Why Were Lumber Prices So High, But Now Declining?

Before the baby food shortages, skyrocketing gas prices, and low inventories of new and used vehicles — the issue of the day was high lumber prices.

No doubt, lumber prices have been at record levels the past couple years, but, for lumber buyers, some relief is on the way. Like many commodity industries, lumber markets experienced the “perfect” (or worse?) storm of demand/supply and its certainly not a question of “gouging”. How did we get here and what can we expect in the future?

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‘Made in Mississippi’ Has Strong Future in Value-Added AG Exports, Trade Group Says

The appetite for Mississippi’s packaged agricultural products overseas is expected to grow along with packaged produce from other Southern states over the next decade.

This presents potentially lucrative opportunities for Mississippi’s small specialty farmers and packagers, says Jerry Hingle, executive director of the Southern United States Trade Association, a non-profit agricultural export trade development organization comprised of the Departments of Agriculture of Mississippi and 14 other states and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. Various geographic regions of the United States have their own agricultural trade export association.

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Five Reason Georgia Food Exports Are Skyrocketing

by Trevor Williams | December 20, 2012

When Ron Kirk addressed the Metro Atlanta Chamber this month, there likely wasn’t a farmer in the room. Yet one of the brightest statements woven into the U.S. trade rep’s speech on national problems like the fiscal cliff and K-12 education was his assessment of agricultural exports.

Even with a historic drought, America is on pace for its best year ever for selling food, timber, meat and plants overseas. U.S. ag exports hit $137 billion in 2011 and were up 2 percent through October compared to the same period last year, even as export growth slowed overall.

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Dock and Load – Southern Farmer

By BRAD HAIRE

U.S. farm exports are experiencing a golden age, but Jerry Hingle says that open door of global opportunity for U.S. agriculture could narrow or even close if not properly maintained. Many countries are looking to squeeze through it ahead of the U.S., if given the chance. “Right now we are blowing and going strong overseas. … And we need to keep riding that wave,” says Hingle, executive director of the Southern United States Trade Association who is based in New Orleans.

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