Copper prices are set to drop another 11%. That would be a good sign for inflation but a bad omen for the economy.

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Copper prices are set to drop another 11%. That would be a good sign for inflation but a bad omen for the economy.
Molten copper flows into molds at a smelting plant at Wuzhou Jinsheng Copper Company in China.He Huawen/VCG via Getty Images
  • Copper prices are likely to continue their decline and fall another 11%, according to Fairlead Strategies' Katie Stockton.
  • That would be a good sign for lower inflation, but a bad omen for the economy as copper is seen as a barometer of economic activity.
  • "During severe economic recessions, copper and market declines have been relatively big," Ned Davis Research said.
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The ongoing decline in copper prices is likely to continue further according to Fairlead Strategies' Katie Stockton, and while that could be viewed as a good sign for cooling inflation, it's a bad omen for the broader economy.

Copper prices are often viewed as a leading indicator of the broader economy and a dependable barometer of economic health as the industrial metal is used as an input in a vast majority of goods sold. As demand rises for copper due to economic strength, so does the price, and vice versa.

Copper prices have been in a steady decline since their early March high of about $5 per pound, with the metal falling more than 30% to $3.41 per pound. Stockton expects the decline to continue, arguing that copper could fall another 11% from Thursday's close to $3.14 per pound.

"Copper prices have lost short-term momentum after rolling over below cloud-based resistance last week. Now back below initial support from the 50-day moving average, copper's loss of momentum within its prevailing downtrend increases risk to Fibonacci support at $3.14 per pound," Stockton said.

A decline to $3.14 would represent a peak-to-trough drop of 38% in just five months, and moves of that magnitude are typically associated with an economic pullback.

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But according to Ned Davis Research, the pullback in copper prices could simply represent an economic growth scare rather than a full-blown recession.

"Copper's tendency to reflect economic conditions is evident in the chart [below]. The chart shows that after the starting dates of the past 10 OECD-defined global economic slowdowns, copper has been down by means of -4% six
months later and -15% a year later, lower in all but one case," NDR explained. "The declines have tended to be
especially pronounced during the severe slowdowns."

Copper prices are set to drop another 11%. That would be a good sign for inflation but a bad omen for the economy.
Ned Davis Research

But the decline in copper prices so far this year is not deep enough to suggest a sever economic slowdown is imminent, according to NDR. "2022 [copper price] declines have thus far been more consistent with moderate [economic] slowdown," NDR said.

Any recovery in copper prices would be a good signal for the broader economy and help build the case that the Federal Reserve could stick a soft economic landing as it seeks to tame inflation via interest rate hikes. But if copper prices stage a further decline, as Stockton expects, then investors should expect choppy economic growth ahead.

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