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Copper traders are looking to Chinese buyers after Trump's tariffs

Global copper traders offer cargoes to Chinese customers as they try to unload metal that is no longer able reach the U.S. by President Donald Trump's deadline for a 50% tariff on copper.

Trump announced late Wednesday that he will impose a new tariff on August 1, to encourage domestic production, from semiconductors to ammo. He did not specify which copper products will be affected or whether any exceptions will be considered.

China is the largest copper consumer in the world. The number of overseas sellers' offers has increased since late June, and now is at its highest level for months, said a Chinese copper dealer who spoke under condition of anonymity.

A second China-based broker said that he had received a bid for a cargo of 1,500 metric tons from South America, due to be delivered in late July or early august by a buyer who was "eager to locate a home."

The increase in the offers to China shows how traders who spent months shipping cargoes to the United States to prepare for the tariff must now start to look for alternative destinations to ship their cargoes that cannot cross the border of the United States before the tariff takes effect.

Logistics sources say that only copper from Latin America, which is currently being loaded or is already on its way, is likely make the deadline. And even then, it will be very close.

Albert Mackenzie is a copper analyst with Benchmark Mineral Intelligence. He said that if Chilean material was being released to go to Europe, because the U.S. is receiving less, it would mean that everyone is benefiting. You might also see this in Asia.

According to a copper trader based in Singapore, the Yangshan Copper Premium, or bill of lading, a benchmark that measures what Chinese buyers are willing to pay over the LME price for copper outside China, dropped 5% on Thursday to $62, reflecting the current offers.

They added that major international trading houses offer thousands of tons originally intended for the U.S. to Chinese buyers for delivery between late July and early August.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most traded copper contract fell for the fifth consecutive day on Thursday. It dropped 0.4% to 78.600 yuan (10,952.87 dollars) per ton, after reaching its lowest level since June 23.

(source: Reuters)