On an August morning in 1965, a New York scrap dealer shouted 34 cents a pound for copper. An hour later a telex from London printed 55 cents. Washington had just capped U.S. prices after the Tonkin Gulf Resolution exploded Vietnam spending. Europe, free to float, let copper rip higher. The spread ballooned; Chile, Peru, and Zambia, all short of cash, jacked royalties or seized mines. By 1974 one-third of global output sat in government hands and the metal had tripled. That price divorce didn’t start in a mine, it started in a policy office. Today another policy split is opening, this time between Chicago’s CME contract and London’s LME benchmark. And the echoes from 1965 are getting louder. Yield Squeeze Meets Hard-Asset Hunger Ten-year Treasuries hover near 4½ percent and climbing. Investment-grade spreads are creeping wider. Junk yields are breaking north of 8 percent. When credit costs jump too high, CFOs shelve smelters, data centers, and apartment towers, exactly the projects that soak up copper. |
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