London, June 8, 2026, 09:16 (BST)
- Glencore was little changed near 591p in delayed London data, while the FTSE 100 was down about 0.3%.
- Copper was firmer but still near a one-week low; Brent crude jumped after renewed Middle East strikes.
- Investors are still watching copper growth, coal cash flow and any future Rio Tinto angle.
Glencore shares were little changed in London on Monday, holding near 591 pence as firmer copper and oil prices met a weaker tone across UK blue chips and mining peers. Hargreaves Lansdown showed a 590.90p sell price and 591.10p buy price, up 0.15%, with prices delayed by at least 15 minutes.
The move matters now because Glencore is coming off a sharp one-day fall. Trading Economics put the stock at 590.50p, up 0.05%, after a Friday close of 590.20p, when it fell 3.25%; the same feed showed a roughly 103% rise over 12 months.
It was a regular trading day in London. The London Stock Exchange runs its main weekday session from 0800 to 1630 BST, and the next England and Wales bank holiday is Aug. 31, according to market-hours and government calendars.
The FTSE 100, the index of large London-listed companies, was down about 0.3%. Among peers, Rio Tinto slipped 0.71%, Anglo American was nearly flat and Antofagasta eased 0.33%, leaving Glencore a mild outperformer rather than a clear sector leader.
Commodity signals were mixed. Copper, used in power grids, buildings and electronics, edged higher but stayed near a one-week low as inflation worries and a firm dollar weighed on the metal; benchmark three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange was up 0.38% at $13,570.50 a metric ton in early trade, Reuters reported via Business Recorder.
Oil gave the other side of the story. Brent crude rose more than 4% after Israeli strikes on Iran and Lebanon raised fresh supply fears, Reuters reported, a move that keeps attention on Glencore’s energy marketing arm, which buys, sells and moves physical commodities for customers.
Glencore’s own latest production update gave investors a reason not to read too much into one quiet share move. Chief Executive Gary Nagle said first-quarter production was “largely in line with our expectations,” and the company kept 2026 guidance unchanged, including copper output of 810,000 to 870,000 tonnes. Glencore
The Baar, Switzerland-based group is not just a miner. Reuters’ company profile describes Glencore as a producer and marketer of natural resources, with industrial assets across copper, cobalt, zinc, nickel, coal and ferroalloys, plus a marketing business that sources and sells commodities globally.
Rio Tinto remains part of the market background, though not Monday’s tape. Reuters Breakingviews wrote on May 26 that Glencore’s shares had climbed 23% since merger talks with Rio collapsed in February, and said UK takeover rules would keep Rio waiting until August before another try.
Cash returns also sit in the price. Glencore’s AGM results showed shareholders approved all resolutions, including a capital-reserve repayment and a buyback contract, while Hargreaves Lansdown listed a $0.085 per-share distribution with a June 3 payment date.
But the risks are not small. A stronger dollar, weaker Chinese demand, lower copper prices or renewed cost pressure from diesel, sulphuric acid and freight could test the stock’s rally. Glencore also flagged Democratic Republic of Congo cobalt export quotas, while coal exposure and the unresolved Rio question leave the shares tied to politics as much as price screens.