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Bullboard - Stock Discussion Forum Interfor Corp T.IFP

Alternate Symbol(s):  IFSPF

Interfor Corporation is a Canada-based forest products company. The Company and its subsidiaries produce wood products in Canada and the United States for sale to markets around the world. The Company operates through solid wood products segment. The Company offers its products across two categories, which include Dimension Lumber and Specialty Lumber. The Company's products include Interfor... see more

TSX:IFP - Post Discussion

Interfor Corp > RBC Notes
View:
Post by retiredcf on Jan 17, 2023 9:39am

RBC Notes

January 16, 2023

Forest Products
Lumber Stats: Production lagging 2021 levels

Event: The Western Wood Products Association (“WWPA”) released October 2022 softwood lumber stats.

North American softwood lumber production in October was up 0.6% m/m but down 4.8% y/y — According to the WWPA, North American lumber production year-to-date through October 2022 was up 1.8% in the US, and down 8.8% in Canada, while lumber production in October was down 1.7% y/y in the US and down 9.8% y/y in Canada. In October, US production increased 2.8% m/m, driven by a 2.9% m/m increase in the US West (-12.3% y/y), a 2.8% m/m increase in US South (+5.4% y/y), and a 2.9% m/m increase in US Other (-1.7% y/y). In Canada, production was down 3.1% m/m, due to a 2.3% m/m decrease East of the Rockies (-2.9% y/y) and a 4.5% m/m decrease in British Columbia (-20.7% y/y).

Operating rates: US up, Canada down m/m — The US operating rate increased m/m to 82% in October (up from 80% in September) but was down 5 percentage points y/y. The operating rate in the US South was up 3 percentage points m/m to 89% (down 1 percentage point y/y), and up 2 percentage points m/m in the US West to 73% (down 10 percentage points y/y). The Canadian operating rate decreased m/m to 70% in October (down 9 percentage points y/y), with the BC operating rate down 2 percentage points m/m to 57% (down 16 percentage points y/y), and the East of the Rockies also down 2 percentage points m/m to 79% (down 5 percentage points y/y).

North American softwood lumber consumption was down 0.8% y/y in October — October saw a 1.5% y/y decrease in US softwood lumber consumption (~65 mmfbm), while Canadian softwood lumber consumption increased 4.8% y/y (or ~25 mmfbm), leaving overall North American consumption down by ~40 mmfbm y/y. US consumption was up 1.6% m/m, despite housing starts decreasing by 4.2% m/ m from September to October (before seasonal adjustments; please click here for our latest housing starts update). New housing typically comprises ~35% of US lumber market demand.

US softwood lumber imports increased 3.9% m/m — US imports of Canadian lumber in October were up 1.4% m/m but down 6.9% y/y. Imports from British Columbia were down 7.1% m/m (-9.3% y/y), while imports from East of the Rockies were up 7.9% m/m (-5.3% y/y). Non-Canadian imports were up 17.6% m/m, primarily driven by a 28.6% m/m (38 mmfbm) increase from Europe.

US log exports increased m/m but remained much lower y/y — US softwood log exports were up 6.1% m/m in October. A 104.3% m/m increase in exports to China, a 1.5% m/m increase in exports to Canada, and a 62.3% m/m increase in exports to other countries (i.e., excluding Japan, China and Canada) were partially offset by a 52.0% m/m decrease in exports to Japan. US log exports were down 51.3% y/y, driven by decreased y/y exports to China, Japan and Canada, which were only slightly offset by increased y/y exports to other countries (-65.6%, -60.8%, -32.6%, and +5.2%, respectively).

Lumber pricing update: bouncing off the bottom? — According to Random Lengths, the Framing Lumber Composite increased to $377 as of January 12, posting its first weekly gain since late October and ending a 10-week slump (during which the composite fell $124), as markets gained momentum following the holidays.

We think 2023 could be a challenging year for wood products — Our outlook for 2023 (please click here) includes adjustments to our commodity deck that reflect a more bearish stance on wood products for the year ahead. We are hoping that a difficult 2023 will lead to a number of permanent capacity closures, similar to what we experienced in 2019, with most of the curtailments occurring in BC to balance demand with the declining timber supply.

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