By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mississippi's timber industry may break its string
of record years as preliminary figures show a slight
decrease in value as higher prices couldn't completely
offset reduced harvests. The
state's timber industry has a 1998 projected value of $1.31
billion, down about $3 million from 1997. This fraction of 1
percent decrease still put it above the 1996 harvest
value. Dr. Bob
Daniels, forestry specialist with the Mississippi State
University Extension Service, said 1998 started unusually
with all-time high prices for pine saw timber in January and
February. Prices trended down from that initial
peak. "People
have been looking at the January peak and saying markets are
really down," Daniels said. "But when you look at the prices
for the whole year, we do have a lower volume of harvest by
about 4 percent, but the reason our value didn't suffer too
badly is because average prices have still been
good." Pine
pulpwood took the biggest hit both from slumping prices and
lower demand. These prices fell about 7.5 percent compared
to 1997. Pine saw logs price dropped considerably from early
in the year, but the year's average price is still about 5
percent higher than 1997's average prices. "We had
such a dry year and soft lumber market in 1998 that the
lower standing prices of the summer persisted through
September and October," Daniels said. "Additionally, all our
forest products markets were impacted by the economic
slowdown in Asia, some more than others." Pine
lumber demand was lowered especially by financial troubles
in Japan, a major importer of Pacific northwest and Canadian
softwood lumber. This lumber left on the domestic market
caused a national oversupply, which depressed prices most of
the year. "Even
though we've had the best housing market in the United
States in a decade, there's been lots of lumber available
and it's been an opportunity for lumber users, and not as
much for lumber producers and landowners," Daniels
said. Hardwood
saw logs had a good year, increasing almost 14 percent
overall in price, primarily on the strength of oak prices. A
lower volume was harvested, but the high prices overshadowed
this. Hardwood pulpwood prices increased about 2.5 percent
from 1997 levels. "The
Asian market is having a direct affect on us through the
pulpwood markets because a lot of wood fiber, especially
hardwood chips, have been going to Japan for the last eight
years or so," Daniels said. "Japan's recession is affecting
demand." David
Barge, president of Barge Forest Products Co., in Macon,
said timber owners have faired well in 1998, but finished
product prices suffered a 25 to 30 percent reduction in
1998. "I
attributed that to the acceptability of substitute products
and the share they've taken of the lumber market," Barge
said. These substitute products include plastic, steel and
engineered products made of wood. Adding
to the price reduction is increased timber production and
manufacturing worldwide. The best worldwide export market
currently is the United States, Barge said. The Asian crisis
has compounded the problem, and countries such as Brazil,
Chile and Scandinavian nations have a better exchange rate
in Asia and the United States than does U.S.
exporters. "I think
that even after the Asian economy corrects itself, these
other countries have established a foothold in the market,
and the U.S. producers are not going to be able to regain
the market share they had prior to the crisis," Barge
said. Total
softwood lumber exports from the United States are down 31
percent in 1998. Further declines are expected, Daniels
said, but domestic demand saw an all-time high in 1998.
Softwood lumber demand is expected to be about 3 percent
less in 1999. "The
problem is there is too much softwood lumber available,"
Daniels said. "Abundant supplies combined with declining
softwood lumber exports caused these prices to fall about 20
percent in 1998. Competition to sell lumber in the 1999
market should remain fierce." Heat and
drought in the summer actually made logging easy, allowing a
plentiful log supply all through summer and into October
which generally lowered prices and made mill buyers choosy.
The drought did hurt newly planted pine plantations, killing
a reported 20 to 30 percent of those planted in Mississippi
in the spring. Other Southern states suffered plantation
failures of 60 to 70 percent from the drought, Daniels
said. "This
has made pine seedling demand high as winter planting
starts," Daniels said. Released:
Dec. 21, 1998
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Timber Holds
Firmly As State's No. 2 Crop
Contact: Dr. Bob Daniels, (601) 325-3151
Visit: DAFVM
|| USDA
Search our Site ||
Need more information about this subject?
Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:12
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an98/981221bd.htm
Mississippi State University
is an equal opportunity institution.
Recommendations on this web site do not endorse
any commercial products or trade names.