The supply chain is so dysfunctional even lumber prices are back up 120%

When the lumber bubble popped this summer, economists and commodity traders alike pointed to its swift correction—falling from $1,515 per thousand board feet in May to $389 per thousand board feet in August—as an indication that other material shortages and supply chain woes would subside if simple economics was given time to work its magic. But that “transitory” narrative—something Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said this week he no longer stands by—is facing another challenge: Spiking lumber prices.

On Wednesday, the futures price for framing lumber hit $870 per thousand board feet. That’s up 124% since August. And it’ll only be a matter of time before this hike trickles down into the wholesale “cash” market (currently priced at $611 per thousand board feet) and then the retail price in the aisles of places like Lowe’s.

What’s going on? This current run—which has seen lumber prices rise 11 out of the past 13 weeks—started with the return of do-it-yourselfers into the market once prices came down this summer. At the same time, sawmills curtailed softwood lumber production in the face of a bad wildfire season in the U.S. Pacific Northwest and British Columbia. That combination of falling supply and rising demand pushed prices up 40% by late October. But the run on prices didn’t kick into high gear until a record rainfall hit British Columbia last month. The ensuing flooding and mudslides destroyed bridges and roads, causing mayhem in an already-stretched wood products supply chain.

“The disastrous flooding and washouts that took place in the southern part of British Columbia in mid-November has significantly altered market conditions and overall sentiment. Critical truck and rail routes have been impacted by the record flooding, and while some of the most severe disruptions appear to be resolved, bottlenecks with shipping and distribution will probably last several weeks,” Dustin Jalbert, a senior economist at Fastmarkets RISI who covers the lumber market, tells Fortune. “In response, we’ve seen a ramp up of buying as wholesalers and retailers look to secure supplies for fear of being caught short again for the spring 2022 building season.”

The situation was made worse, Jalbert says, by the U.S. Department of Commerce announcing last month that it finalized its plan to double the tariff on Canadian lumber shipped to the U.S. in 2022 (from 8.99% to 17.9%). In response, some lumber yards upped their order volume as a way to lock-in the price before the tariffs goes into effect.

The latest run raises the question: Do resurgent wood prices foretell that other goods (like gasoline or semiconductors) will also struggle to return to their pre-pandemic price even after they see an initial price correction? Lumber prices, which first started to spike in the summer of 2020, were after all the canary in the coal mine for existing shortages that continue to plague the economy. So maybe it’s again foreshadowing something?

It’s hard to say.

The dynamics driving this current lumber run, including flooding in British Columbia, are very different from the supply and demand issues that drove the spring lumber run. That said, the reason lumber prices were susceptible to this latest run is because of the lingering pandemic dynamics—elevated demand and worker shortages—that continue to bog down the overall supply chain.

Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics, tells Fortune that while the worst of the shortages will soon be in the rearview mirror, some shortages and supply chain issues could take until beyond 2022 to get resolved. As long as the supply chain remains stretched, goods will remain vulnerable to large price runs caused by unexpected events like hurricanes or refinery fires. In that way, lumber could once again be the canary in the coal mine.

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