All Posts August 15, 2022

ArkansasBusiness.com
by Jan Cottingham
Monday, Aug. 15, 2022,

What’s behind this surge in announced sawmill updates and expansions? Historically high lumber prices.

“It’s the crazy market that we’ve had for the last two or three years now, the roller-coaster prices that have generated unprecedented profits in the sawmill business,” said Steve Anthony, president of Anthony Timberlands Inc. of Bearden (Ouachita County).

“There’s been some 4 billion board feet of announcements over the U.S. South in the past year,” said Matthew Pelkki, the George Clippert Chair of Forestry at the College of Forestry, Agriculture & Natural Resources at the University of Arkansas at Monticello. “There’s a lot of activity going on, not just in Arkansas. Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama have all seen some substantial mill announcements. That’s largely looking at capturing those lumber prices.

“Southern pine sawmills have been doing very, very well in the last two-and-a-half years,” he said.

But Pelkki also noted that timber companies had envisioned some of these projects for several years and that the easing of the COVID-19 pandemic was allowing them to proceed.

The pandemic certainly fueled the lumber price roller-coaster. Lockdowns in March 2020 and expectations of a recession caused sawmills to curtail production. But then a boom in home renovation super-charged lumber demand. Added to that was a surge in housing demand, with the homebuilding industry the first to come out of the pandemic-caused recession.

On Feb. 20, 2020, before the effects of the pandemic began to be felt in the United States in March, the price of lumber stood at $463 per thousand board feet. It dropped to $296.50 on March 30, 2020, then shot up to $1,495 on May 12, 2021, plunged to $470.90 by Aug. 16, 2021, only to soar again, to $1,233.70 on Jan. 19 of this year.

The price has since softened, with lumber trading at $552.80 per thousand board feet on Aug. 9, a price that nevertheless remains above the $333.20-$426.20 range of the pre-pandemic year of 2019.

As Pelkki noted of lumber prices, “Even in their big drops, they’re still well above what we would consider normal, which was 2019 prices.”

PotlatchDeltic Corp. of Spokane, Washington, which announced this spring that it was spending $131 million to expand and modernize its sawmill in Waldo (Columbia County), told Arkansas Business last week that the project “reflects our belief that the long-term backdrop for housing fundamentals remains favorable for new residential construction and repair and remodel. This is supported by a housing shortage, millennials in their prime homebuying years and aging U.S. housing stock.”

Big Investments

Following are some of the announced sawmill upgrades, though this list may not be comprehensive:

PotlatchDeltic on June 6 announced its $131 million investment in Waldo, increasing the mill’s annual capacity from 190 million board feet of dimensional lumber to about 275 million board feet. “The investment will also reduce the mill’s operating costs significantly,” a company news release said.

PotlatchDeltic, which owns three sawmills and nearly 950,000 acres of timberlands in Arkansas, said the expansion was expected to create 55 indirect jobs. The investment in the Waldo mill includes upgrades to the log yard and planer, a new saw line and a new continuous dry kiln. PotlatchDeltic said the existing mill would continue to operate during the project and completion was expected by the end of 2024.

Canfor Corp. of Vancouver, Canada, on April 21 announced it would invest about $130 million to upgrade and expand its sawmill and planer facility in Urbana (Union County). The company said the investment will take advantage of the abundant supply of high-quality fiber to manufacture high-value products, increase annual production at the facility by 115 million board feet, and reduce the facility’s cost structure. “The investment aligns with Canfor’s growth and diversification strategy to keep pace with growing customer demand,” the company said.

Resolute Forest Products Inc. of Montreal on Dec. 6 announced it was investing more than $20 million in its sawmill in El Dorado and $8.4 million in its mill in Glenwood (Pike County). Resolute bought the sawmills, as well as one in Cross City, Florida, in 2020 from Conifex Timber Inc. The total purchase price was $163 million, plus working capital, which Resolute estimated at $13 million.

Resolute said the El Dorado mill would produce up to 180 million board feet of lumber and specialty products. The investment in Glenwood will allow the facility to expand its production capacity up to 185 million board feet of lumber and decking.

Anthony Timberlands said May 19, 2021, it was investing $10 million in improvements to its pine sawmill in Malvern during the next six to eight months.

And last week, Anthony said his company was investing another $10 million in its facility in Bearden.

Domtar Corp. of Fort Mill, South Carolina, announced July 15, 2021, that it would spend $10 million to restart a paper machine at its mill in Ashdown to meet increasing demand.

And on May 24, Astara Capital Partners LLC of New York announced that it had formed Camden Timbers LLC to buy and restart the Victory Lumber LLC sawmill in Camden. The news release gave no cost estimate for the investment.

Signs of Softening

In June, housing starts fell to a nine-month low, to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.559 million units, and rising mortgage rates appear to be cooling what had been a red-hot housing market. If the United States slips into a recession, plans announced by forest products companies could change.

“I can guarantee you that all of these companies are going to be watching what the Fed does,” Pelkki said. “What happens if we do dip into a recession in 2023? That could put a hold on all of this.”

But despite what may be softening demand, Pelkki, for one, believes in the forest products companies’ “earnestness” in announcing their upgrades and expansions. “These companies want to expand,” he said. “But the reality is that if we run into a recession and the housing market dips, that’s going to put continued downward pressure on the lumber market.

“On the other hand, … we’ve been underbuilding new homes for the past decade,” Pelkki said. “That housing demand is not going to go away. While they talk about housing sales dropping, cooling off, we’re still pretty red hot. A home stays on the market now still less than 60 days on average. And a normal market is considered six months.”

The recent softening of lumber prices will have no effect on the upgrade plans for Waldo, a PotlatchDeltic spokesman said. “We used a conservative seven-year average lumber price in our financial analysis, and we expect the project will result in incremental EBITDDA [earnings before income tax, depreciation, depletion and amortization] of $25 million to $30 million per year and a 22% IRR [internal rate of return] in our base case,” the spokesman said.

Anthony, of Anthony Timberlands, said that, generally, the forest products industry has been profitable since 2013, coming off the Great Recession. “But 2019 was the second-worst year in our company’s history,” he said. “Going into 2020, when the pandemic began, it looked awful — coming off the second-worst year in our history, and now we’ve got a pandemic.

“Of course, people laid off shifts in anticipation of a depression, and the exact opposite occurred. The last two or three years have been the two or three most profitable in our history,” Anthony said.

“And people are spending $200 million to build new sawmills and spending $120 million to upgrade existing sawmills, and it just seems crazy unless you think the most recent history is more the norm of what we can expect going forward.”

Pelkki said, “Inflation or not, I think we’re going to continue to see good lumber prices.”