Dubai Telegraph - Could copper tariff hurt US more than Chile?

EUR -
AED 4.202328
AFN 73.23303
ALL 93.849906
AMD 420.850564
ANG 2.048704
AOA 1049.875357
ARS 1704.389617
AUD 1.649659
AWG 2.062546
AZN 1.948742
BAM 1.953733
BBD 2.303074
BDT 140.991476
BGN 1.934823
BHD 0.431144
BIF 3401.231922
BMD 1.14427
BND 1.475646
BOB 7.918555
BRL 5.927533
BSD 1.143495
BTN 108.936815
BWP 15.422551
BYN 3.317705
BYR 22427.684133
BZD 2.299767
CAD 1.625069
CDF 2570.029602
CHF 0.919194
CLF 0.026813
CLP 1055.268365
CNY 7.768559
CNH 7.763743
COP 3843.441384
CRC 520.946669
CUC 1.14427
CUP 30.323144
CVE 110.148486
CZK 24.182768
DJF 203.62283
DKK 7.474747
DOP 67.738642
DZD 152.278237
EGP 56.214307
ERN 17.164044
ETB 183.36024
FJD 2.586564
FKP 0.856377
GBP 0.856755
GEL 3.015162
GGP 0.856377
GHS 12.990146
GIP 0.856377
GMD 82.960531
GNF 10028.392028
GTQ 8.726807
GYD 239.184901
HKD 8.974924
HNL 30.605759
HRK 7.5339
HTG 149.562447
HUF 353.403066
IDR 20568.360462
ILS 3.431264
IMP 0.856377
INR 108.96599
IQD 1497.922053
IRR 1574457.754537
ISK 143.994741
JEP 0.856377
JMD 181.01852
JOD 0.811281
JPY 184.590712
KES 147.988354
KGS 100.06374
KHR 4579.116221
KMF 493.180344
KPW 1029.843039
KRW 1753.133006
KWD 0.355021
KYD 0.952984
KZT 540.76271
LAK 25819.462689
LBP 102396.390863
LKR 383.003188
LRD 207.538653
LSL 18.547462
LTL 3.378731
LVL 0.692157
LYD 7.329247
MAD 10.693389
MDL 20.113548
MGA 4847.829629
MKD 61.631208
MMK 2401.830438
MNT 4098.209134
MOP 9.237148
MRU 45.635727
MUR 53.837734
MVR 17.690167
MWK 1982.885187
MXN 19.991729
MYR 4.658348
MZN 73.130287
NAD 18.547462
NGN 1566.104684
NIO 42.075676
NOK 11.247306
NPR 174.302148
NZD 2.0042
OMR 0.439973
PAB 1.14348
PEN 3.891001
PGK 5.023686
PHP 70.381755
PKR 317.910627
PLN 4.288373
PYG 6952.645534
QAR 4.180078
RON 5.230793
RSD 117.370031
RUB 87.993175
RWF 1674.014608
SAR 4.292268
SBD 9.221143
SCR 15.991064
SDG 687.132684
SEK 11.032269
SGD 1.477658
SHP 0.854313
SLE 27.863067
SLL 23994.765542
SOS 653.514428
SRD 43.0783
STD 23684.07042
STN 24.474218
SVC 10.005416
SYP 126.478519
SZL 18.544546
THB 37.947986
TJS 10.599795
TMT 4.016386
TND 3.37483
TOP 2.755127
TRY 53.554237
TTD 7.749768
TWD 36.554841
TZS 3003.705391
UAH 50.92713
UGX 4173.603425
USD 1.14427
UYU 45.991351
UZS 13698.5098
VES 731.077588
VND 30089.713366
VUV 137.562872
WST 3.179418
XAF 655.258146
XAG 0.01832
XAU 0.000274
XCD 3.092446
XCG 2.060829
XDR 0.815248
XOF 655.266726
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.249076
ZAR 18.563085
ZMK 10299.802608
ZMW 21.010592
ZWL 368.454344
  • CMSC

