
US lumber futures price climbed past $630 per thousand board feet on June 18, the
highest level since October, amid higher effective US import
costs on Canadian softwood and tighter expected supply.

Prices rose despite a small reduction in preliminary antidumping
and countervailing duties, because the combined tariff burden
remains high at about 35.9% including the existing Section 232
levy, set to take effect in August. The market is also being
driven by uncertainty ahead of final duty decisions, prompting
buyers to accelerate purchases and lift near-term demand.
At the same time, US domestic production is still constrained,
while housing-related consumption remains structurally large,
with softwood lumber and engineered wood products heavily used
in new construction. Each new home requires roughly 15,000 board
feet of lumber plus extensive engineered wood products, keeping
baseline consumption elevated even in a softer housing cycle.
Source: tradingeconomics.com