Mining stocks are back on top, and this time, copper, silver, and nickel are dragging them there. Since the beginning of 2025, the MSCI Metals and Mining Index has jumped nearly 90%, crushing semiconductors, banks, and even tech giants.
Wall Street fund managers who once ignored these stocks are now going heavy. Theyβre not doing it for fun. The demand for metals is exploding, and supply canβt keep up.
This rally isnβt slowing down. Copper is already up 50% this year. Thatβs because itβs essential for energy infrastructure, EVs, and AI data centers. But itβs not just copper. Silver, nickel, aluminum, and platinum are all gaining ground too. Even gold is holding strong. Investors are still piling into it as a hedge against whatβs happening with U.S. money policy and rising global tensions.
Fund managers increase mining exposure despite caution
Mining stocks used to be dead weight. Everyone was focused on tech and banks, especially while Chinaβs economy looked shaky. That changed when Beijing started cutting interest rates and pledging economic support. Suddenly, the metals sector didnβt look so bad.
Dilin Wu at Pepperstone said, βMining stocks have quietly gone from a boring defensive sleeve to an essential portfolio anchor, one of the few sectors positioned to catch both changing monetary policy and a shaky geopolitical setup.β
Whatβs interesting is that copper and aluminum donβt follow the economy like they used to. Theyβve become long-term bets. Thatβs why people are buying dips every time prices fall. Europeβs fund managers now have a net 26% overweight in the mining sector. Thatβs the highest in four years, even if itβs still below the 38% they had back in 2008.
M&A heats up as valuations stay cheap
Even after the rally, the sector still looks underpriced. The Stoxx 600 Basic Resources Index is trading at a forward price-to-book ratio of 0.47, while the average sits closer to 0.59. In past cycles, it peaked above 0.7. So thereβs room left.
Alain Gabriel from Morgan Stanley said, βThis valuation gap stays wide even though natural resources are more important than ever.β Alain also pointed out that companies are choosing to acquire other firms rather than build new sites. Itβs cheaper, quicker, and less risky.
Right now, Anglo American is buying Teck Resources. And thereβs talk of Rio Tinto teaming up with Glencore. Miners want scale. They want better portfolios. Copper is the target. Everyone knows thereβs a supply problem. And if demand keeps pushing higher, so will prices. That means the stocks still have room to run.
Big players like BHP and Rio Tinto are still tied to iron ore. But ironβs not doing much. The last China-led supercycle is over. Thatβs why theyβre moving to copper. Meanwhile, only a few companies offer pure copper exposure; Freeport-McMoRan and Antofagasta are two of them.
Some are staying cautious. Bank of America actually downgraded the sector in Europe. They said thereβs a risk of bad economic surprises.
Nick Ferres from Vantage Point said heβs pulled back on gold for now. βI get concerned when the price of any asset goes parabolic,β Nick said. βBut the miners are cheap. If gold holds up, weβd scale back in on a pullback.β
Bloomberg Intelligence says copper will still be in deficit this year, and the gap may even be worse than in 2025. As for gold, they say prices could hit $5,000. Goldman Sachs thinks itβll go even higher, $5,400 by the end of 2026, about 8% above where it is now.
Gerald Gan from Reed Capital isnβt pulling back. βThe upside drivers for commodities are now more powerful and more diversified,β Gerald said. βIn the coming months, weβre planning to raise our mining exposure.β
If you're reading this, youβre already ahead. Stay there with our newsletter.



















English (US)