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From Premium to Plunge: The Unraveling of History’s Most Profitable Copper Play

Quiver Editor

President Trump’s surprise 50% tariff on copper semi-finished products—paired with an exemption for refined metal—sent shockwaves through global markets, obliterating the lucrative CME-LME spread and triggering Comex copper’s largest intraday plunge on record. The White House’s last-minute proclamation annihilated months of fat profits for traders who had front-loaded U.S. warehouses ahead of levy day.

Comex front-month futures in New York collapsed over 22%, flipping from a 30% premium to a deep discount against London Metal Exchange benchmarks as LME prices dipped only modestly. “In a single session, the spread evaporated,” noted Daniel Ghali of TD Securities, capturing the scale of the unwind. With millions of tons of copper now stranded in U.S. depots, the once-profitable trade has become a cautionary tale of policy risk.

Market Overview:
  • Trump’s tariff twist upends copper arbitrage between Comex and LME
  • Commodity flows reverse as massive U.S. premiums vanish
  • Volatility spikes underline vulnerability to abrupt policy shifts
Key Points:
  • 50% duties hit semi-finished copper; refined metals remain untaxed
  • Comex futures tumbled >22%, while LME lost under 1%
  • Goldman Sachs sees fundamentals intact but arbitrage pressures easing
Looking Ahead:
  • Speculation mounts over U.S. re-exports as warehouse stocks swell
  • Comex-LME spreads likely to normalize once policy clarity returns
  • Supply-security exemptions hint at ongoing administration focus
Bull Case:
  • President Trump’s exemption for refined copper—while hitting semi-finished products—could ultimately secure domestic supply and support U.S. manufacturing, incentivizing longer-term investment in refinement capacity as companies adapt to the new trade regime.
  • With the premium on Comex futures wiped out, U.S. copper prices may normalize relative to global benchmarks, helping downstream buyers access material at more competitive rates and reducing distortions in industrial procurement.
  • Goldman Sachs and other analysts note that copper’s fundamental supply-demand balance remains intact. Short-term volatility may give way to a more stable environment once the market digests the policy change and arbitrage pressures subside.
  • For sophisticated traders and institutions, the recent dislocation presents new tactical opportunities: those with nimble positioning and robust risk management can profit by arbitraging price moves as spreads re-anchor between Comex and LME.
  • From a broader strategic standpoint, the tariff shock is a wake-up call reinforcing the importance of supply-chain flexibility and geodiversification, prompting firms to reassess storage, sourcing, and trade execution in light of policy risks.
  • If and when policy clarity and exemptions are fully detailed, investor confidence in U.S. copper logistics could rebound, paving the way for renewed investment as the volatility premium dissipates.
Bear Case:
  • The sudden imposition of a 50% tariff on semi-finished copper products and the carve-out for refined metal destroyed months of planned arbitrage trades, triggering over 22% declines in Comex prices and stranding millions of tons in U.S. warehouses—an acute market dislocation that could lead to lasting losses and reputational risk for affected stakeholders.
  • Abrupt policy pivots expose the entire copper and broader commodities complex to heightened volatility and policy risk, deterring long-term investment in U.S. base-metal processing, logistics, and infrastructure.
  • Arbitrage profits that once attracted liquidity, inventory, and efficient commodity flows have vanished; market participants may remain gun-shy about building positions due to uncertainty about future regulatory changes or unpredictable tariff timing.
  • The patchwork, phased approach—with delayed refined copper tariffs—unsettles trade partners and global suppliers, who may opt to redirect flows elsewhere or negotiate with alternative buyers, weakening the position of the U.S. as a key copper market.
  • Speculation about re-exports, mounting warehouse stocks, and mismatched price benchmarks could trigger further market inefficiency, raising the risk of forced liquidation sales or additional price shocks if inventory levels become unmanageable.
  • Even if fundamentals broadly stay unchanged, the policy-driven risk premium may linger, discouraging both physical investment and speculative participation—especially from overseas players wary of recurring, unpredictable U.S. interventions in key commodity markets.

The administration’s patchwork approach—delaying refined copper levies until 2027 at 15%, rising to 30% in 2028—reflects a bid to secure domestic supply amid limited U.S. smelting capacity. Industry veterans caution that abrupt policy pivots could deter long-term investment in critical base-metal infrastructure.

Despite the upheaval, analysts at Goldman Sachs argue that the tariff carve-outs leave copper’s demand-and-supply dynamics largely intact, forecasting Comex prices to track LME levels over the coming months. For now, traders and producers alike will be bracing for a period of tactical repositioning as the dust settles on one of the commodity world’s most spectacular policy-driven reversals.

About the Author

David Love is an editor at Quiver Quantitative, with a focus on global markets and breaking news. Prior to joining Quiver, David was the CEO of Winter Haven Capital.

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