| Column: Global imbalances grow as ever more copper flows to the US: Andy Home 
 mining.com
 
 Reuters | June 15, 2025 | 9:28 am                                      Markets  China  Europe  USA  Copper
 
 The collective scramble to move as much physical copper as possible  to the US before the imposition of import tariffs is creating shortages  in the rest of the world.
 
 London Metal Exchange (LME) stocks  have fallen to nearly two-year lows with time-spreads flaring into backwardation as inventory drains away.
 
 This tariff trade will continue until US President Donald Trump’s  administration makes up its mind whether to add copper to the  lengthening list of metals subject to penal import duties.
 
 The Section 232 investigation  launched by the administration in February  comes with a 270-day deadline. Administration officials have dropped  heavy hints it would be completed in accelerated “Trump time” but the  market is still waiting.
 
 The CME customs-cleared US copper contract continues to command a  hefty premium over the London market. The arbitrage has been a volatile  trade but at a current $1,000-per metric ton basis three-month delivery,  traders appear to be pricing in a potential 10% tariff
 
 More importantly, the transatlantic price gap more than covers the  costs of shipping, suggesting no immediate let-up in the physical copper  tariff trade.
 
 
 
 
  US refined copper imports by major origin country 
 Desperately seeking Chilean copper
 
 US imports of refined copper jumped to more than 200,000 tons in April, the highest monthly arrival rate this decade.
 
 Imports totalled 455,000 tons in the first four months of the year,  more than double the tonnage imported over the same period of 2024.
 
 Chilean brands dominate the current import mix, accounting for 61%  and 75% of total inbound shipments in March and April respectively.
 
 This data is not surprising. The CME’s list of good-delivery brands  is relatively restricted but includes 19 from Chilean producers.
 
 LME warehouse stocks of Chilean-brand copper have been virtually  cleared out, falling to just 75 tons at the end of May from 25,150 tons  at the close of 2024.
 
 It’s also noticeable that while Chinese imports of refined metal were  flat on a year-over-year basis in the January-April period, those of  Chilean metal fell 44%.
 
 While Chile is evidently the preferred origin, the gravitational pull  of the US tariff threat is also attracting metal from a multitude of  countries that rarely ship to the US such as Australia, Belgium,  Germany, Spain and South Korea.
 
 If China’s trade figures are to be believed, even that country has  shipped close to 50,000 tons to the US market. This figure, though, more  likely denotes metal being stripped from bonded warehouses and  re-exported. Such “turnaround” metal is confusingly counted as an export  by the country’s customs department.
 
 
 
 
  Global exchange stocks of copper 
 LME stocks drained
 
 Some of these US arrivals are heading straight to CME-operated  warehouses. CME inventory is rising every day and has already more than  doubled this year to a current 175,954 tons.
 
 LME warehouses, by contrast, are being steadily emptied. More than  half the headline stocks of 114,475 tons have been cancelled in  preparation for physical load-out.
 
 
 
 The remaining 50,850 tons of live stocks are now at levels last seen in July 2023.
 
 What remains is largely Russian and Chinese brand copper, although  even this is on the move to fill gaps in the supply chain left by metal  heading to the US.
 
 LME off-warrant stocks have also been sliding, and at 30,188 tons they are now down by 20,300 tons since the start of the year.
 
 Unsurprisingly, LME time-spreads have been tightening. The benchmark  cash-to-three-month period is currently trading in a backwardation of  close to $90 per ton, which is the widest it’s been since August 2023.
 
 Even the Shanghai Futures Exchange forward curve is in backwardation,  with registered exchange inventory of 101,943 tons a long way off the  Lunar New Year peak of 268,337 tons.
 
 Game still on
 
 This redistribution of global inventory is ongoing and the imbalances  will become ever starker until the market gets closure on the tariff  threat.
 
 When that comes is anyone’s guess. But the Trump administration may want to move  sooner rather than later.
 
 The US will have accumulated so much copper during the Section 232  investigation process that it won’t need to import much metal for months  to come, reducing any US Treasury take from tariffs.
 
 The rest of the world will be hoping for a speedy decision too since  the flow of metal to the US is creating shortfall everywhere else.
 
 And what’s been customs-cleared into the US will need a massive financial incentive to leave again.
 
 (The opinions expressed are those of the author, Andy Home, a columnist for Reuters.)
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