    0.0400

    21.99

    +0.18%

  • NGG

    2.6700

    82.85

    +3.22%

  • GSK

    2.3600

    53.66

    +4.4%

  • BTI

    1.2100

    61.77

    +1.96%

  • AZN

    11.2900

    195.15

    +5.79%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.15

    -0.14%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    75.93

    +0.59%

  • RIO

    1.0700

    94.42

    +1.13%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13

    +0.46%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    21.42

    +1.87%

  • BP

    1.2500

    37.4

    +3.34%

  • RELX

    0.5500

    31.93

    +1.72%

  • VOD

    0.1400

    13.15

    +1.06%

  • RBGPF

    2.5400

    68.15

    +3.73%

  • RYCEF

    0.5400

    19.68

    +2.74%

Could copper tariff hurt US more than Chile?
Could copper tariff hurt US more than Chile? / Photo: RODRIGO ARANGUA - AFP

Could copper tariff hurt US more than Chile?

Chile, the world's biggest copper producer, is hoping for a last-minute deal to stop the United States from imposing a 50-percent import tariff on the red metal.

Text size:

If not, the South American country should be able to easily find other buyers for a metal deemed critical for the artificial intelligence and green energy revolutions, analysts say.

Chile is the largest provider of copper to the United States, whose President Donald Trump announced a punishing levy on the metal starting Friday.

Government sources in Santiago told AFP delegations have been talking behind closed doors since Monday, seeking a Trump-pleasing deal that will in effect replace a free trade agreement in place since 2004.

- Impact on the US -

The United States imports about 45 percent of the copper it needs for industrial use, according to the US Geological Survey, a government agency. Of that, it gets 51 percent from Chile.

According to Trump himself, it is "the second most used material by the Department of Defense" -- used in semiconductors, planes, ships, ammunition, data centers and missile defense systems.

Trump "wants to revitalize a domestic industry that has faded and has been overtaken by China and has become reliant on foreign imports," Andy Cole, an analyst with the London-based Fastmarkets price-tracking agency, told AFP.

Raising the tariff on imported copper will increase US production costs, which may boost demand for domestically sourced copper.

But the United States does not have the capacity to increase its production overnight, and "in the long run the losers will be US consumers if they have the pay more for copper," said Cole.

Juan Carlos Guajardo, director of Chilean consulting firm Plusmining, said the United States would need to produce between 600,000 and 800,000 tons of copper per year for its domestic industry, and would not be able to reach that level for "at least 10 years."

- Impact on Chile -

Chile is responsible for nearly a quarter of global copper supply, which contributes 10 to 15 percent to its GDP.

Its Finance Minister Mario Marcel has warned of "medium-term" damage from a 50-percent tariff, but said the country could mitigate longer-term harms through "market diversification."

For Guajardo, this means Chile can "redirect its copper," particularly "to Southeast Asia and India" or even Europe.

China is by far the leading buyer of Chilean copper, accounting for 52 percent -- totaling $26 billion --in 2024, according to the South American country's central bank.

The United States occupied a distant second place with imports worth $5.8 billion from Chile, followed by Japan with $5.3 billion and South Korea with $2.8 billion.

According to Maurice Obstfeld, an economics professor at the University of California, Berkeley, "copper importers other than the US could gain" from the tariff hike.

- Exception? -

Chile says it has not been officially notified of the August 1 starting date for a copper tariff, and is still hoping to avoid it.

The country's foreign ministry has said "confidential" talks with US delegates would continue to the last minute.

According to Marcel, copper itself is not formally on the negotiating table, but will likely be included.

"For this type of raw material, exceptions have been made in other agreements," he told Radio Duna earlier this week.

After Trump's announcement on July 8, the price of copper soared to record levels in New York.

US buyers rushed to stockpile the red metal before August 1, paying prices sometimes as much as 30 percent higher than in London.

H.El-Qemzy--DT