top of page

Lumber prices plunge 28% in three weeks as the housing market cools

Updated: Jun 11, 2022





By Carl Surran

Mar. 25, 2022 7:05 PM

View source version HERE


Wood prices have been volatile since the start of COVID-19



Lumber futures (LB1:COM) in Chicago sank below $1,000 per 1,000 board feet for a sixth straight decline, the longest slump since January and capping the biggest weekly loss since July.


Lumber futures have dropped 28% from their early March high of $1,357 per 1,000 board feet, as new home sales fell for the second straight month in February, missing forecasts.


"The price decline is tied to the DIY [do-it-yourself] sector slowing down due to high lumber prices, with people spending their money on other things like travel," Russ Taylor, president of Russ Taylor Global in Vancouver, told Bloomberg.
"Flooding in British Columbia disrupted lumber supplies and lifted prices in late 2021, and volumes that were stuck at mills in western Canada will move more quickly in better spring weather, resulting in more supplies in the market after months of tight inventories," Taylor said.


Click here to return to the homepage


View source version on seekingalpha.com HERE

https://seekingalpha-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/seekingalpha.com/amp/news/3817773-lumber-prices-plunge-28-in-three-weeks-as-housing-market-cools

bottom of page