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How the copper price has moved across key timeframes. Change is calculated from the opening price of each period to the current price.
Copper is one of the most widely used industrial metals in the world. Often called 'Doctor Copper' because its price tends to predict turning points in the global economy, copper serves as a barometer of economic health due to its presence in virtually every sector — from construction and electronics to renewable energy and electric vehicles.
Copper has been used by humans for over 10,000 years, making it one of the first metals ever worked. The Copper Age (Chalcolithic) preceded the Bronze Age, during which copper was alloyed with tin to create bronze. Ancient civilizations in Mesopotamia, Egypt, and the Indus Valley relied heavily on copper for tools, weapons, and currency. The Roman Empire sourced much of its copper from Cyprus — the island from which the metal derives its name (Latin: cuprum). Modern copper trading began on the London Metal Exchange (LME) in 1877, and the metal remains one of the most actively traded commodities globally.
Copper's excellent electrical and thermal conductivity make it indispensable in modern industry. About 65% of copper goes into electrical applications: wiring, motors, transformers, and circuit boards. Construction accounts for roughly 25%, used in plumbing, roofing, and cladding. The energy transition is rapidly boosting demand — electric vehicles use 3-4x more copper than conventional cars, and a single offshore wind turbine requires approximately 8 tonnes of copper. Other uses include telecommunications, antimicrobial surfaces in healthcare, and industrial machinery.
Global copper mine production exceeds 22 million tonnes annually. Chile is by far the largest producer (~25% of world output), followed by Peru, the Democratic Republic of Congo, China, and the United States. The largest copper mines include Escondida (Chile), Grasberg (Indonesia), and Collahuasi (Chile). Copper is also extensively recycled — roughly 30% of global copper consumption comes from recycled sources, making it one of the most recycled metals.
Copper prices are primarily set on the London Metal Exchange (LME) and COMEX (CME Group). Key factors include: global economic growth (especially Chinese manufacturing and construction, which consumes ~55% of world copper), mine supply disruptions (strikes, weather, permitting delays), energy costs (smelting is energy-intensive), inventory levels at LME warehouses, the US dollar (copper is dollar-denominated), and increasingly, the pace of the energy transition and EV adoption. Speculative positioning in futures markets also influences short-term price swings.
Investors can gain copper exposure through futures contracts on the LME or COMEX, copper ETFs (such as the United States Copper Index Fund), shares in copper mining companies (Freeport-McMoRan, Southern Copper, BHP), or physical copper. Copper futures are quoted in USD per pound on COMEX and USD per tonne on the LME. Due to storage costs, most retail investors prefer ETFs or mining equities over physical metal.
The chart above shows the copper price per tonne in US dollars. Use the timeframe buttons below the chart to switch between periods.
Intraday indicative prices are updated every 5 minutes during market hours.
Metal markets trade Monday–Friday. During weekends and public holidays the chart displays the most recent available closing price.
Copper earned this nickname because its price movements historically correlate with global economic health. Since copper is used in so many industries, rising demand (and prices) often signals economic expansion, while falling prices can indicate a slowdown.
A battery electric vehicle uses approximately 53-83 kg of copper, compared to roughly 23 kg in a conventional internal combustion engine car. This includes copper in the motor, battery, wiring, and charging infrastructure.
The LME copper contract (Grade A) is the global benchmark for copper pricing. It trades in lots of 25 tonnes and is quoted in USD per tonne. The LME sets the official daily closing price used as a reference in physical copper contracts worldwide.
Copper is widely regarded as a strategic commodity due to the energy transition. Growing demand from EVs, solar panels, wind turbines, and grid infrastructure is expected to outpace supply growth for years. However, copper prices are cyclical and sensitive to economic downturns, particularly in China.
Common supply disruptions include labor strikes at major mines (especially in Chile and Peru), adverse weather events, declining ore grades at aging mines, permitting delays for new projects, and political instability in producing countries.
The prices displayed are for informational purposes only. Use of this page is at your own risk. We accept no liability for errors.
| Timeframe | High | Low | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Month | 13,050 usd | 11,350 usd | +11.37% |
| 3 Months | 13,050 usd | 10,570 usd | +20.30% |
| 1 Year | 13,050 usd | 8,241 usd | +32.27% |
| 5 Years | 13,050 usd | 6,406 usd | +56.23% |
| 10 Years | 13,050 usd | 4,063 usd | +181.86% |