Freeport-McMoRan Inc.

FCX
NYSEFree primer · Steps 1–3 of 21Updated May 13, 2026Coverage as of 2026-Q2
TTM ROIC
5%FY2025
Moat
Narrow
Top Holder
Vanguard Group9.5%
Institutional
67.5%
Bull Case
GBC restart recovery, 300M+ lbs capital-light leaching growth, and sustained elevated copper prices could drive FCX EBITDA to more than double its 2023 trough levels by 2027.
Bear Case
A second Grasberg safety incident, prolonged copper price weakness below $3.50/lb, or adverse Indonesian government action could structurally impair FCX's production economics and returns.

Business Model


ticker: FCX step: 01 generated: 2026-05-13 source: quick-research

Freeport-McMoRan Inc. (FCX) — Business Overview

Business Description

Freeport-McMoRan is the world's largest publicly traded pure-play copper producer, operating large, long-lived mines across the U.S., South America, and Indonesia. The company's flagship asset is the Grasberg minerals district in Papua, Indonesia — one of the world's largest copper and gold deposits — operated through PT Freeport Indonesia (PTFI, 48.76% FCX-owned). FCX is uniquely positioned as the highest-leverage play on the copper price among publicly traded miners, with ~75% of revenue from copper, ~15% from gold, and ~8% from molybdenum. FY2024 revenue was $25.5B.

Revenue Model

Revenue is driven by copper and gold production volumes sold at prevailing commodity spot prices, partially hedged. Key cost metrics are cash costs per pound of copper produced (net of gold/moly by-product credits). Grasberg's massive gold by-product significantly reduces net copper cash costs. Revenue and earnings are highly sensitive to copper price: each $0.10/lb change in copper price impacts annual EBITDA by ~$300-400M.

Products & Services

  • Copper: Primary product (~75% of revenue); produced from open-pit and underground mines
  • Gold: Significant by-product from Grasberg Indonesia (~15% of revenue)
  • Molybdenum: By-product from North American porphyry deposits (~8% of revenue)
  • Refined copper: New Indonesian smelter commissioned 2024 provides domestic processing capability
  • Leaching initiatives: Innovative technology to recover copper from existing waste stockpiles (+300M lbs targeted by 2026)

Customer Base & Go-to-Market

Sells copper concentrate, cathode, and refined copper to smelters, refineries, wire-rod producers, and commodity traders globally. Gold is sold to refineries. Copper pricing is benchmark-based (LME/COMEX); gold follows spot pricing. No single customer concentration; commodity market pricing is the primary revenue driver.

Competitive Position

FCX is the only large-cap, pure-play copper investment vehicle for institutional investors seeking copper price exposure. BHP, Rio Tinto, and Glencore are all diversified miners; FCX gives maximum copper leverage. The Grasberg district is a generational asset — low-cost, high-grade, with decades of reserve life. The new Indonesian smelter (commissioned 2024) adds downstream integration. U.S. brownfield growth (Bagdad, El Abra, leaching) provides organic expansion without greenfield risk.

Key Facts

  • Founded: 1912 (predecessor Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold)
  • Headquarters: Phoenix, AZ
  • Employees: ~30,000
  • Exchange: NYSE
  • Sector / Industry: Materials / Copper
  • Market Cap: ~$45B

Financial Snapshot


ticker: FCX step: 04 generated: 2026-05-13 source: quick-research

Freeport-McMoRan Inc. (FCX) — Financial Snapshot

Income Statement Summary

Metric FY2022 FY2023 FY2024 YoY
Revenue ~$22.8B $22.9B $25.5B +11.4%
Gross Margin ~30% ~25% ~28%
Operating Margin ~22% ~15% ~18%
Net Income ~$3.5B ~$1.8B ~$2.7B +50%
EPS (diluted) ~$2.40 ~$1.25 ~$1.85 +48%

Revenue growth in FY2024 driven by higher copper prices (~$4.15/lb avg) and volume recovery. FY2025 Q3 EBITDA run-rate of $10B+ annualized. Q1 2026 EPS: $0.57 (beat estimates) on $6.23B revenue. September 2025 Grasberg mud rush reduced H2 2025 production.

Cash Flow & Balance Sheet (FY2024)

Metric Value
Operating Cash Flow $7.0B+
Free Cash Flow $2.37B
Capital Expenditures ~$4.5B
Total Debt ~$9.3B
Net Debt ~$1B (near net-debt-neutral)
Debt/Equity ~30.6%

Key Ratios (approximate)

  • P/E: ~25-39x (wide range reflects copper price sensitivity) | EV/EBITDA: ~8x
  • FCF Yield: ~5% (capex-heavy period) | Adjusted EBITDA (TTM): ~$10B
  • Copper break-even: ~$1.50-2.00/lb net cash cost (with gold by-product credits)

Growth Profile

FCX generates exceptional earnings leverage to copper prices. At $4.50-$5.00/lb copper (the 2025 range FCX guided to), operating cash flows exceed $11B annually. The September 2025 Grasberg mud rush temporarily reduced Indonesia production in H2 2025; phased restart targets ~85% of normal rates in H2 2026, full recovery by late 2027. New leaching technology could add 300M lbs of incremental copper annually from existing stockpiles — high-return, low-capex production.

