People love to talk about “make money while you sleep” and “position early,” but most people don’t actually study what moves real markets. They react to headlines. They wait for confirmation. They show up after the move. Then they wonder why they always feel late. That’s why Robert Kiyosaki’s recent post caught my attention. Whether you agree with him on everything or not, he’s been right about a lot of macro trends over the years and he was early on silver too. What he’s highlighting right now is something most people still treat as boring: copper demand.
Copper has been labeled an “industrial metal” for decades. Wires, pipes, construction. Something you don’t think about unless you’re remodeling a house. But Kiyosaki’s point is that era is over because the world is building an electrified, digitized, infrastructure-heavy future, and copper sits underneath all of it.
This isn’t hype. This is supply and demand.
Kiyosaki lays out a clear supply-demand problem: global copper demand projected to rise from roughly 28 million tonnes today to about 42 million tonnes by 2040. That’s not a small increase, it’s a structural shift driven by massive global changes that are already underway.
Here’s why copper demand is accelerating:
Electrification changes everything. Electric vehicles use significantly more copper than internal combustion vehicles because of wiring, motors, battery systems, and charging infrastructure. So this isn’t just “more cars.” It’s a different type of car that requires more copper embedded into the system.
The power grid is being pushed past what it was designed for. Modern life runs on electricity. The more we electrify transportation, heating, and industry, the more the grid has to be upgraded, expanded, reinforced, and rebuilt. And copper is a core component of that.
Digital infrastructure is exploding. Data centers, networking, cloud systems, all require heavy electrical and cooling systems. Kiyosaki specifically calls out AI-related copper demand, stating it’s expected to grow over 120%, reaching around 2.5 million tonnes by 2040. Even if you’re not “an AI person,” you don’t have to be. The world is building a bigger digital machine, and copper is part of the plumbing.
The important takeaway is simple: copper isn’t “optional.” It’s foundational.
This is where Kiyosaki’s post becomes very practical. Demand can increase relatively fast. Supply usually can’t.
Kiyosaki points out that global copper production is expected to peak around 34 million tonnes near 2030, then gradually decline to roughly 32 million tonnes by 2040. Whether those exact numbers end up being perfect or not, the logic behind them is what matters: copper mining is slow, expensive, and constrained.
Copper mining is capital-intensive, permitting is slow, environmental concerns are real, geopolitics matters, and new discoveries tend to be smaller and lower-grade. In plain English: it takes a long time and a lot of money to bring new copper supply online. That’s not a social media opinion. That’s how commodity supply chains work.
So if demand rises faster than supply, pressure builds. And as Kiyosaki says, price is often just the messenger, scarcity is the story.
Kiyosaki shares a line from his rich dad that hits the core of how serious people think:
“Watch what the world cannot function without, not what’s popular.”
That’s the point of studying copper demand. This isn’t about jumping on a trend. It’s about learning to see what the world is building, what it requires, and where constraints are showing up.
This is the same lens I’ve tried to get people to adopt for years: stop waiting for the mainstream to tell you what matters. Learn what drives the world first.
Now here’s where this becomes practical for you and your income.
Quick Silver just announced that copper is available now. That matters because it expands the conversation beyond one metal and gives you a new angle that’s incredibly easy to communicate in “real life language.” Most people don’t understand charts, but they do understand electricity, infrastructure, and everyday usage.
And if you’re building affiliate income, adding copper gives you more ways to educate, create content, and attract the right kind of buyer. Not tire-kickers. Not hype chasers. People who actually understand value and want to learn how markets work.
Here’s the key: you don’t make money promoting anything long-term by being loud. You make money by being useful. You make money by helping people understand what they’re looking at, what matters, and why.
That’s why the copper conversation is powerful: it’s grounded in reality.
If you want to use this for content and lead generation, don’t start with “you should buy copper.”
Start with questions that force people to think:
Have you ever noticed how the world keeps demanding more electricity, more data, more infrastructure, but nobody talks about the materials it requires?
If demand rises and supply is slow to expand, what tends to happen to pressure over time?
What are the “boring” things the world cannot function without and are you paying attention to them?
Those questions pull in thinkers. And thinkers convert better than impulse buyers.
Important note: This article is for education and awareness. It’s not financial advice. Do your own research, understand your risk tolerance, and make your own decisions.
Copper used to be treated like an afterthought. Kiyosaki’s point is that the world doesn’t have the luxury of treating it that way anymore, because the future being built requires more copper than the system can easily produce. When the world commits to electrification, grid upgrades, AI data centers, and massive digital infrastructure, copper stops being “boring.” It becomes essential. And when something is essential while supply is slow to expand, pressure builds long before the average person notices.
That’s why copper demand matters.
And that’s also why Quick Silver adding copper matters. It’s the next logical step inside a platform that’s already been helping people position with tangible metals, without needing to be a Wall Street expert or glued to market news all day. This isn’t replacing silver. Silver is still the foundation. I’ve been in Quick Silver for 4 years now, I’ve built a strong, growing team, and I’ve personally helped a lot of people start collecting real silver consistently over time. That doesn’t stop because copper is here. It expands the conversation and gives people another practical option inside the same ecosystem.
What I like about this is how simple it is to explain to normal people. Silver has a powerful monetary and industrial story. Copper has a “the world literally can’t build the future without it” story. When you understand that, you don’t have to hype anyone. You can educate. And education attracts better people, more qualified conversations, and stronger long-term teams.
So if you’ve been looking for something real you can share with others, something grounded in everyday reality and global demand, this is worth looking at. Quick Silver adding copper gives you a new angle to talk about markets, how supply and demand works, and why certain materials become strategic over time. And for those who want income from it, you can also build a business by promoting Quick Silver with this new copper option now available.
And to make this even more valuable, I’m adding something I don’t normally give away: anyone who joins my Quick Silver team through this article gets a FREE 1-hour private coaching session with me (a $1,000 value). Not a group call. One-on-one. In that session, I’ll help you get clear on your plan, your message, and exactly how to build momentum without confusion, overwhelm, or guessing.
Copper demand is rising. Silver isn’t going anywhere. Quick Silver just gave us the next step.
Now it’s just about who moves early and who watches from the sidelines again.
#CopperDemand, #CopperMarket, #Commodities, #MarketEducation, #SupplyAndDemand, #EconomicTrends, #Infrastructure, #EnergyTransition, #DigitalInfrastructure, #AI, #QuickSilver, #AffiliateMarketing, #OnlineIncome, #LeadGeneration, #MakeMoneyOnline
Stay ahead in a rapidly world. Subscribe to Prysm Insights,our monthly look at the critical issues facing global business.