As Metal Mining Stocks Correct, Consider Buying PICK ETF On Dips

 | May 10, 2022 13:01

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Rising interest rates weigh on industrial metals
  • Move in US Dollar Index bearish
  • Lockdowns in China not helping
  • Addressing climate change requires metals
  • Leading mining company shares have corrected: Buying dips could be optimal approach

In 2021, Goldman Sachs’ commodity analysts declared copper is the new crude oil, and the price would move toward the $15,000-per-ton level by 2025. If copper on the London Metals Exchange reaches that level, it will put COMEX copper futures at over $6.80 per pound. In May 2021, copper rallied to a record high at just under the $4.90 level. In March 2022, the price probed above $5 for the first time.

Copper is not the only nonferrous metal that moved to record highs in 2021 and 2022. Aluminum, nickel, lead, zinc and tin all moved to record or multi-year highs.

Companies that extract the ores from the Earth’s crust have experienced a profit bonanza over the past year. As prices rise, the more attractive low-grade ores with higher production costs become. Meanwhile, the prospects for the demand side of the fundamental equations for the base metals remain bullish for prices.

Over the past weeks, prices have corrected, and mining shares moved lower. The iShares MSCI Global Metals & Mining Producers ETF (NYSE:PICK) holds shares in the leading mining companies and provides a diversified investment approach.

h2 Rising Interest Rates Weigh On Industrial Metals/h2

The prospect of rising US interest rates has weighed on copper and other industrial metal and mineral prices as higher rates increase the cost of carrying inventories.