Forward Estimates

  • FY2026: Phased Grasberg restart expected to restore production toward 1.6-1.7B lbs copper + 1.6M oz gold from Indonesia
  • Copper price sensitivity: Each $0.10/lb copper = ~$300-400M EBITDA impact
  • Leaching initiatives: 300M lbs additional copper targeted in 2026 from recoveries
  • Analyst consensus: Mixed (Morgan Stanley downgraded April 2026); avg. target ~$42-66

Recent Catalysts


ticker: FCX step: 12 generated: 2026-05-13 source: quick-research

Freeport-McMoRan Inc. (FCX) — Investment Catalysts & Risks

Bull Case Drivers

  1. Copper Supercycle: Structural Demand Deficit with No Easy Supply Fix — The electrification megatrend (EVs, renewable energy, AI data center power, grid modernization) is projected to create a structural copper deficit of 10 million tons annually by 2040. An EV requires 3-4x the copper of an internal combustion vehicle; a utility-scale wind turbine uses 3-4 tons; data centers require massive copper wiring infrastructure. Meanwhile, new copper mines take 15-20 years to bring online from discovery to production — there is no quick supply response. FCX, as the world's largest publicly traded pure-play copper producer, offers maximum leverage to this secular demand surge. At $5-6/lb copper (plausible in a deficit environment), FCX's earnings and FCF would roughly double from current levels.

  2. Grasberg Restart + Leaching Innovation = Volume Uplift — After the September 2025 mud rush disruption, Grasberg Block Cave is on a phased restart targeting ~85% of nameplate capacity in H2 2026 and full recovery by late 2027. This production ramp — returning 1.6-1.7B lbs of copper and 1.6M oz of gold annually from Indonesia alone — is a significant near-term earnings catalyst as volumes recover to normalized levels. Simultaneously, FCX's innovative leaching technology for recovering copper from existing waste stockpiles at U.S. mines targets 300M incremental lbs annually by 2026. These two volume uplift drivers are independent of new greenfield capital, representing high-return production recovery.

  3. Near Net-Debt-Neutral Balance Sheet Enables Capital Return Acceleration — FCX has reduced net debt to ~$1B (on $9.3B gross debt), achieving near net-debt-neutral status — a remarkable balance sheet transformation from its leveraged history. With capex partially stepping down post-smelter construction and as Grasberg reaches steady state, FCF should expand significantly. Management has targeted returning 50%+ of available free cash flow to shareholders once net debt reaches zero. At normalized copper prices, FCF of $3-5B+ would support meaningful buybacks and dividend growth, creating a capital return catalyst that is not yet fully priced in.

Bear Case Risks

  1. Grasberg Operational Risk is the Central Near-Term Bear Case — The September 2025 mud rush was a stark reminder that Grasberg — located in a remote, geologically complex highland region of Papua — carries significant operational risk. Morgan Stanley downgraded FCX in April 2026 to Equal Weight, cutting price target from $70 to $66, specifically flagging the slower-than-expected Grasberg restart (now targeting 65% of nameplate in H2 2026, down from 85%). Full production recovery is not expected until late 2027 — two years of below-normalized output from FCX's most important asset. Any further geological, labor, or geopolitical setbacks in Indonesia could push the recovery timeline further, materially impacting earnings for 2026-2027.

  2. Copper Price Cyclicality and China Demand Risk — Despite the long-term structural thesis, copper remains a highly cyclical commodity driven primarily by Chinese manufacturing and construction demand (China consumes ~55% of global copper). A hard landing in China's economy, a property sector collapse extending into industrial metals, or a global recession would cause sharp near-term copper price declines. FCX's earnings could swing violently: at $3.50/lb copper (seen in 2023), earnings would approximate breakeven; at $5.00+/lb, earnings are exceptional. The stock at ~25x P/E already prices in significant copper price optimism, leaving limited margin of safety if prices disappoint.

  3. Indonesia Political and Regulatory Risk — PTFI (PT Freeport Indonesia) is majority-owned by Indonesian state interests (51.24%), with FCX holding 48.76%. The Indonesian government has historically sought to renegotiate contracts, impose export restrictions, and increase royalty rates when commodity prices rise. The new Indonesian smelter was built partly under government pressure to process ore domestically. Future contract renewals, environmental permitting for underground expansion (Kucing Liar deep mine), and potential nationalization pressure represent non-operational risks that are difficult to model and can materially impair FCX's long-term Grasberg earnings.

Upcoming Events

  • Grasberg Restart Milestones (Q2-Q4 2026): Production reports each quarter will track progress toward 85% then 100% capacity — key determinants of 2026-2027 earnings
  • Q1 2026 Earnings Beat (already reported): $0.57 EPS on $6.23B revenue beat estimates; confirms leaching ramp and Americas operations resilience
  • Copper Price Trajectory: LME/COMEX copper vs. $4.50-5.00/lb guidance range will set earnings upside/downside for 2026
  • Leaching Technology Scale-Up: 300M lb target in 2026 — quarterly progress is a clean, capex-light earnings catalyst

Analyst Sentiment

Mixed and shifting: Morgan Stanley downgraded to Equal Weight (April 2026, target $66) on Grasberg recovery delays. Bull-case analysts cite the copper supercycle thesis with targets exceeding $70-80. Consensus sits around $42-66 (wide range reflecting commodity price uncertainty). The debate is fundamentally about whether Grasberg recovery timeline disappointments are priced in, and whether copper prices can sustain above $4.50/lb to justify the ~25x P/E multiple.

Research Date

Generated: 2026-05-13

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