A do-it-yourself home-improvement and construction boom has sent the price of lumber skyrocketing, as sawmills and strand-board manufacturers, including in Minnesota, scramble to keep up with surging demand.
It's one of the odd business wrinkles of the pandemic. Future prices for random lengths of board are $834 per thousand board feet, triple their April low and about double the typical price in recent years.
"When COVID hit, everything bottomed out real quick. A lot of mills took downtime, and that reduced supply," said Mike Birkeland, executive vice president of the Minnesota Forest Industries and Timber Producers Association. "Then as people stayed home, that do-it-yourself market just exploded. Mills came back on line, but they haven't been able to catch up."
The squeeze is driving up the cost of home construction and causing scarcity for building products. It is not yet benefiting Minnesota loggers, who must contend with slumping demand at paper mills. Shares of lumber firms are rising as investors perceive a profit spike on the horizon.
Much of the lumber produced each year is used to build houses, and home construction has soared this summer. July new home sales in the U.S. rose 36% compared to last year — the highest level since 2006, the Census Bureau said. In the Twin Cities metro, sales of new homes in the same month rose 17%, according to a monthly sales report from the Minneapolis Area Realtors. For single-family houses, the median new home price was $426,000, slightly more than last year.
Sunny Bowman, whose family owns Dakota County Lumber in Farmington, said they are low on plywood and a similar product called oriented strand board. They are also out of three-quarter-inch tongue-and-groove wafer board used for roofs and siding. When she calls mills to ask for more, they say no, they can't even fulfill orders they already have.
"Dad said he's never seen anything like this before," Bowman said. "We've got a recession and housing bubble and huge demand, but with increasing demand people being home and not spending money on other things. Everybody wants to do a project right now."
Sticker shock and long delays
Minnesota has six big plants that turn trees into building materials, including Potlatch Deltic and Norbord outside Bemidji, Louisiana Pacific in Two Harbors, Hedstrom Lumber in Grand Marais, Savanna Pallets in McGregor and Bell Lumber & Pole in New Brighton.