Analyst Predicts Major Surge in Bitcoin, Says ‘This Asset Works 24×7 While Gold Sleeps’
Analyst Sujay U predicts a copper boom as global supply tightens and demand soars from EVs, renewable energy, and infrastructure calling it “the metal that builds the future.”
Mumbai, Nov 10 : Gold may glitter, but copper is quietly emerging as the real wealth builder of the next decade. Analyst Sujay U has warned that while Indians continue to favor gold, they’re overlooking copper, the metal driving the world’s clean energy and digital transformation.
In a viral LinkedIn post, Sujay described copper as “the metal that might reshape wealth in the next 5–10 years,” emphasizing that India remains largely unaware of its potential. “The world can’t build the future without it,” he wrote, noting its indispensable role in electric vehicles, solar panels, charging infrastructure, power grids, and data centers.
However, copper’s growing demand is being met with constrained supply. Grasberg, one of the world’s largest copper mines in Indonesia, faces production disruptions due to floods and accidents with analysts warning of a 600,000-ton shortfall by 2026. Since opening new mines can take over a decade, the looming supply crunch is driving prices higher.
Recently, copper prices spiked 3–3.5% in a single day amid market anxiety. Major investment banks, including Goldman Sachs and Citi, now forecast copper reaching $11,000–$14,000 per ton in the coming years a potential 20–50% surge.
Adding to the momentum, China’s decision to cut solar subsidies has triggered a rush to install panels before new rules take effect, further intensifying demand for copper wiring and grid expansion. Sujay calls this a “short-term frenzy” feeding into a “long-term green revolution.”
Unlike gold, copper is constantly at work. “One sits in lockers. The other runs the future,” Sujay remarked. “While gold waits, copper works 24×7.”
Historically, every major copper rally began with a supply crunch and ended in record highs. As the world races toward electrification and renewable energy, Sujay’s message is clear copper isn’t just a commodity, it’s an opportunity hiding in plain sight.