Madison’s Reporter: Many Lumber Prices Flat as Ongoing Delivery Delays Resolved
After dropping quite a bit in recent weeks, many softwood lumber prices levelled off in mid-June as a modicum of supply-demand balance seemed to have been reached. Over the past two years as the lumber market reacted to big changes in external conditions, there was never-before-seen high price levels and volatility. It looks like the remarkable highs and attendant corrections down might be getting worked out, as these swings are less extreme each time. This is the usual time of year for construction framing dimension softwood lumber prices to be dropping, as most large-volume builders have received the wood they need for housing projects planned. At the moment the delivery delays which have plagued the forest industry for more than six months seem to be working out; customers are receiving their orders in a more normal time frame.
Check back with the Madison’s website www.madisonsreport.com often for the latest softwood lumber prices and market updates.
Staying flat from the previous week, for the week ending June 10, 2022 the price of benchmark softwood lumber item Western Spruce-Pine-Fir 2×4 #2&Btr KD (RL) was again US$660 mfbm, said weekly forest products industry price guide newsletter Madison’s Lumber Reporter. This is down by -$285, or -30% from one month ago when it was $945.
Persistently negative lumber futures led some players to re-quote upcoming projects to avoid heavy losses. Stud producers described limited sales activity, even after significant price drops in recent weeks.
“Sales of panels were particularly rough as market malaise and price drops persisted across all commodity groups.” – Madison’s Lumber Reporter
Producers of Western S-P-F lumber and studs in the United States searched fixedly for firm offers. Buyers were largely idle, though an undercurrent of demand was evident among those suppliers who were more open to counteroffers. Sawmill order files were no further than two weeks out, as producers showed more prompt material with each passing day.
Western S-P-F lumber prices continued to vary significantly between print levels, producer asking prices, and actual sales numbers. The overall sentiment was the same as the previous week: profoundly uncertain. Print levels were flat or down a few points while all manner of below-print counteroffers and other deals were happening behind the scenes. Primary and secondary suppliers crossed their fingers in hopes of the market putting in a bottom sooner than later, while buyers held off as best they could in order to cash in at the nadir. Meanwhile, most deliveries were finally occurring within quoted shipping timelines as subpar sales volumes over the past month or so has eased up that ongoing snarl in transportation.
“Stud Western S-P-F prices corrected again as mills tried to find a trading range that would coax buyers off the fence. Smatterings of business were reported, but most customers continued to sit on the sidelines in hopes of scooping the bottom when it hits. Secondary suppliers remained busier than mills as buyers grabbed the odd fill-in LTL or mixed truckload from the distribution network. Order files marched ever-closer, with prompt offerings more common by the day. ” – Madison’s Lumber Reporter
Madison’s Benchmark Top-Six Softwood Lumber and Panel Prices: Monthly Averages
When compared to the same week last year, when it was US$1,275 mfbm, for the week ending June 10, 2022 price of Western Spruce-Pine-Fir 2×4 was down by -$615, or -48%. Compared to two years’ ago when it was $378, this week’s price is up by +$282, or +75%.
About Madison’s Lumber Reporter
Established in 1952, Madison’s Lumber Prices is your premiere source for North American softwood lumber news, prices, industry insight, and industry contacts. The weekly Madison’s Lumber Reporter publishes current Canadian and US construction framing dimension lumber and panel wholesaler pricing information 50 weeks a year and access to historical pricing as well.
Contact:
Keta Kosman – Publisher, Madison’s Lumber Reporter – (604) 319-2266 –www.madisonsreport.com
Source: Madison’s Lumber Reporter