Tungsten Eclipses Gold in Seven-Fold Price Rally As Gulf Conflict Perdures
Tungsten is one of the #CriticalMinerals used in weaponry, and China is the world’s largest producer. Under export control in retaliation to Trump’s tariffs and with the war in the Persian Gulf perduring, the price of Tungsten has soared so much that it has eclipsed gold and copper.
According to the United States Geological Survey, China accounts for nearly 80% of the global tungsten mined in 2024. Backed by the state, Chinese Tungsten has flooded the market, pushing other producers out of the market.
The international market price of #Tungsten is based on ammonium paratungstate (APT) powder, and its price skyrocketed to RMB 2,250 per kg at the start of March 2026, compared to just RMB 315 per kg in March 2025, representing nearly a seven-fold increase.

Tungsten (W74) is one of the hardest metals and is widely to manufacture armor-piercing bullets, bunker-busting bombs or missiles. During military conflicts, huge amounts are consumed and have to be replenished.
The US has itself stopped mining Tungsten domestically for at least a decade. Given the new situation, the Trump Administration is rushing to restore tungsten operations within the US. Similarly, the EU is currently focusing its efforts on the recycling of Tungsten from waste.
Given Tungsten’s small market size and its cyclical nature, it might prove difficult to get private companies interested. The global tungsten market totals about USD 16 billion, representing only 5% of the copper opportunity. The rise in demand and price is highly contingent upon the eruption and sustainment of armed conflicts, which is somewhat hard to predict. Without state intervention, it will be hard to guarantee a strategic supply of tungsten.
