Global Sawlog Prices Rose 1% in Q4

Seattle, WA, April 17, 2018-In the quarter four 2017, the Global Sawlog Price Index (GSPI) rose 1% from the previous quarter to reach just over $76/m3.

This was the fourth consecutive quarter-over-quarter rise, with the GSPI being up 9.8% in one year.

Sawlog prices have gone up universally in U.S. dollar terms in 2017, with the biggest growth occurring in Eastern Europe, the Nordic countries and in Western North America, while the price movements have been more modest in the U.S. South, Latin America and Oceania, according to the Wood Resource Quarterly (WRQ).

Sawlog prices in the Western U.S. have seen a spectacular increase in less than two years. A combination of restricted log flows due to wildfires, low sawlog inventories, and strong domestic lumber markets resulted in a substantial jump in sawlog prices in the western states in the quarter four 2017. This came at a time when prices had already been slowly trending upward for over a year. In the quarter four 2017, average prices for Douglas-fir and hemlock sawlogs were about 27% higher than in early 2016, making the current price levels the highest recorded since the WRQ started tracking sawlog prices in 1995.

With a few exceptions, sawlog prices in Europe were lower in the quarter four 2017, which resulted in a 1.2% decline quarter-over-quarter of the European Sawlog Price Index (ESPI). This came after the index reached a two-year peak in the quarter three 2017. By far the biggest price increase in 2017, in Euro-terms, was in Eastern Europe, where demand for sawlogs increased as lumber production rose. In addition, log supplies around the Baltic Sea region were tight because of unfavorable weather for logging and transportation, adding to upward price pressure in the second half of 2017.