For 50 years, commodity sectors moved in sync, driven by global demand. This broke in 2024. Now, supply-side dynamics are causing a divergence, with metals prices surging while energy prices fall, a trend expected to persist through 2027.
The current surge in metals prices is fueled by factors like central bank buying, geopolitical tensions, and AI-driven demand, occurring *before* a significant rise in inflation expectations. This suggests the trade has a powerful secondary catalyst; if inflation re-accelerates, it will add more fuel to an already burning fire.
Despite healthy global oil demand, J.P. Morgan maintains a bearish outlook because supply is forecast to expand at three times the rate of demand. This oversupply creates such a large market imbalance that prices must fall to enforce production cuts and rebalance the market.
While prices above $10,000/ton are expected to depress Chinese demand, the current supply disruption is so significant that this response is unlikely to restrain the price surge. The supply shock is the dominant market driver, overpowering near-term demand-side resistance.
An acute supply squeeze in copper is imminent as massive U.S. imports create a severe inventory dislocation. With LME stocks dwindling to critical levels, J.P. Morgan predicts prices must spike to reverse the arbitrage and incentivize the flow of metal out of the U.S. to where it's more needed.
For 20 years, pension funds and endowments shunned investment in mining and resources due to political and social pressures. Now, a confluence of geopolitical necessity and reshoring is creating a demand shock that institutional capital is unprepared for, forcing them to chase a supply-constrained sector and exacerbating the rally.
The Grasberg mine disruption provides a fundamental catalyst for higher copper prices. This is amplified by a macro environment where investors are rotating into real assets like copper due to inflation risks and economic uncertainty, creating a potent combination for a price surge.
Despite a compelling fundamental story for commodities, significant capital has not entered the sector. Investors, scarred by past downturns and drawn to high returns in tech, are hesitant to fund new production. This capital starvation is the core reason the supply crunch will likely worsen.
For 50 years, commodity prices moved together, driven by synchronized global demand. J.P. Morgan identifies a breakdown of this trend since 2024, dubbing it the 'crocodile cycle,' where supply-side factors cause metals to outperform while energy underperforms, creating a widening gap like a crocodile's mouth.
The major outage at the Grasberg mine, which supplies 3% of the world's copper, is turning a previously balanced market into a significant deficit for 2025 and 2026. This highlights supply chain fragility, as there were no existing surpluses to absorb the shock.
The current geopolitical shift toward resource nationalism is focused on critical metals and minerals, not oil. The crude market is relatively well-supplied by producers like the U.S. and potentially Venezuela, making the 'death of globalism' primarily a story about securing supply chains for industrial and technological metals.