MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 58,182
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
Yikes!
TWIGGS COUNTY, Ga.裕he pandemic delivered an unexpected boon to the lumber industry. Hunkered-down homeowners remodeled en masse and low mortgage rates drove demand for suburban housing. Lumber supplies tightened up and prices smashed records.
添ou must be making a lot of money, an Ace Hardware store manager told timber grower Joe Hopkins, whose family business has about 70,000 acres of slash pine near the Okefenokee Swamp.
的知 not making anything, Mr. Hopkins replied.
Timber growers across the U.S. South, where much of the nation痴 logs are harvested, have gained nothing from the run-up in prices for finished lumber. It is the region痴 saw mills, including many that have been bought up by Canadian firms, that are harvesting the profits.
Saw mills are running as close to capacity as pandemic precautions will allow and are unable to keep up with lumber demand. The problem for timber growers is that so many trees have been planted between the Carolinas and Texas that mills are paying the lowest prices in decades for logs.
The log-lumber divergence has been painful for thousands of Southerners who are counting on pine trees for income and as a way to hold on to family land. And it has been incredibly profitable for forest-products companies that have been buying mills in the South. Three Canadian firms Canfor Corp. CFPZF 0.27% , Interfor Corp. IFP 5.48% and West Fraser Timber Co. WFG 2.19% 幼ontrol about one-third of the South痴 lumber-making capacity. Since bottoming out last March, shares of the Canadian sawyers have risen more than 300%, compared with a 73% climb of the S&P 500 index.
The surplus of standing pine is such that growers, foresters and mill executives expect that even with mills sawing at capacity and new facilities coming online, it could be another decade, maybe two, before enough trees are felled to balance supply with demand.
Meanwhile, it痴 a buyer痴 market for logs down South, said Don Kayne, Canfor痴 chief executive. 展e try to be fair, he said.
Saw mills like the one run by Canfor in Moultrie, Ga., are paying the lowest prices for logs in years.
At their onset, coronavirus lockdowns seemed to derail the housing recovery. Lumber prices plunged in March 2020. Dealers liquidated inventories. Speculators dumped lumber futures and took short positions, betting prices would fall further. Mills sent workers home and curtailed production. By April, roughly 40% of North America痴 saw mill capacity was shut down.
Wood was in short supply when the remodeling bonanza began. Then the housing market picked up. Restaurants around the country had to build outdoor decks. Saw mills ramped up to capacity but couldn稚 catch up. By last summer, lumber was America痴 hottest commodity.
Lumber futures, a benchmark for an array of regional and species-specific prices, rose to a record in early August and kept climbing. Futures contracts traded up to $1,000 per thousand board feet, more than 50% above the previous high, set during the 2018 building season.
Home builders kept hammering through mild early-winter weather and depleted lumber dealers are stocking up for spring. Lumber futures have hit new all-time highs and are more than twice the typical winter price. Spot prices for southern yellow pine set records in January.
None of that has lifted the price of timber, which never recovered from the 2007 housing bust. Logs for softwood lumber averaged $22.50 a ton across the South last summer, the least since 1992, according to TimberMart-South, a pricing service affiliated with the University of Georgia痴 forestry school.
的f you put inflation on it, it痴 really sad, said Mr. Hopkins, the Georgia timber grower. Adjusted for inflation, prices for the logs used to make lumber are at their lowest in more than 50 years.
Mr. Hopkins raises timber on a 25-year rotation to support himself and make payments to more than a dozen shareholders in the 109-year-old family business. Because the pines take about a quarter-century to be suitable for lumber, just 4% of the land produces income each year, though taxes are owed on every acre. He said it is like managing a store where he can only sell merchandise from a few shelves.
展e used to be considered wealthy, he said. 的 don稚 see wealth. I see tax bills.
Mr. Hopkins harvests only a small portion of his timber each year, but has to pay taxes on every acre.
Thousands of Southerners fortunes depend on timber prices. In Georgia, timberland owned by families and individuals covers roughly one-third of the state.
