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U.S. lumber demand up in Q3

Higher lumber demand in the U.S. increased both U.S. lumber production and importation in the third quarter of 2012, but sawlog prices have remained unchanged since 2011, reports the Wood Resource Quarterly.

November 27, 2012  By Hakan Ekstrom


Housing starts in the U.S. jumped to 894,000 units in October. This was 19 percent higher than in August, and as much as 42 percent more than in October of last year. So far this year, housing starts have been at their highest levels since 2008, and market analysts expect the next 12 months to be bumpy but still upward-trending.

The improved housing market has been good news for many sawmills in North America, with lumber production higher throughout the continent, with an increase of 7.3 % in August year-over-year in the US, and of 6.3 % in Canada over the same time period.

The U.S. Northwest and the province of Quebec have been the regions with the biggest increases in production the past year. The sawmills in Quebec have really ramped up production, with output in August being 30 percent higher than at the same time last year. It is also interesting to note that for the first time in two years, sawmills in the Western U.S. produced as much lumber as the mills in the US South in August. Typically production levels are higher in the U.S. South than in the West.

The improved U.S. housing market has resulted not only in higher domestic lumber production, but also in an increase in the importation of lumber. Softwood lumber imports in the third quarter of 2012 were up nine percent from the previous quarter, which was the highest quarterly import volume since the second quarter of 2010.

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The higher lumber demand has pushed lumber prices substantially upward this fall. In November, Southern pine prices were 48 percent higher year-over-year, while Western hemlock prices were up 32 percent over the same period, according to Random Lengths.

As reported in the Wood Resource Quarterly, sawlog prices have not yet gone up as a result of the improved lumber market. Pine log prices across the U.S. South have been practically unchanged for almost two years, and sawlog prices in the U.S. Northwest have been surprisingly flat for more than a year. However, in early November, there was increased upward pressure on sawlogs prices in the West from Chinese log buyers that were more active in the market than earlier in the year.

Global pulpwood and timber market reporting is included in the 52-page quarterly publication Wood Resource Quarterly (WRQ). The report, established in 198 and with subscribers in over 25 countries, tracks sawlog, pulpwood, lumber and pellet prices, trade and market developments in most key regions around the world. Visit: www.woodprices.com.


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