
The latest box shipment data from Bloomberg, citing a report by the Fibre Box Association, shows some of the weakest volumes in years, reflecting waning consumer sentiment and potentially signaling a subdued holiday shopping season. These shipments were at their lowest levels since the third quarter of 2015.
Bloomberg Intelligence noted that box orders remained flat or below normal in October, while consumer sentiment hit a five-month low and manufacturing activity contracted for an eighth straight month.
The economic picture is cloudy: US manufacturing surveys were mixed in October, while Goldman analysts warned the other day about waning consumer sentiment.
"We're not getting a lot of lift, obviously, from the economy," Packaging Corp of America President Thomas Hassfurther warned last month, adding, "And these starts and stops that we've seen consistently go on throughout the year relative to tariffs and a bunch of other things certainly are impacting the business."
Here are dismal earnings from top box makers companies point to a slowing economy:
- Smurfit Westrock posted an 8.7% YoY decline in Q3 North American box volumes, sending shares to their lowest since mid-2024.
- Packaging Corp. of America shares also slid, and International Paper cut its sales outlook for both 2025 and 2027, triggering a nearly 13% stock plunge.
- International Paper now expects US box shipments to fall 1-1.5% in 2025, reversing earlier forecasts for growth, citing soft consumer sentiment, trade uncertainty, and a sluggish housing market. CEO Andy Silvernail said targets were "obviously" adjusted downward absent a "major pickup" in US and European volumes
Meanwhile.
Just a mixed picture.





Reader Comments
S O M E B O D Y begins to realize we are in not a temporary depression or crisis but a race to the bottom, and is afraid of being strung up by the starving, desparate and furious masses. We are not there yet, but one can see this waypoint already ...
Passing the IOU to the tax payers.
It's amazing, they can create digital money, but they (the banks) won't erase the debt.
The more I think about it, the more unreal it becomes.
Much more alarming are other trends. Besides of the continuing rise of PM prices, real estate is going down for a few months now. After at least two decades of steady rise. Very gloomy atmoshere here in Europe, especially in a high-price metropol area where I live ...