Georgia, like much of the Southeast, was thick with longleaf pine when British colonists arrived. The crown claimed the big timbers for ship masts. Trees were bled for their gummy sap to make turpentine. After U.S. independence, the Georgia legislature encouraged clearing for farms by offering 500 acres to settlers who built saw mills.
Johnny Bembry痴 great-great-great-great-great grandfather got 200 acres near the Ocmulgee River for serving in the Revolutionary War. The family added land over the years and by the 1980s, when the veterinarian took over, there were 1,200 acres.
Cotton and peanuts were too demanding for a practicing vet. Pine trees need little tending. Plus, the federal government was paying landowners to plant trees. Forestation initiatives meant to stop erosion and lift crop prices, such as the Conservation Reserve Program, promised annual payments for every farm acre planted over with trees.
Mr. Bembry was among the droves of Southerners who signed up. He planted mostly slash, a little longleaf, and he added another 800 acres.
The payments and restrictions on logging expired around 2000, just in time for a housing boom that pushed timber prices to highs. Mr. Bembry didn稚 cut much of his timber, though.
的 liked looking at it, he said. ?*nd it was good for wildlife.
Adjusted for inflation, prices for the logs used to make lumber are at their lowest in more than 50 years.Pine logs are loaded for transport in Charlton County, Ga.
Home prices crashed in 2007. Lumber and timber prices, too. The number of saw mills in the South had already been declining due to consolidation. The collapse in home construction hastened closures of small and less efficient mills. Today the region has about 250, down from more than 400 in 2000, according to TimberMart-South.
West Fraser, the continent痴 largest lumber producer, and Canfor had already begun buying Southern mills in the years leading up to the crash. Back home in Canada, their prospects were dimming.
Log supply, which is meted out by Canada痴 provincial governments, is threatened by forest fires and wood-boring beetles, which together have laid waste to tens of millions of acres. The lumber companies also have paid billions of dollars in duties on boards sold across the U.S. border, part of a decadeslong trade dispute between the countries.
鼎anadian companies have always been on the losing end, said Eric Miller, president of the Rideau Potomac Strategy Group, a Washington, D.C.-based consulting firm. 鉄o the logical solution was for them to jump the tariff wall and invest in the U.S.
Sawing in the South allows Canadian firms to avoid tariffs and be closer to top customers in the Sun Belt痴 mushrooming housing markets. Labor is cheaper, too.
West Fraser bought mills from Texas to Florida, including 13 from International Paper Co. Canfor started with four in the Carolinas and moved west, adding mills in Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi and Arkansas.
Interfor executives circled Georgia and waited for the bottom. The Vancouver, British Columbia, company pounced at the depths of the housing bust in 2013. Within about two years, Interfor owned one mill each in Arkansas and South Carolina and seven in the pinelands south of Atlanta.
展hatever Interfor pays, that痴 what everybody else pays, said Billy Humphries, who advises on timber sales around Macon, Ga., and grows trees himself in Twiggs County. 典hey moved to the South in pretty tough times. They could be pretty ruthless.
Because of trees bred to become planks and the computerization of mills, well-managed timberland produces about 50% more wood than it did a generation ago, he said.
Mr. Hopkins raises timber on a 25-year rotation to support himself and make payments to more than a dozen shareholders in the 109-year-old family business.
When Interfor arrived, it studied the surrounding trees, noting ages and diameters, then calibrated mills to accommodate the most common-sized trunks, said Todd Mullis, a former Interfor executive who now works for Mr. Humphries痴 firm, Forest Resource Consultants Inc.
There aren稚 enough of the oldest, thickest trees to justify scaling mills for them. Many of the biggest trees went from fetching top dollar to being mashed into paper and cardboard for much less money. This was bad news for growers like Mr. Bembry, whose trees were left growing when the housing crash cut off demand for wood.
展hen you design a mill, you design it for the masses, Mr. Mullis said. 典he metal matches the wood.
