A copper mining exchange-traded fund returned 115% over the past year, as the red metal supplants crude oil as the dominant commodity trade of the current cycle.
The Global X Copper Miners ETF (COPX) has gained 115% in the trailing 12 months, compared with the United States Oil Fund (USO), which returned roughly 5% over the same period, according to Bloomberg data. The divergence reflects a structural rotation from fossil fuels into metals tied to electrification and AI infrastructure.
COPX holds mining equities including First Quantum Minerals at 11%, Lundin Mining at 10.3%, Freeport-McMoRan at 9.9%, Teck Resources at 9.9%, and Southern Copper at 9.7%. These companies carry fixed operating costs, so every dollar copper rises above their breakeven flows disproportionately to earnings — a dynamic known as operating leverage that amplifies returns during price rallies.
LME copper traded near $10,200 per tonne as of the latest session, up roughly 33% over the past year, supported by supply deficits and rising demand from power grid upgrades and data center construction. The United States Copper Index Fund (CPER), which tracks copper futures directly, returned 28% over the same period, highlighting how mining equities have magnified the underlying commodity move.
Copper supply remains constrained. Chilean output fell 8% year-over-year in the first quarter, and global refined copper production is expected to fall short of demand by 500,000 tonnes this year, according to the International Copper Study Group. On the demand side, US power grid investment is projected to reach $400 billion by 2030, with data center capacity doubling every three years, according to McKinsey & Co.
The 115% return in COPX compares with the S&P 500's 15% gain over the same period and the Bloomberg Commodity Index's 8% advance. Copper miners have absorbed both commodity price gains and equity market beta, creating a leveraged exposure that has outperformed every major asset class over the past year.
The next catalyst for copper prices is the July Chinese industrial production and PMI data, which will signal whether demand from the world's largest copper consumer is accelerating or slowing.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.