The U.S. isn’t discovering copper — it’s stockpiling it.
Quietly, American warehouses have turned into a modern-day metal fortress, with 590,000 short tons of copper sitting in COMEX-approved storage — the highest level in more than 30 years.
This isn’t a mining miracle. It’s a trade-war chess move.
Copper inventories have exploded nearly 300% in just 12 months, now exceeding the combined stocks of the LME and Shanghai exchanges, according to CME data and Goldman Sachs.
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The reason is simple: traders are front-running potential U.S. tariffs of 15%–25% on refined copper by rushing metal across the border today to avoid taxes tomorrow. The result is a local glut in America — even as the rest of the world tightens.
This pile looks big, but it’s a mirage in a structurally tight market.
Goldman warns that once tariff uncertainty clears (likely mid-2026), much of this metal could flow back out, creating a short-term price dip.
In other words, the fortress could quickly become a fire sale.
Chamath Palihapitiya calls copper the top trade of 2026, arguing that AI alone could demand 50,000 tons per data center, while mine supply takes 20-plus years to scale.
To him, today’s inventory is “pennies” next to a projected 130% jump in data-center power demand by 2030.
Tariffs, he says, could turn copper into a national-security asset — and prices “absolutely parabolic.”
Traders tracking this theme are increasingly using copper and copper-miner ETFs — such as the United States Copper Index Fund (NYSE:CPER), the iPath Series B Bloomberg Copper Subindex ETN (JJC) and the Global X Copper Miners ETF (NYSE:COPX) — as a liquid way to express the bet without owning physical metal.
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Short term: U.S. has a glut created by fear of tariffs.
Long term: World faces a famine driven by AI and electrification.
If you trade copper, the fortress is a warning.
If you invest like Chamath, it’s just a speed bump on the road to a structural shortage.

