November 10, 2025 in
Brighton Capital Management 2026 Investment Outlook – Summary Edition
Brighton Capital Management 2026 Investment Outlook – Summary Edition Resilience, Renewal and the Return of Productive Capital The global...
November 19, 2025
Most investors know copper as a workhorse material – in pipes, wiring and “the bits behind the walls”. It rarely gets the same attention as lithium, batteries or “Big Tech”.
But when we look at the themes likely to define the next decade – AI data centres, power grid investment, defence spending, electric vehicles and broader electrification – copper keeps reappearing at the centre of the story.
Recently, our investment team spent time with an excellent research piece from Global X, “Copper: At the Intersection of Megatrends”. It brought together many of the structural forces we’ve been discussing in our own investment thesis: AI infrastructure, energy transition, and rearmament. That work helped crystallise our thinking and prompted us to set out, in our own words, how we see copper and why it matters for long-term portfolios.
From old-economy metal to strategic enabler
For decades, copper demand has been dominated by construction, conventional vehicles and waves of infrastructure spending in China – areas that tend to rise and fall with the global business cycle. That’s why copper and copper miners have traditionally been lumped into the “cyclicals” bucket.
What’s changing is who is driving the marginal tonne of demand:
Crucially, much of this investment is planned years in advance by utilities, governments and large technology companies. That makes an increasing slice of copper demand less about short-term GDP surprises and more about multi-year infrastructure and technology roadmaps.
The supply side: slow to respond
If demand is becoming more structural, the natural question is whether supply can keep pace.
In the short term, the refined copper market can still swing between modest surplus and tightness. But looking out into the 2030s, the industry’s own forecasts suggest a more challenging backdrop:
Put simply, the world is asking for more copper at the same time as the system is becoming more cautious and slower to deliver it.
Where copper fits in our broader themes
Within Brighton Capital Management’s investment thesis, several long-term themes stand out:
Copper sits at the intersection of all four:
If there is a bottleneck between what policymakers and technology companies want to build and what is physically achievable, materials like copper will be part of that story.
What this might mean for investors
None of this guarantees a smooth path for copper prices or mining shares. Copper will always be volatile and sensitive to global growth worries, changes in Chinese demand and shifts in market sentiment.
However, in our view:
How we think about copper within BCM portfolios
As discretionary wealth managers, we’re not in the business of forecasting next quarter’s copper price. Instead, we ask questions like:
In practice, within our models we express these themes through:
The Global X work on copper and megatrends aligns closely with our own analysis and has been a useful external reference point. Our implementation, however, is tailored to our mandates, risk controls and the specific needs of our clients.
Is your portfolio prepared for a world constrained by copper?
Copper is unlikely to dominate the headlines in the way AI or cryptocurrencies do, but it may quietly exert a much bigger influence on the real economy – and on investment outcomes – than many portfolios currently assume.
We believe it is one of several key materials that deserve a place in long-term portfolio thinking, especially for investors who want to participate in the AI and energy-transition themes in a grounded, risk-aware way.
If you’d like to understand:
we’d be delighted to discuss this in the context of your own circumstances.
👉 If you’re a private investor, trustee or family considering professional investment management, please get in touch to arrange an initial conversation with the Brighton Capital Management team.
This article is for information only and does not constitute personal advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any security, fund or sector. The value of investments can go down as well as up, and you may get back less than you invest. Past performance is not a guide to future returns. If you are unsure about the suitability of any investment, you should seek advice that takes your personal circumstances into account.
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