More Of The Same For 2019
It’s taken almost a decade for housing starts to slowly return to 1.3 million units—the threshold when housing begins to have an impact on lumber prices—but the housing sector appears to have plateaued.
“It took almost 10 years to slowly but steadily get to a decent level of housing starts, raising expectations for all of us in the tree-growing business, and now we have stalled right at the point where demand might have created some upward pressure on prices paid for trees,” writes Marshall Thomas, president of F&W Forestry Services, Inc., in the winter issue of his company’s newsletter, F&W Forestry Report.
In late 2016, housing starts reached 1.3 million, but since then they have bounced between 1.1 and 1.3 million units, with little to no trend.
“I’m afraid there is nothing in the outlook to suggest that 2019 will be much different from the last two years,” Thomas writes. “But most forecasts since 2008 have been wrong, including mine, so maybe I’ll be wrong this time.”
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