Copper And Its Byproducts

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Marc Lonoff
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
21
File Size:
572 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1980

Abstract

Byproducts are more important to the copper mining companies than to the copper market. Copper ores frequently contain gold, silver, molbydenum and cobalt. With the increase in the prices of these metals copper mining has become more profitable. If byproduct prices remain high, additional firms will be attracted to the copper industry; the increased supply of copper will reduce the long-run copper price. However, this is unlikely to happen because the markets for the copper byproducts, especially molybdenum and cobalt, are small. Increased recovery from copper and other sources will depress the prices of these byproducts before the copper price is significantly affected. Should byproduct prices remain high the copper market will both settle at a lower long-run price and be more unstable in the short run. Since changes in the copper price do not affect the entire earnings of a multi-metal mine, the copper price must fall further before such mines reduce output in the short run. Higher byproduct revenues will make copper supply less responsive to copper price; shifts in copper demand will result in greater copper price fluctuations in the short run than they did before.
Citation

APA: Marc Lonoff  (1980)  Copper And Its Byproducts

MLA: Marc Lonoff Copper And Its Byproducts. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1980.

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