Off the paved roads in Laurens County, Ga., Charles Hill痴 logging crew is loading trucks bound for Interfor and West Fraser mills. Sorting is done by a $500,000 John Deere swing machine. A computer is in the cab. A merchandiser on its arm senses the length and girth of trunks in its grasp, strips away limbs and slices off the tree top to fit the mill.
Interfor urges loggers to use such equipment. The company says it offers long-term supply deals and premiums for mechanically trimmed trunks to ease the financial burden of buying the machines.
典he most important decision you make is the first decision, which is where to cut the log, said Interfor Chief Executive Ian Fillinger. 典he human decision is taken out of it.
Sawing in the South allows Canadian firms like Canfor to avoid tariffs and be closer to top customers in the Sun Belt痴 mushrooming housing markets.
Boards pass through Canfor痴 mill in Moultrie.
At its mills, Interfor installed scanners that size up logs and position and slice them to maximize board feet and minimize waste. Yields climbed as much as 20% within two years, Mr. Mullis said. Current Interfor executives say the company has invested $300 million making the mills more efficient and productive. Two would have closed had Interfor not bought them, Mr. Mullis said.
典he industry in the Southern U.S. has been relatively backward, said Mark Wilde, who researches forest products for BMO Capital Markets. Many lumber mills were built by paper companies eager for the sawdust and scraps to pulp. 鼎anadians going down South is the best thing that痴 happened to Southern timber, he said.
This month, Interfor said it would pay a cardboard maker $59 million for a lumber mill near the port in Charleston, S.C. and would spend $25 million to boost output 60%.
The average price of timber sold to lumber mills rose to $24.03 a ton in last year痴 fourth quarter, according to TimberMart-South. But the increase is little consolation to pine growers. That is the same price as in 2012, when there were half as many homes being built.
Mr. Hopkins worries he might have to sell some of his family痴 70,000 acres near the Florida line, likely to hobby farmers妖octors and dentists from Jacksonville more interested in outdoor recreation than turning profit on timber.
Mr. Hopkins examines new pine growth on his land in Charlton County. He worries he might have to sell some of his family痴 70,000 acres.
Saw mills are running as close to capacity as pandemic precautions will allow and are unable to keep up with lumber demand. Stacks of wood at a Canfor mill.
的f I知 not sustainable, I can稚 keep that land, he said. 摘verything is going up except the price of timber.
Mr. Bembry, the veterinarian, is concerned about passing liability to heirs. He is studying the potential to sell his standing trees into the booming market for carbon offsets, which would pay him not to cut, and has been planting longleaf instead of faster-growing slash, aided by federal habitat restoration programs. When the subsidies expire, the foot-long needles can be raked, baled and sold to garden centers and landscapers.
典he salvation for me has been pine straw, he said. An acre can annually produce more than $300 worth.
Lee Rhodes wants to cut and restock for the next generation the 10,000 acres of loblolly pine he manages for his family. It wasn稚 cut with urgency when prices were high. Now they are so low, and the nearest mill so far, that loggers have turned down jobs on the property northeast of Macon. He wants to hire his son as successor but cannot afford it.
典he first thing I致e got to have with 10,000 acres is $55,000 for property taxes, he said. 的 do wake up some mornings wondering, why am I doing this??
It is not price gouging, it is supply and demand.
There are building booms and busts, and with COVID #19, and so many people at home working on their houses after watching Property Brothers on TLC, they have the inspiration and time to work on projects...
Price gouging too is when there is no alternatives, and you can easily buy rough cut cedar instead, or buy a sawmill from harbor freight and make your own lumber. There are plenty of options out there besides pressure treated lumber from a big box store, it is just not as convenient to get, and that is what you are paying for.
I've got more than 45 sheets in my barn, I'm rich and didn't even know it!!Over $30 per sheet of OSB... that's insane. I've got 10 lightly used sheets in my wood rack, sometimes I think I should go set up in the HD parking lot with a sign for $20 each, lol. But then I realize I might never be able to replace them for anything close to the old prices.