Tag: us housing

  • Building Materials Price Index, US: December 2016

    The price of softwood lumber rose by 2.3 per cent in December, while prices paid for ready-mix concrete, gypsum products, and OSB all fell, according to the latest Producer Price Index release by the Bureau of Labor Statistics January 13. The 2.3 per cent increase in the softwood lumber price index is the largest monthly…

  • US Construction Labour Shortage

    Also at the NAHB Design and Construction Week, was a lot of conversation about a looming and serious shortage in skilled construction labour. During a three-hour seminar Wednesday morning, builders shared tips for finding and training newcomers and maintaining ties with their trades when labour is hard to find. US Home Builders and Skilled-Labor Shortage:…

  • National Association of Home Builders: January 2017

    The annual International Builders’ Show was held by the National Association of Home Builders in Orlando, FL, this week. US Housing Market: 2017 Forecast At the annual International Builders’ Show was held by the National Association of Home Builders in Orlando, FL, this week, attendees were told almost 50,000 apartments are being built in North…

  • BC Dimension Cedar Producers Hike Prices in Anticipation of Softwood Lumber Duties

    Dimension cedar mills in Lower Mainland, British Columbia, pushed their prices up another ten per cent, with plans for further hikes designed to mitigate forthcoming retroactive duties on their US-bound shipments. At least one large producer was “working hard” at getting Western red cedar exempted from the ongoing and embittered US-Canada Softwood Lumber Dispute. In…

  • US Construction Outlook 2017: ConstructConnect

    In US residential construction, the multi-family homebuilding segment has returned to a level of starts on a par with before the Great Recession, said Alex Car- rick, Chief Economist for ConstructConnect (formerly Reed Construction Data), December 1. Single-family groundbreakings, while considerably better than they were in 2010, are still languishing below their previous ‘norm’. Many…