Caution Prevails After the Summer Vacation – ITTO European Market Report 31st August 2011

As usual during Europe’s lengthy summer vacation period, there has been a slowdown in tropical hardwood trading. Importers in many parts of Europe suggest that overall trade during the first half of 2011, while unspectacular, was an improvement on the same period the previous year. However, the volumes involved were well down on levels prevailing before the recession and there is little expectation of any significant upturn when buyers return at the end of August. On-going concerns about the debt crises in the euro-zone and government austerity measures has contributed to a general feeling of uncertainty about the future direction of demand and raised the spectre of volatile exchange rates. Nor has the long-term problem of limited access to credit amongst importers been resolved.

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European Domestic Hardwood Production Rebounds – ITTO European Market Report 31st July 2011

Data from the UNECE Timber Committee indicates that hardwood production across the European subregion rebounded during 2010 (the UNECE European subregion includes all countries within the continent of Europe plus Turkey but excluding Russia). Following an 18% decline in hardwood saw and veneer log production in the region between 2007 and 2009 to 29.7 million m3, production rebounded by 12% to 33.2 million m3 in 2010 (Chart 1). Significant increases in hardwood log production were recorded in Romania, Germany, Turkey, and Latvia during 2010. 26.2 million m3 (78%) of total European hardwood log production during 2010 was in EU countries. 

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European Market for Tropical Wood Quiet But Stable – ITTO European Market Report 15th July 2011

The European market for tropical hardwood lumber is quiet but relatively stable. Uncertainty about future demand has meant that speculative purchasing is being kept to a minimum. Overall European stocks of lumber of the most popular species such as meranti, bankirai, sapele, sipo, and wawa remain at historically low levels. However with slow consumption this has not led to reports of significant supply problems. Orders are being placed to replace stocks as and when gaps open up.

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Tropical Hardwood Plywood Prices at Record Levels in Europe – ITTO European Market Report 30th June 2011

CIF Europe prices for South East Asian and Chinese hardwood plywood increased dramatically in the second quarter of 2011 in response to tight supplies, rising production costs, currency movements and firm demand in Asia. Prices have continued to rise for July and August shipment. Prices for Malaysian BB/CC raw plywood on offer to European buyers now exceed Indo96+40% and those for equivalent Indonesian products may be over Indo96+50%, levels never seen before. 

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Tropical Hardwood Market in France – ITTO European Market Report 13th June 2011

Traditionally France has played a central role in the international tropical hardwood trade. Over recent year’s this influence has diminished as a greater proportion of tropical hardwood is diverted away from Europe and into emerging markets, as tropical hardwood has lost competitiveness in Europe, and as tropical producing countries have restricted log exports and increased domestic production. Nevertheless France remains the leading European importer of tropical wood, accounting for around 900,000 m3 (roundwood equivalent volume) of the 4.5 million m3 of tropical wood products imported into the EU during 2010. French companies retain large investments in the tropical wood industry, notably in Central and West Africa.

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European Economies Diverge – ITTO European Market Report 31st May 2011

Economic conditions across Europe have been diverging widely. On the fringes of the euro-zone, Greece, Ireland and Portugal have become ensnared in a sovereign-debt crisis. In Northern Europe, driven by the German powerhouse, economies are reviving and public finances are solid. Meanwhile in the UK, there are discouraging signs that the recovery is already running out of steam. 

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Market for Tropical Hardwood Lumber Subdued but Stable – ITTO European Market Report 14th May 2011

The changing political situation in the Ivory Coast is a major point of discussion by European traders and policy makers and is affecting the availability of a few species. However it has not had a significant impact on the overall market for tropical wood in the EU. The further decline in availability from Ivory Coast – which in any case has been low now for many years – has been compensated by a slight easing in the supply situation elsewhere in Africa. At the same time, European demand for both tropical logs and lumber remains subdued, so the overall balance between supply and demand is being maintained and prices for most species and products – with a few exceptions – are stable.

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TTJ Celebrates Strong Prospects for Tropical Hardwood – ITTO European Market Report 30th April 2011

The UK-based TTJ published its annual Tropical Timber supplement in the last week of April, containing a series of articles and expert commentaries on prospects in the UK and wider European market. Major European concerns in relation to tropical timber include: the potential impact of the EU Illegal Timber Law (ITL) – to be fully implemented from 3 March 2012; the impact of rising demand in emerging markets to reduce availability of supply to Europe; the rate of uptake of certification in tropical supply countries; and the extent to which modified softwoods and temperate hardwoods may substitute for tropical hardwoods in the future. While there is clearly uncertainty about future prospects to tropical wood in the European market, there are also encouraging signals that many buyers remain committed to sourcing and marketing genuine tropical hardwoods.

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Mixed Signals for Tropical Hardwood – ITTO European Market Report 14th April 2011

Overall the year 2010 was a slightly better year for the European trade in tropical hardwood than 2009, although purchasing remained at levels well below those before the recession and there were unsettling signs of declining market share in some sectors.

The latest EU-wide trade data (see Table) indicates that imports of tropical hardwood logs into the region reached 354,000 m3 (down 18% on 2009) valued at €133 million (down 7%). The big decline in imports from Gabon following that country’s log export ban imposed from May 2010 onwards was only partially offset by rising imports from other countries in the Congo basin.

