Softwood Lumber Supply-Demand Balance Restored, Prices Mostly Flat: Feb 2019


Prices of a few standard construction framing North American softwood lumber commodities did bounce up last week, but overall most of the market stayed flat. New orders were encouraging if not guarded, as end-users did their best to survive on existing inventories rather than ordering beyond immediate needs in fear of prices dropping again. This is usually the time of year for growing inventories; when US home builders stock up on supplies needed for spring construction projects.
One problem for operators might be the delay in data releases due to the recent US government furlough. As that US home building and sales data comes out, end-users will have a better idea of US real estate market conditions for this summerโ€™s new home sales season.
Like the previous week, wholesaler prices for benchmark lumber (net FOB sawmill) commodity Western Spruce-Pine-Fir KD 2×4 #2&Btr remained flat at US$422 mfbm, an $0 or +0% increase from $422 the week before.
However Inland Hem-Fir and Southern Yellow Pine prices bounced upward by notable margins, making understanding of current market conditions a little bit more murky.

Overall sales volumes of WSPF lumber receded slightly from the previous weekโ€™s levels thanks to persistent winter weather in most US consuming regions. Western sawmills maintained early- to mid-March order files as demand remained adequate compared to reduced production levels. โ€” Madisonโ€™s Lumber Reporter

http:// www.madisonsreport.com

A reference in Madisonโ€™s commentary last week to lumber futures trading on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange prompted that organization to reach out by phone. Madisonโ€™s is assured there will be a clarification arriving from CME soon. We will, of course, update readers as soon as we are able.

SOURCE: Madison’s Lumber Reporter www.madisonsreport.com

As sales volumes dropped further this week, Canadian WSPF producers felt production and demand were coming into balance. Recent cold weather has slowed down consumption of framing lumber in North American markets, but sawmills have also curtailed their production to compensate for high log costs and sub-optimal market conditions. Lumber manufacturer order files on most items were into the week of March 18th , with nothing but โ€œminimal stockโ€ available any quicker. While #2&Btr R/L commodities were in supply-demand equilibrium, production volumes of lower grade WSPF dimension lumber were โ€œhard pressedโ€ to keep up with sustained demand.
This weekโ€™s price for the other large volume-traded softwood lumber commodity, Southern Yellow Pine, surged once again as they eclipsed year-over-year weekly prices for the first time in 2019. Forest2Marketโ€™s composite southern yellow pine lumber price for the week ending February 22 (week 8) was US$456 mfbm, a +5.3% increase from the previous weekโ€™s price of $433 and a 0.44% increase from the same week in 2018. Year-To-Date average price from Forest2Marketโ€™s Southern Yellow Pine index: US$402 mfbm.

Southern Yellow Pine Spikes … Again

SOURCE: Madison’s Lumber Reporter www.madisonsreport.com

From the point of view of secondary suppliers, the US Northeastern lumber market went further into โ€œhibernationโ€ last week, said Eastern stocking wholesalers. Dropping mercury knocked the wind out of sales, construction, and shipping activity โ€“ into and within the region. Any urgency among buyers or vendors was โ€œnonexistentโ€ this week.

Sawmills all over the Pacific Northwest ran four-day week schedules as it didnโ€™t make sense to go full bore while log prices remained sky high. Lumber manufacturer order files shortened from three to two weeks recently but put no real pressure on sawmills, since production volumes have correspondingly fallen off. โ€” Madisonโ€™s Lumber Reporter

www.madisonsreport.com

Current Softwood Lumber Prices Compared to Recent and Historical Highs: Feb 201

The below table is a comparison of June 2018 and February 2019 benchmark dimension softwood lumber 2×4 prices compared to historical highs of 2004/05:

SOURCE: Madison’s Lumber Reporter www.madisonsreport.com