| e9ukzruzxi | Date: Miercuri, 2013-12-25, 5:30 AM | Message # 1 |
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General
Group: Utilizatori
Messages: 2770
Status: Offline
| Updated Softwood Lumber Market Outlook For ones US
"The worst is actually over to the Western softwood lumber market as improving demand in fact is anticipated to breathe some life back up in a passed industry. (Source: International WOOD Markets Group) While the coming winter will in all probability <a href=http://www.fjellrev.no/adi.html>adidas campus</a> become a tough one, rising housing starts, lean distribution channel inventories while some lingering government stimulus programs should kickstart lumber demand including prices.
After facing declining markets and <a href=http://www.kabulguide.net/adi2.html>http://www.kabulguide.net/adi2.html</a> prices since 2006, the 2010 outlook predicts there will likely be enough play blocks in place to contain some necessary market improvement. It really is last year and especially 2012 and 2013 that a true housing recovery is forecast to look at hold, creating higher prices with significant price volatility occurring as sudden demand surges catch the lumber market aback. are anticipated upper management this year following your Obama government housing stimulus legislation of 2009 plus the expansion of more normalized housing inventories. residential housing construction in 2005, lumber demand plummeted to around 6.9 billion bf in 2009. and Canada need to rebound having an average annual increase of approximately 10% expected from 2009 to 2014 as sawmill operating rates improve from dismal levels averaging just 50% during the past year to near 90% levels by 2013
Total Western lumber production peaked at 75 billion bf in 2005 and tend to bottom out dramatically lower at near 43 billion bf during the past year. Steady rises are forecast in output, to in excess of 60 billion bf in 2013 allowing most remaining mills to resume production at more normal historic levels."
Source: International WOOD Markets Group,This could be by far the most bullish report I have seen in the demand for lumber. Considering how bad the world is they are with just an average annual increase of just 10 %. Further, it demands "sawmill operating rates to further improve from dismal levels averaging Fifty % in '09 but estimates being near 90 percent levels in 2013."
My question is Ninety percent in the? 90 % in the mills that are fitted with not been "mothballed" or closed, <a href=http://www.kabulguide.net/adi2.html>http://www.kabulguide.net/adi2.html</a> or 90 percent of 2006 output?
Also the most bullish of reports suggest it's a number of years before we retreat to 2006 levels. In actual fact I'm not against the recall reading anyone's research that dares in making that call.
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