Who We Are US Division Canada Division Management Partners Careers Advertising Opportunities Press Releases Announcements Reed In The News
Construction Project Leads BIM SmartBuilding Index Construction Costs (RSMeans) Market Analytics Building Product Information Associated Construction Pubs Daily Commercial News Journal of Commerce B2B Marketing
SmartBIM Market Insights Connections RSMeanies SmartBuzz accessArchitecture Green Construction US Construction Canadian Construction
Building Products Construction Projects Building Codes Companies RSS Feeds eNewsletters Blogs Forums
Upload Plans & Specs
Construction Market analytics and forecasting community header

Notes from Alex Carrick

Insight and Analysis of Construction Industry Trends
Get RSS Feed

Account Access

Regional Markets

Alex Carrick avatar

Join the Discussion

There is a new fact of life that we have to deal with in the U.S. and Canada. That new reality is high world commodity prices. These are having a tremendous impact on costs and pricing, resource investment and currency values.

It is stating the obvious that a commodity’s price depends on demand and supply. However, this relationship is no longer as simple as it once seemed to be. There are a lot more players now and a lot more factors to take into account.

For example, on the demand side, the emergence of the BRIC nations – Brazil, Russia, India and China – has greatly expanded the size of the market. On the supply side, availability is a function of developed sites (or arable land, in the case of agriculture), planned capital spending, geopolitics in some unstable nations, the weather and avoiding bad luck (e.g., mine floods).

Furthermore, all of these factors are interlinked. Influences on upstream production find their way downstream, often quickly, but sometimes with a delayed effect. Keeping track of what is going on, across many countries and under a wide variety of circumstances, has become an extremely complicated and difficult process. I would liken it to playing some futuristic version of the game of chess in three dimensions. (Even Bobby Fischer would have been challenged.)

Occasionally, in my Blog going forward, I will set out “snippets” of information with respect to commodities that I have picked up in my latest readings. I hope that you will find these interesting and informative.

Alex Carrick

Member Comments 

» View all comments (0 total comments)
Post Your Own Comments 
» Not a member? Register now to become one. Otherwise, login to post your comments on this article.

Read Other Recent Alex Carrick Posts

   Community Login | Register

Search SmartBuilding Index

Advanced Search


What's Hot

Take a Demo!


Recent News

E Newsletter

Do You Know?

World-class customer support is based in our Norcross, Georgia headquarters.

Learn more!


Resource Center

© 2008 Reed Construction Data Inc. All rights reserved.