Mining stocks are surging as rising copper prices shows no signs of slowing

Copper prices beat their previous all-time high of 2011 to a smashing $10,190 last week and mining stocks are surging. While their 2011 price surge was fueled by one country – China and its reliance on raw materials for their economic growth – this time around, the entire globe is clamoring for copper.
As the world shifts to more environmentally friendly solutions, copper plays a crucial role in many growing industries as an electrical and thermal conductor.
The rise – fueled by the recent global effort to cut carbon emissions – have analysts predicting that this is just the beginning:
As countries turn to renewables and ramp up production of batteries, solar panels, and wind turbines to meet the terms of the Paris climate agreement, investors are buying up copper as a bet that they follow through on their emissions targets.
Copper prices took a hit at the beginning of the pandemic, falling under $5K, but have since steadily trended upwards – a blessing for share prices of mining companies:
Both Goldman Sachs and Trafigura Group – the world’s top copper trader – believe prices could soar as high as $15k in the coming years, nearly 50% higher than they are today. Goldman Sachs even went as far as declaring copper “the new oil”.
Commodities are not your typical “set it and forget it” long-term investments but rather cyclical ones that require some planning.
For these reasons, investors should be ready to exit upon cue when investing in commodities.
Learn more: Another catalyst that could send mining stocks up – Biden’s $2t infrastructure bill