Home>News & Insights>Publications>Chile’s copper boom levels off: a signal for the global economy?Chile’s copper boom levels off: a signal for the global economy? CEIC Publications Ian Lim 10.04.2026 1 min read Copper is a bellwether for the global economy given the metal’s fundamental uses in manufacturing. What is it telling us about the aftershocks of war in the Persian Gulf? Export figures from Chile, the world’s no. 1 copper producer, provide a weekly indicator. It suggests that a historic boom might be levelling off. We’ve charted year-on-year growth rates for various categories of Chilean copper shipments, which recently touched the highest since the post-pandemic snap-back era of 2021. This coincided with prices soaring to records, driven by the metal’s special importance to clean power and the AI boom. However’ Chile’s copper export growth rate has steadily retreated as the conflict persisted through March. (Copper prices faded in March, too — but only to December levels.) The flipside to the demand story is supply constraints; Chile’s state-owned mines are aging. As our second chart shows, however, the price boom means falling production hasn’t hurt Chile’s exports in value terms. We’ve added two more charts worth watching as the Iran war’s effects trickle down through the global economy. The number of ships visiting Chilean ports linked with copper exports peaked in January; while still historically at very high levels, weekly vessel traffic has been ticking downward. The Shanghai futures market for copper shows a changing trend since the war began. Prices for short-term delivery versus those for six months out have converged; in January, it was notably cheaper to take immediate delivery — perhaps reflecting the concerns about near-insatiable demand and constrained future supply that were sending copper prices to records at the time. Tags CopperLATAMRecent Posts Grab Enters Taiwan with USD 600mn foodpanda Acquisition EMIS 20.05.2026 Insights Grab Holdings has agreed to acquire Delivery Hero’s foodpanda delivery business in Taiwan for USD 600mn in cash, marking the Read More April 2026 | Top M&A Deals in ASEAN EMIS 20.05.2026 Insights Thailand’s CP Axtra has agreed to acquire 100% of Malaysia’s TFP Retail (The Food Purveyor) for MYR 1.7bn (USD 420.9mn) Read More Getting short with private credit EPFR 19.05.2026 Quants Corner In recent months, regulatory and market angst about the role of shadow banks – or Non-Bank Financial Intermediaries (NBFIs) – in global finance has centered around private credit and the systematic risks it poses. Read More Sorry, no articles match the current filters. Sorry, no articles match the current search query.