Header: Header: Header:

Maybe The Markets Will Surprise Us Once Again

Article by Rich Donnell, Editor-in-Chief, Timber Processing June 2023

If you didn’t notice it on the cover, your eyes are getting as bad as mine, but yes this is our annual U.S. Sawmill Operations and Capital Expenditure survey report. It doesn’t pretend to be as precise as a presidential election poll, and there’s no figuring for margin of error here, but it is a solid indicator of what U.S. lumbermen are feeling— where in the mill they’ve been spending their money, where they plan to spend it, and how much. Sprinkle in a few comments on markets and mill operations, as many lumbermen did, and one starts to get a clear picture—at this point in time.

That last clarifier—at this point in time—is key. The survey is e-mailed in April, and the reports on the results as shown in this issue were written in the second week of May. Now of course, as you read this, we are into the month of June.

Why do I point this out? Let’s go back to April 2020, when this survey was conducted. The coronavirus was coming on, and there was tremendous uncertainty. As a result, when U.S. softwood and hardwood lumbermen were asked what their forecast was for their lumber business for 2020-2021, only 27% said excellent (2%) or good (25%), while 39% said fair and 34% said poor or very poor.

After a brief standstill, the lumber markets took off and lumber prices went so high that saying they broke all previous records doesn’t do justice to just how high they went. In other words, the majority of lumbermen got it wrong, but who knew?

So it was no surprise that in the following year’s survey, conducted in April 2021, a whopping 92% of lumbermen expected their lumber business for 2021- 2022 to be excellent (46%) or good (46%), while only 5% said fair and only 3% said poor or very poor. This time they got it right.

The enthusiasm waned a tad the following year, as did markets, but still 81% of the lumbermen said 2022-2023 would be excellent (16%) or good (65%), while 15% forecasted fair and 4% said poor or very poor. Again, right on.

So here we are now, and given the expected softening of the markets following the last two years (it couldn’t last forever), along with higher interest rates and inflation, 35% of softwood and hardwood lumbermen combined expected their lumber business to be excellent (1%) or good (34%) in 2023-2024, while 55% said fair and 10% said poor or very poor. The outlook isn’t as muddled as it was as the pandemic came on in spring 2020, but it’s fairly comparable. And really the most striking comparison is with the 2021-2022 outlook, when 92% said excellent or good, of which 46% said excellent, while today it’s only 35% excellent or good for 2023-2024, of which only 1% said excellent.

It will be interesting come next April 2024 to see what transpired in the lumber business the remainder of this year and into next year. As recent history has taught us, who knows?

As usual we present separate reports on the softwood and hardwood survey results in this issue, with the softwood report beginning on page 16 and the hardwood report starting on page 42. To those who completed the survey, thanks for taking the time.

Don’t receive Timber Processing magazine? Subscribe today!

Latest News

WorkSafeBC Revises Rules, Cracks Down On Sawmills

B.C. forest companies face new, prescriptive regulations that define how much sawdust can settle in a wood-products plant before it is considered a hazard, almost two years after the deaths of four workers in sawmill explosions. The new regime has been rolled out in...

Canfor Invests $15 Million In Alberta Sawmill

Grande Prairie’s Canfor sawmill recently received a capital investment grant from the Canfor Corporation in the amount of $15 million to perform some necessary upgrades to the facility. The planned work includes upgrades in controls and technology as well as equipment...

Saskatchewan’s Carrier Forest Products Sawmill To Close

Saskatchewan’s Carrier Forest Products Sawmill To CloseA Saskatchewan sawmill is shutting down and its remaining 12 workers have been given layoff notices. Operations at Carrier Forest Products in the Prince Albert area are to cease entirely later this month. Shane...

Canfor Making $8 Million Capital Investment In B.C Sawmill

Canfor will be adding another power-generating turbine to its biomass-fired energy system as part of $8 million in capital upgrades to its Fort St. John sawmill announced Tuesday. Canfor Corporation President and CEO Don Kayne says the investment will improve...

2013 Softwood Lumber Global Trade Highest In Five Years

Global trade of both logs and softwood lumber was higher in 2013 than it was in 2012 with both products reaching their highest levels traded since before the global financial crises in 2008, as reported in the Wood Resource Quarterly (WRQ). The total value that was...

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.