, traders, manufacturers and miners all face the possibility that copper’s recent wobble could turn into a sharper, more prolonged fall.

Why copper matters right now

Copper is everywhere: wiring, motors, renewable-energy systems, EVs and construction. Because it sits at the intersection of heavy industry and high-tech demand, its price moves reflect both supply-chain frictions and growth expectations.

Goldman Sachs warned that copper is vulnerable to further declines if the Strait of Hormuz remains blocked. The bank’s point is twofold: one, the immediate logistics shock — stranded shipments, strained alternative ports and rising freight and insurance costs — reduces physical availability in key consumption hubs; and two, the broader macro shock from higher energy prices and slower growth undercuts demand. Together, these forces can push prices down even as some supply-side inputs become costlier. (finance.yahoo.com)

The mechanics: how a Gulf chokepoint ripples through the copper chain

  • Disrupted shipping routes. The Strait of Hormuz handles a huge share of seaborne energy flows. Its closure forces rerouting and congests alternative ports such as Khor Fakkan and Fujairah, which are near capacity. That has stranded shipments of copper cathode and delayed deliveries. (fastmarkets.com)
  • Sulfuric acid shortages. Less obvious but crucial: Middle Eastern producers supply granulated sulfur — feedstock for sulfuric acid used in copper leaching and refining. Interruptions to those chemical flows can throttle smelters and refineries in Latin America and Africa, tightening refined copper availability even if ore output remains steady. (fastmarkets.com)
  • Demand shock from higher energy costs. Oil and gas volatility feeds directly into manufacturing costs. As energy costs spike and inflation persists, project owners delay construction and manufacturers scale back production — both of which reduce copper consumption. Goldman’s warning includes this growth-sapping channel. (bloomberg.com)

Goldman Warns on Copper as Iran War Threatens Global Economy — what the numbers say

Market reports and industry intelligence point to tangible flows at risk. Fastmarkets and other market sources noted roughly 40,000 tonnes per month of copper cathode that previously moved through Jebel Ali are now running into rerouting headaches. Meanwhile, LME prices have shown volatility: a swing down to multi‑month lows and sharp rebounds tied to political headlines and ceasefire talks. These are not just abstractions — they are monthly tonnages, port berthings and processing inputs that power factories. (fastmarkets.com)

A paradox: price down while supply tightens

This is where the story gets counterintuitive. Normally a physical squeeze lifts prices. But here, a growth shock (weaker demand because of economic uncertainty and expensive energy) collided with localized availability problems. That mix can push prices lower in futures markets as traders price weaker demand, even though certain regions face acute shortages and logistical bottlenecks. In short, a market can be physically tight in places and still trade lower on macro fears. (spglobal.com)

Broader implications for industries and investors

  • Manufacturers and contractors: Watch inventories and just-in-time exposure. Firms reliant on the Gulf for semi-finished copper or sulfuric acid need contingency plans.
  • Miners and smelters: Expect margins to be squeezed and short-term shut-ins if chemical inputs don’t arrive. Capital projects may be delayed, compounding future supply risk.
  • Traders and funds: Volatility will create trading opportunities but also higher collateral and margin pressure. Hedging becomes more expensive.
  • Policy and geopolitics: A prolonged reopening impasse would push central banks and governments to reassess inflation trajectories and growth forecasts, influencing interest rates and risk premia. (spglobal.com)

How markets reacted and what changed

In recent days news flow oscillated between threats and de-escalation. Reports indicate that U.S.-Iran ceasefire talks and pauses in strikes caused oil to tumble and risk assets to rally, which in turn nudged copper prices higher from some earlier lows. That demonstrates how quickly sentiment and physical risk can reprice base metals. Still, Goldman’s central caution remains: if the Hormuz disruption persists, copper is vulnerable to further price moves — potentially downward on demand fears or upward in localized spot tightness. (bloomberg.com)

Key takeaways

  • Copper sits at the intersection of logistics risk and macro demand; both channels are active because of the Iran war.
  • The Strait of Hormuz closure has immediate logistical effects (stranded cathode flows) and secondary industrial effects (sulfuric acid shortages).
  • Prices can fall even amid regional shortages if global growth expectations deteriorate.
  • Companies with supply-chain exposure and investors in base-metals need to reassess buffer inventories and hedging strategies.

My take

We’re witnessing a classic modern supply‑shock meets demand‑shock scenario. The near-term noise will remain headline-driven — each diplomatic volley or ceasefire pause will rattle prices. But the structural lesson is longer-lived: global manufacturing chains depend on chokepoints and specialized chemical inputs more than many realize. That fragility argues for diversified sourcing and clearer industry contingency plans, not just for copper but for any commodity where a handful of routes or inputs concentrate risk.

Markets will price headlines, but the physical world — ports, warehouses, smelters and acid plants — ultimately determines who feels the pain. Companies that treat copper’s current lull as a pause, not a permanent repricing, will be better placed when the next swing comes.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

Gulf Supply Shock: Kuwait and UAE Cuts | Analysis by Brian Moineau

When the Strait of Hormuz Stutters: Kuwait and the UAE Turn Down the Taps

The image of huge tankers idling off a Gulf coast — engines quiet, destinies paused — has moved from the pages of history to this month’s headlines. This time, it’s not just dramatic footage: the near-closure of the Strait of Hormuz has prompted Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates to actively reduce oil and refining output. That isn’t a remote geopolitical drama. It’s a fast-moving shock to global supply chains, fuel prices, and the choices governments and companies must make this spring.

