Key Points

Base metals are positioned for continued strength according to Motilal Oswal's latest analysis. Copper is seeing massive demand growth from electric vehicles and global electrification trends. Zinc and aluminium are both benefiting from tightening inventories and supportive market fundamentals. While some economic concerns remain in China, the overall outlook for these industrial metals remains constructive through FY26.

Key Points: Copper Zinc Aluminium Bullish Momentum to Sustain Motilal Oswal

  • Copper demand surges from EVs needing 25-50kg per vehicle versus 8-12kg in conventional cars
  • Zinc prices rally 9% year-to-date supported by depleting LME inventories and weaker dollar
  • Aluminium hits six-month high above $2700 driven by Fed rate cuts and Chinese production caps
  • China's aluminium imports surge 40% year-on-year with higher inflows from Russia and Indonesia
2 min read

Bullish momentum expected to sustain copper, zinc, and aluminium in medium term: Motilal Oswal

Motilal Oswal report forecasts sustained bullish momentum for copper, zinc, and aluminium, driven by electrification demand and tightening global inventories.

"The long-term outlook for copper remains strongly bullish, supported by structural shifts in the global economy toward decarbonization, electrification, and digitalisation - Motilal Oswal Report"

New Delhi, October 11

Base metals are firmly positioned for continued strength, with bullish momentum expected to sustain across copper, zinc, and aluminium in the medium term, according to a report by Motilal Oswal.

The convergence of tightening inventories, electrification-led demand, and supply disruptions across key producing nations supports a constructive outlook for the remainder of FY26.

The report highlighted that the long-term outlook for copper remains strongly bullish, supported by structural shifts in the global economy toward decarbonization, electrification, and digitalisation, along with persistent risks of disruption.

Domestic copper is trading about 27 per cent higher year-to-date, triggered by the US announcing tariffs on copper imports, which sent shockwaves through global markets.

The report mentioned that rising EV sales and the growing use of copper in electrification, artificial intelligence, and the global energy transition have also driven the surge in demand.

The electrification of transport and infrastructure continues to be a key driver of copper demand. Electric vehicles (EVs) require between 25 and 50 kilograms of copper per unit, compared to just 8 and 12 kilograms in conventional vehicles. The demand for EVs is expected to double to 2.2 million tonnes by 2030, compared to 1.2 million tonnes in 2025, the report noted.

Zinc prices on the London Metal Exchange (LME) rose above USD 3,000 per tonne in September 2025, posting a nearly 9 per cent rally year-to-date. The gains were supported by depleting inventories and a weaker U.S. dollar.

The report also stated that the expectations of Chinese production cuts further boosted sentiments, even though broader demand trends remained uneven.

Aluminium prices on the LME climbed to a six-month high above USD 2,700, largely driven by optimism following the U.S. Federal Reserve's 50-basis-point rate cut, which lifted overall commodity prices.

The rally was also supported by China reaching its production cap of 45 million tonnes. LME aluminium inventories are now 50 per cent lower than the highs seen in June 2024, while inventories on the Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE) are about 53 per cent lower.

China's aluminium imports surged 40 per cent year-on-year to 317,549 tonnes in 2025, supported by higher inflows from Russia, Indonesia, and India.

However, some concerns remain as China's industrial production dipped to 5.2 per cent, and fixed asset investments rose only 0.5 per cent year-on-year, indicating lingering weakness in its economy.

The report added that while some optimism among metals may continue to support aluminium, a mix of fundamentals may keep prices hovering within a range in the near term.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
As someone working in the auto industry, I can confirm the copper demand from EVs is real. But I worry about how these price increases will affect final product costs for consumers. Already seeing component prices going up 📈
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Sarah B
Interesting analysis. The 27% YTD increase in copper is significant. I've been tracking Vedanta and Hindustan Zinc stocks - they might see good momentum in coming quarters. Time to review my portfolio!
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Arjun K
While the report is optimistic, I feel Motilal Oswal might be overlooking the China factor. Their economic slowdown could impact global demand more than anticipated. Need to be cautious about these projections 🤔
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Meera T
The electrification story is strong, but what about environmental concerns? Mining these metals has ecological costs. Hope the government balances economic growth with sustainable practices 🌱
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Vikram M
Good analysis! The AI and digitalization angle is particularly interesting. Copper is becoming the new oil in tech infrastructure. Indian companies should invest more in recycling to reduce import dependence 🔄

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