Header: Header: Header:

It Could Be Worse, Really

Article by Rich Donnell, Editor-in-Chief, Timber Processing June 2024

The results of this year’s U.S. Sawmill Operations and Capital Expenditure Survey have us longing for the old days, though the old days were only a few years ago, when lumber prices were setting records and the homebuilding and remodeling markets were going gangbusters.

Perhaps the negative thing about surveys in general is that when it comes to reporting the results, as we do throughout this issue, some generalization has to come with it. That is, the survey may reveal a significant percentage of lumbermen who are feeling less optimistic these days, and perhaps downright pessimistic, but that doesn’t mean there isn’t a percentage who are more upbeat.

Results of the softwood lumbermen and hardwood lumbermen are broken out into two separate stories. But in this space I’ve always liked to combine the results to provide a snapshot look at the entire U.S. lumber industry.

As usual, considerably more softwood lumbermen weighed in, but in total the number of mills represented in the results by softwood and hardwood lumbermen is around 190. These mills vary drastically in annual production, which of course is the real world.

The survey was 24 questions long, but the one multiple-choice question that it hangs its hat on each year concerns how lumbermen forecast their “lumber business situation” for the remainder of this year and into next year, as in, this case, 2024-2025.

Only 1% forecasted it as “excellent,” while 7% said “very poor.” What about the in-between? Well, 39% said “fair.” That leaves 24% who forecasted “good,” and 29% who forecasted “poor.”

Looking at the bright side—why not?—that means a quarter of the lumbermen expect at least a good business performance in the near future. Don’t let the fact that three years ago 92% forecasted at least a good business situation, and in fact of that number it was 46% who said good and 46% who said excellent.

In other words, the survey this year shows a whopping 67% of the lumbermen have fallen out of the good or excellent forecast in three years.

But at the same time—looking at the bright side again—it’s not like lumbermen have screeched to a halt when it comes to capital expenditure. For the remainder of 2024 and 2025, 26% of them have committed at least $1 million toward a mill project. And 15% of those have allocated at least $5 million. Certainly not as a robust as in recent years, but still significant.

I always keep at my side the September 2009 issue of Timber Processing, which was during the Great Recession. It was a 24-page issue with seven pages of advertisement and one of those was a mill liquidation ad. It was the thinnest issue in the magazine’s 48-year history. In our 2008 sawmill survey that April, 70% of the lumbermen said it was the worst business environment they had ever seen.

I doubt that 70% of the lumbermen responding to the current survey would say likewise about the present business environment (though the recent demise of several mills would probably have those ex-managers in agreement).

I’m not sure if comparing a current situation to an absolute worst case situation is recommended in the field of psycho-analysis, but if it helps, have at it.

Latest News

Failed Yukon Sawmill Investors Hopefully Await Court Ruling

A group of 120 shareholders who invested in a failed Watson Lake sawmill 13 years ago are hopeful they'll be paid back soon by Ottawa if a federal court of appeals upholds their award. The sawmill went bankrupt and ran out of wood in 2000, costing 150 jobs. The...

Is There An Oppurtunity Here?

Story by Rich Donnell, Editor-in-Chief In case you’ve forgotten, the U.S. Forest Service does still exist? Many in our industry have forgotten about this agency, perhaps even chosen to forget it, ever since our industry became barely a blip on the Forest Service...

Canfor Announces Permanent Closure Of Rustad and Tackama Mills

Canfor Announces Permanent Closure Of Rustad and Tackama MillsAfter a lengthy indefinite shutdown that followed the collapse of the United States residential housing market in 2008, Canfor Corporation has decided to close its historic Rustad Sawmill in Prince George,...

Lewiston Mill Sold To Idaho Forest Group

Lewiston Mill Sold To Idaho Forest GroupClearwater Paper Corp. is selling its Lewiston, Idaho sawmill to Idaho Forest Group of Coeur d'Alene, Idaho. The $30 million transaction includes the sale of Clearwater Paper's sawmill, planer mill, dry kilns, and related assets...

2011 West Coast Log, Lumber Exports Surpass 2010 Totals

Log and lumber exports from Washington, Oregon, northern California, and Alaska in the first three quarters of 2011 have surpassed the total exports of 2010 according to the U.S. Forest Service’s Pacific Northwest Research Station. “The increasing shipments to China...

Find Us On Social

Newsletter

The monthly Timber Processing Industry Newsletter reaches over 4,000 mill owners and supervisors.

 

Subscribe/Renew

Timber Processing is delivered 10 times per year to subscribers who represent sawmill ownership, management and supervisory personnel and corporate executives. Subscriptions are FREE to qualified individuals.

Advertise

Complete the online form so we can direct you to the appropriate Sales Representative.