menu-bgimg

What we can offer you

We provide detailed transactional data, cost benchmarks and in-depth analytics for participants in the wood raw materials supply chain.
  • Pricing Data
  • Benchmarks
  • Product Forecasting
  • Advisory Services
  • Analytics
Learn More

SilvaStat360 Platform

  • Price Benchmarks
  • The Beck Group’s Sawmill TQ
  • Timber Supply Analysis 
  • Global Economic Data

Explore Forest2Market's Interactive Business Intelligence Platform

Learn More

Industries

From biomass suppliers in the Baltics to pulp producers in Brazil and TIMOs in the United States, Forest2Market provides products and services for suppliers, producers and other stakeholders in the global forest products industry.

Learn More
x
 
Blog

Mississippi Lumber Prices Low; Mill Closures Likely

October 05, 2007
Author: Suz-Anne Kinney

Lumber markets in southern Mississippi will continue to suffer until the residential construction industry begins to recover toward the end of 2008, a forest products industry expert said Monday.

Mills continue to scale back production due to an oversupplied housing market, said Scott Twillmann, senior analyst for industry market information provider Forest2Market. The crippled housing industry will keep timber prices below historical norms for at least a year.

“The downturn has become so severe, we expect to see mills with high production costs begin to shut down for extended periods, and some in the U.S. South will close permanently,” said Twillmann.

But commercial construction has not suffered as severely as residential construction, and plywood markets remain healthy compared to lumber markets, which is helping to keep timber prices out of the gutter in some areas of the southern U.S. Since lumber and plywood mills compete for the same raw material, the demand for plywood has kept stumpage – the price of standing timber – from falling even lower.

Another trend affecting the forest products industry in southern Mississippi, as well as the rest of the U.S. South, is the strength of the Canadian dollar, Twillmann said.

According to Twillmann, the Canadian dollar has appreciated around 16% against the American dollar this year. The high cost of production combined with resource issues in Canada has made the South a very attractive place for investment by foreign forest products companies. Foreign companies are looking to the region as an area with plentiful resources where wood products can be produced at a lower cost and sold abroad for higher profits.

More than 25,000 people are employed in Mississippi’s forest products industry with an annual payroll of almost $1.2 billion. Almost 62 percent of the state’s total land area is timberland.

Charlotte, N.C.-based Forest2Market has developed sophisticated analytical tools to accurately forecast timber prices throughout the South.

Links:

  • Timber Price Forecast

Suz-Anne Kinney: +1 980 233 4021 or suz-anne.kinney@forest2market.com
Back to Blog

You May Also be Interested In