Lumber is a critical infrastructure building block. While wood is a crucial industrial commodity like oil, copper, and other energy and metals, the lumber futures market is far less liquid than the other industrial raw materials. Low liquidity creates challenging trading conditions as bids to purchase often disappear during selloffs and offers to sell can disappear when the price rises. Illiquidity tends to lead to hyper price variance.
Over the past years, lumber prices have spiked to over $1,700 per 1,000 board feet in 2021 and under $355 in early 2023. The extreme price swings encourage traders and speculators to avoid the lumber futures arena like the plague. The Chicago Mercantile Exchange attempted to increase liquidity by abandoning the de-listed random-length lumber futures contract and replacing it with the current physical lumber contract. The new listing has a smaller contract size, broader specifications, and more delivery flexibility. However, the leading metrics determining liquidity, open interest, and volume have not improved. Therefore, lumber prices remain highly susceptible to wild price swings when trends develop.
Lumber prices have remained stable at around $500 per 1,000 board feet, and the market is now in the off-demand season as construction projects slow during winter. Meanwhile, action in other markets and other factors could lift wood demand over the coming months, igniting the illiquid market.
I would never trade a lumber futures contract as low liquidity dramatically increases risks. However, there are lumber-related products that offer liquidity and tend to move higher and lower with wood futures prices.
Lumber prices are steady in late 2024
Short-term interest rates are falling- Will long-term rates follow?
Mortgage rates are crucial for the path of least resistance of lumber prices
Levels to watch in the lumber futures arena
ETFs and stocks that tend to follow the lumber futures market
The monthly chart shows lumber futures’ penchant for extreme price variance and its recent price consolidation. Pent-up demand for new homes, and the potential for falling mortgage rates over the coming months could push lumber prices significantly higher. Lumber is a seasonal commodity that tends to reach annual highs during the spring construction season. Adding some lumber exposure to portfolios during winter on a scale-down basis could be optimal for 2025.
Thanks for reading, and stay tuned for the next edition of the Tradier Rundown!