
Weak lumber markets and higher U.S. trade costs pressure results, and the company expects early 2026 prices to fluctuate with winter weather and industry-wide lumber production curtailments.

Weak lumber markets and higher U.S. trade costs pressure results, and the company expects early 2026 prices to fluctuate with winter weather and industry-wide lumber production curtailments.

Inventory totals 1.22 million units, while the median price rises to $396,800.

Weaker demand, adverse currency moves and higher raw material costs outweigh record pulp output and cost reductions.

Company says stronger Real Estate results offset weak timber markets, with Southern pulpwood pricing down and Pacific Northwest harvest volumes lower year over year.

West Fraser says lumber duties, OSB and southern yellow pine oversupply, and housing affordability constraints keep wood building products markets pressured. It expects another year of modest demand in 2026 and reiterates lumber and OSB shipment targets.

Spruce shortages and higher pine output reshape supply, while expected rate cuts could lift 2026 building demand.

Rental vacancies improve slightly in 2024, but owner vacancy rates remain below 1% nationwide.

Pulp deliveries rise 4% while paper deliveries decline and electricity output edges lower.

Maine, Michigan, Louisiana, Washington, and Oregon hold the largest foreign-owned forest areas, led by Canadian and European investors.

Renewable energy development and technology infrastructure are expected to expand non-timber revenue opportunities for timberland owners in 2026.

Lower electricity prices in northern Sweden and reduced demand for wood products weigh on results while Board and Paper maintains strong margins.

Tokyo targets 6% of power from biomass, yet high fuel prices, policy uncertainty, and competition challenge new projects.

Homebuilder reports 5% revenue decline and narrower margins as affordability improves but confidence lags.

Average stumpage price reaches 16 euros per cubic metre, while delivery sales average nearly 40 euros.

Exports to the United States fall to the lowest level since 2017 due to new tariffs.

Paper sector profits declined 13.6% and timber processing dropped 38.3%, while overall manufacturing rose 5%.

Export volume totals 12.99 million m3 as value decreases 2% and average price falls 8%.

Harvests from private forests amount to 47.6 million m3, representing 79% of total volume.

A new analysis shows losses from EU Emissions Trading System changes and higher rail and shipping charges, threatening jobs and exports.

Total 2025 purchase volume is 19% below 2024 level as stumpage and delivery prices for all timber types continue to decline.