Copper, grade A cathode Monthly Price - Baht per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2021 - Mar 2026: 112,358.300 (38.45%)
Chart

Description: Copper (LME), grade A, minimum 99.9935% purity, cathodes and wire bar shapes, settlement price

Unit: Baht per Metric Ton



Source: Platts Metals Week, Engineering and Mining Journal; Thomson Reuters Datastream; World Bank.

See also: Mineral production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Copper, grade A cathode, is the refined, high-purity form of copper used as the standard deliverable material in many physical and financial markets. It is typically priced in U.S. dollars per metric ton, with the London Metal Exchange (LME) spot price for grade A cathode serving as a widely used benchmark for global trade and hedging. Grade A cathode is the form most suitable for direct use in wire rod, cable, tubing, and other downstream manufacturing because its purity and consistency meet the specifications required by exchange delivery systems and industrial users.

Copper is valued for its high electrical conductivity, thermal conductivity, ductility, and corrosion resistance. These properties make it essential in power transmission, building wire, electronics, motors, transformers, plumbing, and industrial equipment. Because it is both a basic industrial metal and a key input to electrification infrastructure, its market reflects conditions in construction, manufacturing, and power systems. The cathode form is especially important because it is the intermediate product that links mining and smelting with fabrication into finished copper products.

Supply Drivers

Copper cathode supply is shaped by the geology of ore bodies, the long lead times required to develop mines, and the energy- and capital-intensive nature of extraction and refining. Major producing regions include South America, North America, Africa, and parts of Asia, where large porphyry deposits and other copper-bearing formations support long-lived mining operations. Ore grades, strip ratios, water availability, and access to power all influence production costs and the pace at which output can be expanded or maintained.

Supply is also constrained by the sequence of mining, concentrating, smelting, and electrorefining. Disruptions at any stage can affect cathode availability because concentrate must be processed before refined metal reaches market. Transport bottlenecks, port capacity, labor conditions, and the availability of sulfuric acid, electricity, and water can all shape output. Copper mining is sensitive to depletion in mature deposits, so sustaining production often requires continual investment in deeper pits, underground expansion, or new ore bodies.

Weather and climate matter because many large mines operate in arid or high-altitude regions where rainfall, drought, or water restrictions affect throughput. In addition, some operations face seasonal access constraints or power interruptions. Recycling provides an important secondary supply source, but it depends on scrap collection, sorting, and refining capacity, and it does not fully offset the geological limits of primary mining.

Demand Drivers

Demand for copper cathode is driven primarily by electrical and construction uses. The metal is a core input for power cables, building wire, transformers, motors, generators, appliances, and telecommunications equipment. Because these uses rely on copper’s conductivity and durability, substitution is limited in many applications, although aluminum can replace copper in some power transmission and wiring contexts where weight and cost matter more than conductivity.

Industrial demand is closely tied to construction activity, factory output, grid investment, and durable goods production. Copper is also used in plumbing, heat exchangers, and industrial machinery, which links consumption to housing starts, commercial building, and capital spending. In many economies, demand rises with urbanization, electrification, and income growth because these trends increase the intensity of copper use per person and per unit of infrastructure.

Seasonal patterns can appear in construction and power-system maintenance, but the broader demand structure is cyclical rather than purely seasonal. Scrap copper competes with refined cathode in some downstream uses, so higher scrap availability can reduce cathode demand at the margin. Regulatory and technological shifts that favor electrification, energy efficiency, and grid expansion tend to support long-run copper intensity because they increase the amount of conductive material required per unit of installed infrastructure.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Copper cathode prices are sensitive to the U.S. dollar because the metal is globally quoted in dollars while many buyers earn revenue in other currencies. A stronger dollar can make copper more expensive in local-currency terms and can weigh on demand at the margin. Prices also respond to interest rates and broader financial conditions because copper is a storable industrial metal: financing costs, warehouse economics, and inventory holding costs influence whether material moves into or out of storage.

The market often reflects the balance between near-term physical tightness and expectations of future supply, which can appear in contango or backwardation depending on inventory conditions and delivery incentives. Copper also has a partial role as a macroeconomic indicator because it is widely used in construction and manufacturing, so it tends to be sensitive to industrial activity and credit conditions. At the same time, it is not a pure financial asset; physical consumption, logistics, and refining constraints remain central to price formation.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 2021292,245.00-
May 2021318,095.708.85%
Jun 2021302,798.30-4.81%
Jul 2021308,658.501.94%
Aug 2021310,040.200.45%
Sep 2021309,118.00-0.30%
Oct 2021329,095.606.46%
Nov 2021321,654.00-2.26%
Dec 2021321,025.40-0.20%
Jan 2022325,173.701.29%
Feb 2022325,182.500.00%
Mar 2022340,193.604.62%
Apr 2022343,667.401.02%
May 2022322,903.20-6.04%
Jun 2022315,467.20-2.30%
Jul 2022274,375.00-13.03%
Aug 2022286,381.204.38%
Sep 2022287,050.900.23%
Oct 2022290,144.701.08%
Nov 2022293,706.401.23%
Dec 2022291,830.80-0.64%
Jan 2023300,458.502.96%
Feb 2023303,835.101.12%
Mar 2023305,740.500.63%
Apr 2023302,029.40-1.21%
May 2023281,253.30-6.88%
Jun 2023293,109.904.22%
Jul 2023293,084.50-0.01%
Aug 2023292,607.60-0.16%
Sep 2023296,987.101.50%
Oct 2023289,644.80-2.47%
Nov 2023290,653.700.35%
Dec 2023295,022.701.50%
Jan 2024293,538.90-0.50%
Feb 2024297,821.201.46%
Mar 2024312,412.704.90%
Apr 2024348,182.2011.45%
May 2024371,483.706.69%
Jun 2024354,130.70-4.67%
Jul 2024340,338.50-3.89%
Aug 2024311,817.50-8.38%
Sep 2024308,263.00-1.14%
Oct 2024317,988.103.15%
Nov 2024313,022.40-1.56%
Dec 2024304,920.30-2.59%
Jan 2025307,837.100.96%
Feb 2025315,214.102.40%
Mar 2025329,412.704.50%
Apr 2025309,682.20-5.99%
May 2025314,190.601.46%
Jun 2025320,735.802.08%
Jul 2025316,968.40-1.17%
Aug 2025313,810.80-1.00%
Sep 2025319,390.501.78%
Oct 2025349,598.909.46%
Nov 2025350,524.800.26%
Dec 2025372,038.006.14%
Jan 2026407,594.409.56%
Feb 2026405,065.70-0.62%
Mar 2026404,603.30-0.11%

Top Companies

Codelco
Website: http://www.codelco.com/
Location: Santiago, Chile
Estimated Production: 1.66 million tonnes per year

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