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Lumber prices tumble as Chinese demand falls

softwoodLumber prices are down nearly 30% in the past 12 months as housing construction and remodeling in China have slowed due to the country’s tightening economy. Source: Wall Street

The value of Chinese imports in November totaled $US498 million, down 26% year over year and down from an all-time high of nearly $US900 million in April of 2014.

Log prices are also down about 30% from their April 2014 level and are now at their lowest level since early in 2009, according to the monthly Wood Resources International report.

Prices rose from a trough at the end of 2009 to a peak in early 2013 driven primarily by demand from China. Since that time, prices have been trending downward from a peak near $US400 per thousand board feet to just below $250.

The high end of the Chinese market is currently dominated by Swedish and Finnish logs, and that market grew from a 7% market share in November 2014 to a 9% share in November 2015.

The announced $US8.3 billion merger between Weyerhaeuser Co and Plum Creek Timber Co Inc which is expected to be completed in the first half of this year, will create a $US23 billion giant in the wood products business.

The combined company will own some 13 million acres of timberland, including Douglas fir and other varieties that remain in high demand both in China and

Japan.