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| (Photo
courtesy of Georgia Pacific) |
Contractors and
homeowners searching for plywood to protect windows and buildings
in the path of Isabel last week were hit by sky-high prices,
as the hurricane became the last in a sequence of converging
factors pushing demand beyond existing supply.
Spot market prices of plywood have
more than doubled since mid-May. For example, one thousand
sq ft of 1Ú2-in. southern pine cost $545 on Sept. 12 compared
to a springtime price of $253, according to Crow Forest Products
Market Report, a Portland, Ore.-based publication that tracks
mill prices for wood products. Crow also reports that other
types of panel, including oriented strand board (OSB), are
experiencing similar price increases.
The main culprit for the current
supply-demand imbalance is the red-hot housing market. Residential
construction accounts for roughly half of all demand for structural
wood panels. The resulting surge in demand for plywood has
both U.S. and Canadian mills running at nearly full capacity.
During July and August, plywood producers were operating at
a capacity utilization rate of 97%, according to the Engineered
Wood Association, Tacoma, Wash. However, the roots of the
shortage run deeper than the record number of housing starts.
Going into the summer construction
season, "we had low inventory to start with because we
had cut production," says Melodie Ruse, spokesperson
for Atlanta-based Georgia-Pacific. Other companies, in an
effort to bring supply in line with demand, had taken similar
measures. Some even closed some mills after years of over-supply
and depressed prices.
"Over the last 20 years, the
entire building products industry has gone through a number
of cyclical periods. We had finally reached a point where
supply was equal to demand," says Frank Mendizabal, spokesperson
for Weyerhaeuser Company, Federal Way, Wash. And then the
perfect storm hit.
The historical over-supply had
encouraged builders to fall into a pattern of just-in-time
buying. This year, a wet spring delayed the construction season
and "everyone came in and bought at one time, depleting
the already low inventories even further," says Crows
publisher, Ken Tennefoss.
At the same time, weather across
the country continued to restrict equipment access to forests,
reducing the supply of raw materials. The wet spring turned
into a wet summer in the South and Southeast. In the West,
an atypically dry summer resulted in widespread forest fires,
putting yet another kink in the supply chain.
Some analysts believe that the
straw that broke the camels back was an unexpected order
by the U.S. military of 20 million sq ft of plywood to support
its troops in Iraq and to restock supplies that were drawn
down by the war effort. "They did not buy a tremendous
amount when you look at the total industry output, but combined
with other factors it caused prices to go up," says Mendizabal.
PIPE
Water Projects Help Prices
Rise
By Tim Grogan with Janice Dixon
The water supply
market is still one of constructions bright spots
with work levels through the first seven months of the
year running 6% ahead of the same period in 2002, according
to the U.S Dept. of Commerce. Strong demand and rising
input costs have pushed prices of ductile iron and reinforced
concrete pipe steadily higher over the last six months
(see p. 30). Prices for 8-in.-dia ductile iron pipe
increased 5.2% in the third quarter after jumping 7.1%
during the previous quarter, according to ENRs
20-city average price. RCP prices have increased 4.2%
in the last six months.
High-density polyethylene
(HDPE) pipe is being specified more frequently and its
petroleum base makes prices volatile, says Thomas Olesczuk,
vice president of Tully Construction Co., New York City.
He says suppliers have warned that HDPE prices could
go up as much as 20% in the coming year.
PVC water pipe price peaked
earlier, starting the year 13% above 2002s level.
But in the third quarter, prices for 8-in.-dia PVC water
pipe fell 4%, leaving prices 3.9% higher than a year
ago.
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However, many economists doubt
that the military purchase could so severely impact prices
in an industry with the capacity to crank out 19.3 billion
sq ft of plywood a year. "I think that [military procurement]
is being used somewhat as an excuse," says Michael Carlinger,
an economist with Washington, D.C.-based National Association
of Home Builders.
"The military purchases have
be-come somewhat of an urban legend," agrees Paul Jannke,
vice president of wood products for Resource Information Systems
Inc., a Bedford, Mass.-based forecasting firm. "The real
culprit is definitely record demand and inadequate inventories."
Just as plywood prices reached
record levels in late summer, Hurricane Isabel came churning
along the Atlantic Coast. Given the already low supply, some
towns reportedly did not have any plywood left to sell. Even
before the storm, back orders for December delivery were already
being taken by some suppliers, says Tennefoss.
As winter approaches, prices
are likely to begin declining, assuming the market is not
hit with any new surprises. "If we have a mild winter
and builders can work, you could see prices stay at these
levels for a while," says Tennefoss.
Click below for more articles from Third
Quarterly Cost Report>>
Summary:
Cheap Money Heating Up Costs
Indexes: Tight
Markets Squeeze Margins
Equipment: Fighting
Rising Insurance Rates
Labor: Unemployment
Fails to Dent Wage Hikes
Insurane: Pressure
Grows on Workers' Comp
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