Copper price slides as Warsh’s hawkish Fed debut rattles metals market

Copper price slides as Warsh’s hawkish Fed debut rattles metals market
Sayantan Sarkar
18 Jun 2026, 18:49 PM

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US Dollar (DXY) long

Buy the US Dollar via DXY futures/spot or a USD long ETF. The article flags a stronger USD as the immediate driver pressuring dollar-priced commodities like copper. If Warsh keeps emphasizing inflation vigilance, the USD can keep grinding higher and keep industrial metals capped.

Key Risk: The Fed signals a faster pivot to easing (or yields fall sharply), reversing USD strength and lifting commodities.

LME Copper (HG) short

Sell LME 3-month copper futures (HG) or a copper CFD/ETF proxy. Warsh’s hawkish debut is repricing rates toward earlier hikes, strengthening the USD and tightening financial conditions—exactly what hits copper demand (construction, manufacturing, infrastructure). Until the market gets clearer guidance, copper stays a growth-sensitive “barometer” and can overshoot lower.

Key Risk: Fed turns meaningfully less hawkish (or inflation data collapses), forcing rate-cut expectations back up and crushing the USD tailwind.

  • Copper drops 1% after Fed Chair Warsh warns on inflation risks.
  • Traders price in earlier rate hikes, dollar strengthens sharply.
  • Industrial demand outlook dims as tighter policy clouds recovery.

Copper prices slid as markets reacted to the debut of Kevin Warsh as US Federal Reserve Chair, with his hawkish stance on inflation unsettling investors and sparking a selloff across commodities. 

The decline underscored how sensitive copper remains to monetary policy signals, particularly when they point to tighter financial conditions.

At the time of writing, the three-month copper contract on the London Metal Exchange was at $13,703.25 per ton, down 0.9%.

Warsh’s hawkish debut unsettles markets

Warsh’s first press conference was closely watched, and he did not disappoint in setting a firm tone.

He stressed that inflation risks remain elevated and that the Fed must be prepared to act decisively to contain them. 

Warsh’s remarks were widely interpreted as a signal that interest rates could rise sooner than expected, prompting traders to quickly reprice futures markets. 

By the end of the day, bets on a rate hike as early as July had gained traction, a sharp reversal from earlier expectations that the Fed would hold steady through the summer.

Copper, often seen as a barometer of global economic health, fell more than 1% in response.

The drop reflected concerns that higher borrowing costs could dampen construction, manufacturing, and infrastructure investment, sectors that drive copper demand. 

Copper slides as dollar strengthens

A stronger US dollar, buoyed by the prospect of tighter policy, added further pressure by making dollar‑denominated commodities more expensive for overseas buyers.

The broader financial markets echoed the commodity reaction. Treasury yields climbed, equities slipped modestly, and the dollar strengthened against major currencies. 

Analysts noted that the Fed’s updated projections point to inflation easing sharply next year, potentially allowing rates to return to current levels by the end of 2027. 

But for now, Warsh’s emphasis on vigilance against price pressures has unsettled investors who had hoped for a more dovish approach.

Energy transition

Copper’s decline is particularly significant given its role in the energy transition. The metal is essential for electrical wiring, renewable energy projects, and electric vehicles. 

Any slowdown in investment could weigh on demand, though some economists argue that structural supply constraints in mining may provide medium‑term support.

Still, the immediate outlook is clouded by monetary tightening and a stronger dollar.

Market participants are now bracing for further volatility as they assess how Warsh’s leadership will shape Fed policy.

His criticism of the central bank’s traditional “dot plot” forecasts, which he described as unhelpful, has left investors guessing about the precise trajectory of rates. 

That uncertainty is likely to keep pressure on growth‑sensitive commodities like copper until clearer guidance emerges.

Outlook clouded by policy uncertainty

For traders, the message was clear: the Fed under Warsh is prepared to prioritize inflation control even at the expense of growth. 

That stance could weigh on industrial metals for months to come, particularly if global demand remains uneven.

China’s economy, a major consumer of copper, has shown signs of strain, adding another layer of concern for the market.

In the near term, analysts expect copper to remain under pressure, with prices likely to test lower levels if the dollar continues to strengthen. 

Longer‑term, however, supply constraints and the push for electrification may provide a floor.

For now, though, the hawkish pivot at the Fed has shifted sentiment decisively, leaving copper vulnerable to further losses as investors recalibrate their expectations.