Critical Resources and the New Commodity Leverage

Introduction
Critical resources commodity leverage is fast becoming one of the defining dynamics of the 2020s. Lithium, copper, rare earths, and gold are no longer just industrial inputs; they are instruments of statecraft. As seen in the Scenario Outlook (2025–2026), control over these commodities is shifting the balance of power.
Scarcity Meets Geopolitics
Decades of under-investment are colliding with surging demand from electrification, defense build-ups, and energy transition projects. China dominates refining and mid-stream processing, leaving the U.S. and Europe dependent on a concentrated supply chain.
Lithium and nickel power EV batteries, rare earths are indispensable for defense and electronics, uranium sustains nuclear energy, and gold remains a hedge against financial and geopolitical shocks. As a Brookings analyst noted, these are now national security assets, not just commodities.
Investment Opportunities
For investors, critical resources commodity leverage provides a dual role: exposure to structural growth from electrification and resilience against crises. Mining and resource companies capture upside in both stable and volatile conditions. As highlighted in the Global Energy Transition thesis, these commodities are at the heart of decarbonisation and reindustrialisation strategies.
The U.S., EU, and allies are countering China’s dominance with re-shoring strategies, from the Inflation Reduction Act to the EU Critical Raw Materials Act. This creates opportunities for both Western majors and Chinese champions.
Risks and Constraints
Yet the sector remains vulnerable to price cycles, overcapacity from subsidies, and technological substitutions. Advances in battery chemistry could reduce reliance on metals like cobalt or nickel. Policy risks also loom large, from windfall taxes to outright export bans.
Warning: Commodities deliver leverage and resilience, but volatility and policy shifts make timing critical.
Stocks to Watch
Ticker | Name | Thesis |
---|---|---|
2899 HK | Zijin Mining | China’s flagship miner with gold, copper, and lithium assets. Key beneficiary of Beijing’s resource diplomacy. |
2600 HK | Chalco | Aluminium and bauxite giant central to China’s mid-stream control. |
1114 HK | Brilliance Rare Earth | Rare earth producer linked to defense and EV demand. |
RIO LN / RIO AU | Rio Tinto | Western diversified miner with scale in copper and lithium. |
GLEN LN | Glencore | Trader and producer with unmatched reach in copper and battery metals. |
BHP AU / BHP LN | BHP Group | Strong balance sheet with copper, nickel, and potash exposure. |
Strategic Context
Critical resources commodity leverage ties closely to China Tech Sovereignty where refining control is wielded as a geopolitical tool. It also complements Gold as the Ultimate Hedge, reinforcing resilience in portfolios.
Compared with defense, resources are more volatile but can deliver powerful asymmetric returns during supply shocks or geopolitical crises.
Conclusion
Critical resources commodity leverage will shape geopolitics and markets in the decade ahead. For investors, the lesson is clear: strategic allocation matters more than timing, as those who control resources increasingly control power.