"Today the situation is very different," Bernstein told Reuters.
Doubts emerged about whether JPMorgan would push ahead with its JPM XF Physical Copper Trust after the bank put its commodities business, including warehousing unit Henry Bath which would store the fund's metal, up for sale this summer, Bernstein said.
For BlackRock, its plans were complicated when Goldman Sachs Group Inc pulled its Metro warehousing unit as custodian for the product, he said.
Neither firm has published a final prospectus for the funds with the SEC. JPM got the green light in December last year and BlackRock in February this year.
The furor over the funds has also waned as market conditions have deteriorated.
In late 2010, many analysts attributed copper's surge to over $10,000 per tonne from $6,000 to news of JPMorgan's fund while China's appetite for metal was red hot.
That is dramatically different now.
The copper market is in surplus; doubts remain about long-term demand growth from China, the world's No. 1 metals user and commodities have fallen out of favor with investors.
"I'm not seeing the basis for a compelling argument for launching an ETF right now. It might come back in the future. But right now it's come and gone," Bernstein told Reuters.
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