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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. It operates through the solid wood products segment. The Company’s product categories include Dimension Lumber, Specialty Lumber and Engineered Wood Products. Its products include Spruce-Pine-Fir, Douglas Fir-Larch, Hem-Fir, Southern Yellow Pine, Western Red Cedar, Douglas Fir-Larch, and P3-Joist. Its sawmills provide a diverse range of sustainable products to supply North American markets with a complete offering of framing materials. Its Western Red Cedar products include Elite Decking, Elite Fascia & Boards, Elite V-Joint Paneling, Elite Fineline Paneling, Elite Channel/Lap Siding, Elite Bevel Siding and Elite Shadow Gap Siding. It has an annual lumber production capacity of approximately 5.0 billion board feet and offers a diverse line of lumber products to customers around the world.


TSX:IFP - Post by User

Post by retiredcfon Mar 14, 2023 9:57am
181 Views
Post# 35337115

RBC Notes

RBC Notes

March 14, 2023

Forest Products
North American production was cold in December

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

North American softwood lumber production was down 15.8% m/m and 12.9% y/y in December, reflecting curtailments — According to the WWPA, U.S. production decreased 9.7% m/m in December, driven by a 9.1% m/m decrease in the U.S. South (-7.4% y/y), a 10.8% m/m decrease in the U.S. West (-15.0% y/y), and a 9.7% m/m decrease in other regions (-10.5% y/y). In Canada, production was down 25.6% m/m, due to a 22.0% m/m decrease East of the Rockies (-11.3% y/y) and a 32.8% m/m decrease in British Columbia (-28.6% y/y). In 2022, North American lumber production was down 3.1% y/y, or ~1.9 bbf, with production up 1.0% in the U.S. (+5.9% in the South, -6.0% in the West, +1.0% in other regions) and down 9.5% in Canada (-14.6% in BC, -6.2% East of the Rockies).

Operating rates dropped in both the U.S. and Canada — The U.S. operating rate was 74% in December, down 8 percentage points from November and down 7 percentage points y/y. The operating rate in the U.S. South was down 8 percentage points m/m to 77% (down 8 percentage points y/y), while the U.S. West operating rate was also down 8 percentage points m/m to 69% (down 8 percentage points y/y). The Canadian operating rate decreased 16 percentage points m/m to 56% in December (down 10 percentage points y/y), with the BC operating rate down 17 percentage points m/m to 41% (down 14 percentage points y/y), and the East of the Rockies operating rate down 15 percentage points m/m to 67% (down 7 percentage points y/y).

North American softwood lumber consumption fell by less than production — December saw a 9.4% y/ y decrease in U.S. softwood lumber consumption (381 mmfbm), while Canadian consumption decreased 2.8% y/y (15 mmfbm), leaving overall North American consumption down by 8.6% y/y (396 mmfbm). U.S. consumption was down 7.9% m/m, which directionally aligns with the softer trend in housing starts on both a seasonal basis and a seasonally-adjusted basis (please click here for our latest housing starts update). New housing typically comprises ~35% of U.S. lumber market demand.

U.S. softwood lumber imports decreased 8.2% m/m — U.S. imports of Canadian lumber in December were down 12.8% m/m and 15.1% y/y. Imports from British Columbia were down 12.8% m/m (-17.5% y/y) and imports from East of the Rockies were down 12.9% m/m (-13.5% y/y). Non-Canadian imports were up 9.7% m/m, primarily driven by a 9.4% m/m (~20 mmfbm) increase from Europe. U.S. lumber imports decreased 2.7% y/y in 2022, but imports from Europe of ~2.1 bbf were up 25.6% y/y and were equivalent to 4.0% of U.S. consumption (up from 3.2% in 2021).

U.S. log exports increased m/m but remained much lower y/y — U.S. softwood log exports were up 3.5% m/m in December. A 13.0% m/m decrease in exports to Japan and a 9.9% m/m decrease in exports to Canada were offset by an 8.4% m/m increase in exports to China and an 84.6% m/m increase in exports to other countries (i.e., excluding China, Japan, and Canada). U.S. log exports were down 24.0% y/y, driven by decreased y/y exports to China, Japan, Canada, and other countries (-26.2%, -29.0%, -27.9%, and -2.8%, respectively).

Lumber pricing update — According to Random Lengths, the Framing Lumber Composite was $407 as of March 9, up $34 (+9.1%) from the start of Q123, but down 69.5% from $1,334 at the same time last year. Our current commodity deck calls for an average Framing Lumber Composite price of $455 in 2023, versus an average of $412 year-to-date.


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