Mercuria Metals Boss Says ‘This Is the Big One’ for Copper Bulls

Kostas Bintas, the high-profile head of metals at Mercuria Energy Group Ltd., has renewed his bullish prediction for copper prices as he warned that a rush to ship metal to the US risks draining the rest of the world’s inventories.

Traders have been ramping up shipments to the US in recent weeks to once again capitalize on a big premium for metal on New York’s Comex exchange, fueled by ongoing uncertainty about the potential for future tariffs.

The latest trades extend a tumultuous year for copper: US prices soared early in the year after President Donald Trump first threatened tariffs, kicking off a massive flow of metal from the rest of the world. Trump ultimately exempted refined copper from levies, but said he’d revisit the decision in the second half of 2026. Since then, global prices have surged to record levels as a series of mine disruptions tightened supply.

Bintas says copper will soon start ratcheting higher still, as the revival of the lucrative US arbitrage trade fuels shortages elsewhere.

“This is the big one,” he said in an interview at the end of a key industry conference in Shanghai. “If the world keeps going like this we will be left without copper cathodes in the rest of the world.”

Bintas became one of the best known names in the copper market during his years building Trafigura Group’s copper book into the world’s largest. He joined energy trader Mercuria last year, and has led an aggressive expansion into metals markets — Mercuria was one of the biggest players in the arbitrage trade earlier this year, while a huge position that it built in aluminum has rocked the LME aluminum market and forced the exchange to adjust its rules.

He declined to offer a price forecast, but said that global benchmark copper prices on the London Metal Exchange, already trading near all-time highs, could only go higher.

“Just looking at the facts, mathematically… What is going to happen if all of this continues? There’s only one answer: there will be tightness and a higher price,” he said.

US copper imports have slowed since Trump’s July tariff decision, but Mercuria anticipates that they will ramp up in the coming months, with imports in the first quarter of 2026 at a similar pace to the record second quarter of 2025, when they exceeded 500,000 tons.

surging US prices