Talk Back
Post a CommentHousingZone Most Popular Stories
- A smaller home can still be beautiful
- Tapping an Overlooked Homebuying Market: Single Women
- 10 keys to a more streamlined homebuilding company
- Retool your sales process to meet tougher mortgage guidelines
- Presenting the 50+ Housing Awards of 2008
- The Land Dilemma: Is it Time to Buy or Sell?
- Here are the 100 Best New Products
- Minimalist Modern House Showcases Art and Architecture
- Modular and Green
- Wood vs. Engineered Lumber
Lock in lumber costs
Joe Stella
February 1, 2002
Professional Remodeler
Last August, after a complaint filed by U.S. lumber companies, the United States levied a 19.3% countervailing tariff on softwood lumber from certain Canadian provinces. That was followed by an additional anti-dumping tariff of 12.6% in October, making total duties charged to Canadian lumber exporters almost 32%. Though the tariffs are preliminary and the countervailing duty was lifted in December, the two countries have yet to come to an agreement.
“The tension has certainly been reflected in lumber prices,” NAHB economist Michael Carliner says. “Meanwhile, the effects trickle down from big lumber producers to remodelers.”
Volatile lumber prices require using extra care when job costing. Carliner recommends that remodelers lock in lumber costs with suppliers before providing customers with estimates.
© 2008, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.


Digg This