Codelco’s copper premium contract talks ongoing, chairman says: LME Week

Chilean copper producer Codelco has not yet concluded negotiations for its 2025 premium offer to European customers but remains optimistic that the recent stimulus in China will provide a further boost to demand, the company’s chairman told Fastmarkets.

According to Maximo Pacheco, no premium number will be forthcoming this week and talks will continue in the coming weeks.

“We are going to come with our own decision in the coming weeks and we are in negotiations with our customers. But we will not have a number this week,” he said in an interview during the annual London Metal Exchange industry week.

Last year, Codelco offered a premium of $234 per tonne to European customers for its 2024 copper cathode contractual supplies.

This was the same as its offer for 2023 supplies and an 80% jump from 2022 contracts.

Get notified when Andrea Hotter publishes new articles and interviews on the natural resources sector. Receive the latest stories straight to your inbox.

European copper company Aurubis recently settled its 2025 European contract offer at $228 per tonne, unchanged for the third consecutive year.

“The US copper market is super strong, it’s been strong for some time now, with a rebound tied to restocking and improved consumer demand. Europe has been a little bit weaker, but we haven’t seen any cuts in orders,” he said.

Fastmarkets assessed the copper grade 1 cathode premium, ddp Midwest US at 11-13 cents per lb on Tuesday October 1, unchanged since July 23.

Fastmarkets’ fortnightly assessment of the copper grade A cathode premium, delivered Germany was $170-190 per tonne on Tuesday October 1, unchanged from the prior week.

Pacheco meanwhile said that China’s recent stimulus package was putting money in domestic consumers’ pockets and would encourage growth in consumption. Recent signs of falling copper inventories and strengthening physical premiums were also a move in the right direction, he noted.

“We are seeing a growing rebound in Chinese demand. I think it’s important to take into account that Chinese copper consumption last year grew significantly, roughly 6-7%, so any percentage is on a relatively high basis of comparison,” Pacheco said.

“While people were probably hoping for better numbers, we’ve still seen around 3% demand growth so far this year. So we are confident that through the rest of the year, Chinese consumption should follow an upward trajectory,” he added.

Fastmarkets assessed the daily benchmark copper grade A cathode premium, cif Shanghai at $55-68 per tonne on Wednesday October 2, unchanged from the previous assessment. 

In Hotter Commodities, special correspondent Andrea Hotter covers some of the biggest stories impacting the natural resources sector. Sign up today to receive Andrea’s content as it is published.

What to read next
The United States convened more than 50 countries in Washington this week for a critical minerals summit that delivered a flurry of new initiatives designed to reshape the geopolitics — and pricing mechanics — of minerals essential to semiconductors, electric vehicles and the defense supply chain.
The publication of Fastmarkets’ European aluminium billet premiums assessments for Friday February 6 was delayed because of a procedural error. Fastmarkets’ pricing database has been updated.
Glencore’s share price fell sharply on Thursday February 5 after Rio Tinto confirmed it was no longer pursuing a potential merger, ending weeks of speculation about a combination that would have created one of the world’s largest mining companies.
The US laid out its strongest push yet to reshape global critical minerals supply chains at the inaugural Critical Mineral Ministerial in Washington on Wednesday February 4, where senior officials detailed plans for an allied trade bloc built on reference prices and enforceable price floors – a potential turning point for small, strategically important markets such as tungsten.
A new US initiative to establish a stockpile of critical minerals for the civilian economy could add pressure to already stretched supply, market participants told Fastmarkets on Tuesday February 3 and Wednesday February 4.
The proposal to increase the publication frequency from monthly to weekly comes amid increased volatility of copper on the London Metal Exchange, while copper scrap discounts have been shifting on a more regular basis. This more frequent assessment will enable Fastmarkets to reflect market dynamics in a timelier manner, as well as capture more spot […]