Copper to Gold Ratio
Copper Gold Ratio Today
The copper gold ratio compares copper's price per pound with gold's price per troy ounce. It is a compact way to see whether the market is rewarding industrial growth exposure or paying up for monetary safety. Use this page alongside the live gold price and live copper price to see which side of that macro tug-of-war is leading.
Live Copper Gold Ratio Chart
Current Ratio Snapshot
Start with the live gold price
Gold is the monetary anchor. When safe-haven demand leads, the copper gold ratio usually softens because gold is holding more value per ounce.
Then compare the live copper price
Copper is the growth half. Construction, grids, EVs, data centers, Chinese demand, and mine supply drive its relative swings versus gold.
What Is the Copper Gold Ratio?
The copper gold ratio is copper's price per pound divided by gold's price per troy ounce. Copper futures and LME quotes are typically quoted per pound, while gold spot is quoted per troy ounce, so this page keeps those native units in the calculation.
Macro investors watch the current copper gold ratio because it compares the industrial metal most closely associated with construction, power grids, electrification, and manufacturing with a defensive monetary metal.
How to Read the Copper to Gold Ratio
- A higher copper to gold ratio means copper is outperforming gold. It often fits stronger growth expectations, firm manufacturing demand, or tighter copper supply.
- A falling ratio usually means gold is outperforming copper. That can happen when investors prefer safety, liquidity, and monetary insurance over industrial-cycle exposure.
- The signal is strongest when the direction agrees with copper inventories, mine supply news, manufacturing PMIs, Chinese demand, real yields, and the U.S. dollar.
- The ratio is not a buy or sell signal by itself. It is most useful when combined with copper inventories, LME/COMEX spreads, manufacturing PMIs, China demand, Treasury yields, and the U.S. dollar.
Copper Gold Ratio Zones
Ratio zones are not trading rules, but they help separate three different regimes: copper-led growth, balanced macro conditions, and gold-led defensiveness. That distinction matters because copper is consumed by the industrial economy, while gold is held primarily as a liquid monetary asset.
Relative value compass
A quick visual guide to what different ratio levels tend to imply.
Treat the ratio as a starting question: which metal is stretched relative to the other? Then confirm with copper inventories, manufacturing data, yields, the U.S. dollar, and the shape of the move.
Copper Gold Ratio Timeline
The ratio moves through business cycles, Chinese credit cycles, commodity capex cycles, mine disruptions, energy-transition demand, inflation shocks, and periods when investors pay a premium for gold liquidity.
Relative value in one line
From growth signal to defensive signal
China and infrastructure drive copper
Industrial demand, urbanization, and commodity capex helped copper outperform many defensive assets during expansionary stretches.
Credit crisis favors gold
Copper sold off with the growth shock while gold held up better as liquidity and safety became more valuable.
Sovereign-debt worries lift gold
Gold's monetary bid strengthened while copper was more exposed to slowing global manufacturing expectations.
Pandemic crash, then copper reflation
The ratio fell during the initial panic, then copper recovered as stimulus, housing, and reopening demand improved.
Gold and copper rise together
Recent moves are unusual because gold has repriced higher even as copper benefits from electrification, AI data centers, and grid demand.
Live market ratio
The current ratio reflects copper per-pound prices divided by live gold per-ounce prices.
When the Ratio May Favor Copper or Gold
When copper may have the edge
- The ratio is rising from a low base, suggesting copper is catching up to gold.
- Manufacturing PMIs, construction activity, or Chinese credit impulse are improving.
- Grid, EV, data-center, or electrification demand is pulling copper inventories lower.
- Mine disruptions, low treatment charges, or slow project approvals are tightening supply expectations.
- Treasury yields rise for growth reasons rather than inflation-stress reasons.
When gold may be the better fit
- Markets are defensive and investors are paying for liquidity and monetary insurance.
- Copper demand is being hurt by weak manufacturing, construction, or Chinese property activity.
- You want a compact store of value with deeper global recognition and easier resale.
- Copper rallies are being driven by supply squeezes rather than broad demand improvement.
- Your portfolio already has enough exposure to industrial-cycle and China-demand risk.
Why the Ratio Matters for Bullion Investors
It compares safety with growth
Gold tends to respond to liquidity, real yields, inflation stress, and reserve demand. Copper tends to respond to factories, construction, grids, and energy-transition capex.
It helps read macro regime
A rising copper gold ratio often points to improving growth appetite or tighter copper fundamentals. A falling ratio often points to defensive markets.
It links commodities to rates
Many macro desks compare copper/gold or gold/copper against Treasury yields because the relationship can reveal whether yields are growth-led or stress-led.
Common Mistakes When Using the Ratio
Treating the ratio as a prediction
A high or low ratio does not guarantee mean reversion. It tells you relative price, not timing.
Mixing units without noticing
This page divides copper per pound by gold per troy ounce. Converting copper to ounces first would change the ratio by a factor of 16 and make the chart harder to compare with standard copper quotes.
Comparing copper and gold as if they move the same way
Gold behaves more like monetary insurance. Copper behaves more like a cyclical industrial input, so they can rise together for very different reasons.
Copper Gold Ratio FAQ
What is the copper gold ratio today?
The copper gold ratio today is calculated by dividing copper's live price per pound by gold's live price per troy ounce. Both metals keep their standard market quoting units in the formula.
What is the current copper to gold ratio formula?
The formula is copper price per pound divided by gold price per troy ounce. For example, if copper is $4.80 per pound and gold is $3,300 per ounce, the copper gold ratio is about 0.001455.
Is a high copper gold ratio good for copper?
A high ratio means copper is strong relative to gold, but it is not a standalone trading signal. Investors usually compare it with copper inventories, manufacturing data, Chinese demand, real yields, and overall market conditions.
Why does the copper gold ratio change?
The ratio changes because gold and copper respond differently to safe-haven demand, industrial demand, investor positioning, currency moves, real yields, and copper supply conditions.
When should investors consider copper over gold?
Some investors favor copper exposure when the ratio is rising alongside improving manufacturing, construction, grid, EV, or China demand signals. Copper is usually more cyclical than gold.
When should investors consider gold over copper?
Gold may be a better fit when investors want lower volatility, higher liquidity, and a more defensive store of value. A falling copper gold ratio can show that gold is gaining relative strength versus copper.