Is ERO a good stock to buy? We came across a bullish thesis on Ero Copper Corp. on Danny’s Substack by Danny Green. In this article, we will summarize the bulls’ thesis on ERO. Ero Copper Corp.’s share was trading at $28.39 as of April 20th. ERO’s trailing and forward P/E were 11.44 and 7.58 respectively according to Yahoo Finance.
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ERO Copper (ERO) represents one of the most compelling opportunities in the global copper mining sector, driven by an accelerating secular demand trend and structurally constrained supply. Copper demand is being fueled by four simultaneous pillars: electric vehicle adoption, which requires 2.4 times more copper per vehicle than combustion engines; renewable energy infrastructure, which is copper-intensive and projected to meet surging electricity demand; AI-driven data center expansion, adding incremental grid copper consumption; and rising global defense spending.
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Against this backdrop, supply is constrained by geological limits, declining ore grades, long lead times for new mines, and permitting challenges, creating a structural deficit that could reach 19 million metric tons by 2050. ERO’s production growth is notable, with record 2025 copper output of 64,307 tonnes, driven primarily by the Tucumã mine ramp-up. Revenue for the first nine months of 2025 rose 63% year-over-year, highlighting volume-driven growth rather than price effects.
The company’s high-grade Brazilian assets, low C1 cash costs, and proprietary underground expertise provide a durable competitive advantage and exceptional leverage to copper prices. The Furnas Copper-Gold Project further enhances upside optionality, with a PEA NPV(8%) of $2.04 billion at $4.60/lb copper, effectively equal to ERO’s current market capitalization.
Financially, ERO is transitioning from a growth-stage, leveraged miner to a free cash flow-generating company. Liquidity reached $150 million at year-end 2025, and the balance sheet is being strengthened through operational cash flow, capex discipline, and favorable BRL-denominated cost structures.
Catalysts include Tucumã operational normalization, copper price appreciation, Pilar shaft commissioning, and Furnas PEA realization, while risks involve Chinese economic weakness, regulatory delays, and operational frictions. With undervaluation relative to peers, production growth, and a transformational long-term project pipeline, ERO offers a highly asymmetric risk/reward profile, potentially positioning it as a major mid-tier copper producer and strategic target for large mining companies.

