Copper—A Global Industrial Barometer, Tug-of-War Between Tariffs and Green Transition



Copper is known as the "Doctor of Copper" because its price can preemptively reflect global economic health. Currently, LME copper futures are around $9,200 per ton, down about 6% from the March high of $9,800. There are two main reasons for recent pressure on copper prices:

1. The Direct Impact of Trump’s Tariffs
On April 2, Trump signed an order imposing a 50% tariff on imported steel, aluminum, and copper products, and a uniform 25% tariff on finished goods containing these metals. The U.S. is one of the world's largest copper importers (mainly from Chile, Peru, and Canada). After the tariffs took effect, domestic copper prices in the U.S. surged, but global copper demand elsewhere might decline due to trade shifts. LME copper inventories have recently increased, indicating some traders have redirected copper originally destined for the U.S. to Asian warehouses.

2. Uncertainty in the Global Economic Outlook
Conflicts in the Middle East have driven energy prices higher, European manufacturing PMI remains in contraction territory (Germany’s March PMI is only 43.2), and China’s real estate sector is still in a cleanup phase. Industrial demand for copper is under pressure. However, long-term structural support remains: global energy transition (grid upgrades, electric vehicles, photovoltaics) maintains a 3-4% annual growth rate in copper demand. The International Copper Study Group forecasts a global copper supply gap of 6 million tons by 2030.

Geopolitical Variables
In a speech on April 1, Trump not only mentioned Iran but also referenced “ensuring the security of critical mineral supply chains.” Copper is listed as one of the critical minerals by the U.S. If the U.S. imposes high tariffs on copper imports, it could accelerate the approval process for domestic copper mining projects (such as Rio Tinto’s Resolution project), but it will not change the supply-demand landscape in the short term.

On the technical side, key support levels for LME copper are at $8,800–$9,000 (200-day moving average), with resistance at $9,600–$9,800. For investors, attention can be paid to range trading opportunities in copper mining stock ETFs (COPX) or futures. In the long term, the story of “green demand + supply bottlenecks” for copper remains unchanged, but in the short term, the market needs to digest tariffs and macro headwinds.

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