China’s refined copper imports have fallen to their lowest level in a year as the global copper market experiences dramatic upheaval driven by escalating trade tensions between Washington and Beijing.
The disruption has forced Chinese buyers to fundamentally restructure their supply chains while creating extraordinary price distortions across international markets.
Tariff Fears Drive Massive Re-Export Operations
The chaos began in February when President Trump launched a national security investigation into America’s copper import dependency, sparking fears of imminent tariffs on the critical industrial metal. This triggered an immediate scramble to redirect copper shipments to US markets, with Chinese traders acting as intermediaries in a complex re-export scheme.
Data reveals that China “exported” 121,000 metric tons of copper to the United States in the first seven months of 2025. However, US customs records show only 15 tons of genuinely Chinese-origin copper entered America during the same period, exposing the true nature of these transactions: Chinese companies were simply re-routing previously imported non-Chinese metal to capitalize on the pricing disconnect.
This massive arbitrage operation has drained China’s bonded warehouse inventories, forcing domestic buyers to compete more aggressively for available supplies while diversifying away from traditional sources.
Unprecedented Price Distortions Create Profit Opportunities
The market disruption has created extraordinary profit opportunities for those able to navigate the complex logistics. The premium of copper prices on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange over London Metal Exchange prices exploded to nearly $3,000 per ton in July—almost triple the record $1,100 premium seen during last year’s market squeeze.
Chinese smelters have capitalized on these pricing anomalies by strategically positioning inventory in LME-approved warehouses in Taiwan and South Korea. LME holdings of Chinese copper surged from just 25,000 tons to 98,000 tons during July alone, as traders positioned metal for potential US delivery.
Chile Loses Market Share as Alternative Suppliers Gain Ground
The trade tensions have dramatically reshaped China’s import patterns, with traditional supplier Chile bearing the brunt of the disruption. Chinese imports of Chilean copper have collapsed, falling below 20,000 tons in both June and July—the first time since 2006 that monthly imports dropped to such levels. Year-to-date Chilean imports are down nearly 50% compared to 2024.
This dramatic shift reflects the constraints of CME delivery specifications, which heavily favor Chilean and other South American copper brands. As US buyers aggressively competed for these preferred grades, stripping them from global supply chains, Chinese buyers found themselves priced out of their traditional supply source.
New Suppliers Fill the Gap
In response, Chinese buyers have pivoted toward alternative suppliers, fundamentally altering global trade flows. The Democratic Republic of Congo has emerged as China’s dominant supplier, with cumulative imports reaching nearly 820,000 tons in the first seven months of 2025.
Perhaps more significantly, Russia has become an increasingly important source, with monthly imports now regularly exceeding those from Chile. Russian copper arrivals surged 123% year-over-year to 269,000 tons, highlighting how geopolitical tensions are redrawing commodity trade maps.
Zambia has also benefited from this supply chain reshuffling, with Chinese imports more than doubling to 95,000 tons as buyers seek non-Chilean alternatives.
Market Volatility Reflects Broader Trade Tensions
The copper market turmoil serves as a microcosm of broader US-China trade relations, demonstrating how tariff threats can trigger immediate market responses even before policies are implemented. The August collapse in price premiums following the US administration’s decision to defer copper tariffs until next year illustrates the market’s sensitivity to policy signals.
With China’s outbound copper shipments already exceeding 426,000 tons by July—approaching last year’s record of 458,000 tons—the current disruption appears set to reshape global copper trade patterns for the foreseeable future.
The question now is whether these new supply relationships will prove temporary responses to trade tensions or permanent shifts in the global commodities landscape.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
US tariff threats on copper have triggered a massive global supply chain disruption, forcing China—the world’s largest copper buyer—to abandon its traditional Chilean suppliers in favor of Russia, Congo, and Zambia. This has created extraordinary price volatility, with premiums spiking to $3,000 per ton as traders scramble to redirect metal flows.
The result is a fundamental reshaping of global copper trade patterns that may outlast the immediate trade tensions, demonstrating how geopolitical conflicts can instantly restructure critical commodity markets even before policies are formally implemented.