Why the cuts matter (and why they happened now)

  • The Strait of Hormuz is a choke point for global energy: a meaningful share of the world’s seaborne crude and LNG moves through this narrow waterway.
  • Recent attacks and warnings tied to the widening Iran war have made many shipowners and insurers avoid transiting the strait. Commercial traffic has slowed to a near-standstill in early March 2026.
  • Faced with limited export options and rising risk, Kuwait Petroleum Corp. and Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. (ADNOC) told markets they were managing production and lowering refinery throughput to match storage and export constraints. Kuwait’s initial cuts were about 100,000 barrels a day with plans to increase reductions depending on storage capacity and the status of Hormuz. (fortune.com)

Quick takeaways from the situation

  • Global oil flows are structurally exposed to a small number of maritime choke points; when those are threatened, supply swings fast.
  • Physical constraints (tankers avoiding Hormuz) and commercial constraints (insurance, buyer reluctance) compound each other — making a logistical slowdown feel like a supply shortage.
  • Even with alternate pipelines and export routes (for example, the UAE’s pipeline to Fujairah), bypass capacity is limited compared with total Gulf output, so price volatility and supply anxieties persist. (rigzone.com)

The immediate ripple effects

  • Markets: Brent and other benchmarks jumped as traders priced in the risk of sustained export disruption. Volatility surged because the practical loss of seaborne capacity happens faster than new capacity can be brought online. (euronews.com)
  • Refining and storage logistics: Refiners that rely on Gulf shipments face scheduling chaos; onshore storage is finite, so upstream producers are forced to curtail output rather than export into a bottleneck. Kuwait’s steps to trim both field and refinery output are a direct consequence. (fortune.com)
  • Regional balance: Countries with pipelines that bypass Hormuz (Saudi East–West pipeline, UAE’s Fujairah link) can cushion some flows, but combined bypass capacity still covers well under half of usual seaborne trade through Hormuz; large gaps remain. (specialeurasia.com)

Context you should know

  • This is not a simple “country X turned down the taps” story. It’s a chain reaction: geopolitical attacks and warnings → shipping and insurance pull back → physical exports slow → producers with constrained storage reduce output to avoid oversupply at home → global markets reprice risk.
  • Historical parallels exist (for example, tanker disruptions in the 1980s or episodic harassment in the Gulf), but modern markets are more interconnected and faster — so price moves can be sharper. Analysts and shipping intelligence reported tanker transits dropping to single digits some days in early March 2026, versus dozens per day in normal times. (euronews.com)

Who gets hurt — and who benefits (short term)

  • Hurt: Import-dependent economies (especially in Asia) face higher fuel bills and inflation pressures; refiners and logistics operators suffer schedule and margin disruptions; local consumers may see higher pump prices.
  • Beneficiaries (briefly): Owners of stored crude and some traders can profit from spikes; certain alternative suppliers or routes (pipelines to non-Hormuz ports, spare OPEC+ capacity held in reserve elsewhere) may gain market share temporarily.
  • Longer term: Repeated disruptions incentivize demand-side adjustments (fuel switching, strategic reserves) and supply-side investments (more pipeline capacity, diversification of trade routes), but those changes take time and money.

The investor dilemma

  • Oil-market investors face a choice between short-term volatility plays and longer-term fundamentals. Price spikes driven by transit risk are often followed by mean reversion once shipping resumes — but if the disruption lengthens, structural supply gaps could persist.
  • For companies with exposure to Gulf exports (tankers, insurers, intermediaries), balance-sheet stress and insurance premium spikes are realistic near-term risks. (enterpriseam.com)

What to watch next

  • Shipping and insurance notices: continuous updates from maritime advisors and insurers tell you whether transits are resuming or further constrained. The ISS shipping advisory and commercial trackers have been essential for real-time clarity. (iss-shipping.com)
  • Output statements from regional producers: watch ADNOC, Kuwait Petroleum Corp., Saudi Aramco and Iraq for how far and how long they plan to curtail production.
  • Price signals: sustained moves in Brent above recent ranges would indicate markets expect a longer disruption; abrupt falls would suggest temporary panic priced out.
  • Diplomatic and naval developments: any multinational efforts to secure shipping lanes or de-escalation steps will materially affect flows.

My take

This episode underscores a stubborn reality: geography still matters. No matter how sophisticated the markets, a narrow ribbon of water — the Strait of Hormuz — can force oil producers to choose between flooding domestic storage or throttling production. The response from Kuwait and the UAE is pragmatic: protect domestic infrastructure and avoid creating a crude glut they can’t export. But for consumers and businesses down the supply chain, pragmatic decisions by producers translate into higher prices and greater uncertainty.

Expect policymakers and traders to sharpen contingency planning — more attention on pipeline capacity, strategic reserves, and alternate suppliers — but also expect a period of elevated volatility while the situation remains unresolved.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.