Nevertheless, quarterly data (Chart 1) indicates that after reaching an all time low in the third quarter of 2010, the pace of imports of tropical hardwood logs picked up significantly in the closing months of the year. EU-25 imports of tropical hardwood logs during the October to December period reached 108,000 m3, up from only 78,000 m3 in the previous quarter.

Interestingly, EU imports of tropical logs in the last quarter of 2010 were almost exactly the same volume as the same period in 2009, before introduction of Gabon’s log export ban. Three countries are now filling the void created by Gabon’s withdrawal as a supplier – Congo Democratic Republic, Cameroon and the Congo Republic – each now contributing between 25% and 30% of total EU imports.

EU hardwood imports up 7%

EU imports of hardwood lumber (tropical and temperate) reached 2.69 million m3 valued at €1435 million, up 7% and 12.4% respectively. Despite the gains, imports were still down 42% on levels prevailing before the recession. This is due both to lower consumption and much reduced supply as harvesting levels fell dramatically and large swathes of the hardwood industry were effectively forced to close during 2008 and 2009.

Lack of credit coupled with a desire to keep lower inventories during times of uncertainty has also fed a strong trend towards just-in-time ordering which has tended to favour more readily available hardwoods.  Temperate hardwood lumber producers have benefited most from this trend, and last year there was significant growth in EU imports from several Eastern European supply countries, notably Croatia, Bosnia, Serbia and Romania.

Of leading tropical hardwood lumber suppliers to the EU, imports from Malaysia and Brazil fell last year. In contrast, there was a reasonable recovery in the level of EU imports from Cameroon. Lumber exports from Gabon also rose significantly last year, one effect of the log export ban.

Signs of sustained market improvement in the last quarter of 2010

The quarterly hardwood lumber import data (Chart 2) provides some cause for optimism that the recovery in Europe’s sawn hardwood markets will be maintained. There was a robust rebound in the level of EU hardwood lumber imports in the last quarter of 2010. During that period, EU hardwood lumber imports reached 861,000 m3, the highest quarterly figure for over two years. This suggests that the big decline in imports during the third quarter of 2010 was seasonal and due to short-term stocking issues rather than a long-term reversal in underlying consumption trends.

EU imports of hardwood veneer have followed a similar pattern. Overall EU hardwood veneer imports reached 514,000 m3 in 2010 valued at €455 million, up 14% and 13% respectively. This is partly the result of a switch to hardwood rotary veneer imports by European plywood manufacturers in place of logs from Gabon following the log export ban in May. In addition to Gabonese exporters, those in various other African countries are benefiting from this trend including Cameroon, Ghana and Equatorial Guinea. Rising levels of veneer imports from countries better known for supply of sliced veneer – such as Ivory Coast, USA, and Romania – suggests this component of the veneer market has also seen some recovery this year.

Strong recovery in veneer imports in October to December period

As in the hardwood lumber trade, the quarterly data indicates strong recovery in EU imports of hardwood veneer in the last quarter of 2010 after a disappointing performance in the June-September period (Chart 3). The sharp downturn in EU veneer imports during the third quarter of 2010 seems to have been due to short term over-stocking of okoume rotary veneer destined for the European okoume plywood trade, a sector which in recent times has been struggling to compete with cheap Chinese substitutes.

Imports of hardwood plywood into the EU-25 group of countries during 2010 reached 2.21 million m3 valued at €798 million, up 28% and 40% respectively on the previous year. The particularly sharp rise in the unit value of imports must be welcome news for a sector that has had to deal with narrow and ever declining margins over recent years.

However the data doesn’t bode well for all hardwood plywood producers. A notable trend in the EU market during 2010 was growth in the share of China, Russia, Ukraine, and Uruguay, largely at the expense of Malaysia, Brazil and Gabon. Through-and-through tropical hardwood plywood grades continue to be substituted for cheaper more readily available  combi-products, plantation-grown eucalypt products, and birch plywood.

The quarterly data is also disappointing, revealing a significant downturn in EU hardwood plywood imports during the October to December period last year (Chart 4). This is in line with market reports indicating a downturn in European demand for raw grades of tropical and Chinese hardwood plywood at the end of last year. Following significant imports of plywood in the second and third quarters of 2010, many importers were carrying excess stocks into 2011 relative to limited demand. Demand for more specialist film-faced products was performing rather better, continuing to benefit from higher prices and low availability of birch plywood due to the forest fires in Russia during 2010 and the Russian export tax on birch logs.

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EU Sanctions on the Ivory Coast Impact Trade – ITTO European Market Report 15th March 2011

EU sanctions imposed on the Ivory Coast on 14 January 2011 are now having a significant effect on the wood trade. The sanctions are designed to choke off funding to Ivory Coast’s president Laurent Gbagbo and pressure him to cede power. According to an EU spokesman quoted by the Bloomberg news agency last month, “an important consequence is the prohibition to make available, directly or indirectly, economic resources to or for the benefit of the persons or entities subject to sanctions. Therefore, payments and transfers to sanctioned entities become illegal.” 

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