The Oklahoman

Faux plywood price spike hammers buyers

- By Marcy Nicholson

Americans are coughing up $4,600 more on av erage to buy their dream home than six months ago — thanks to a record run-up in prices for a once-cheap ply wood substitute.

Prices are on at ear for those bonded wood-chip sheets commonly used as sheathing for walls, floors and roofs in new home constructi­on. Oriented Strand Board, or OSB, has long been used as a low-cost alternativ­e to plywood, but the product now fetches a higher price as increased demand and tight supplies lead to delivery delays and elevated constructi­on costs in the U.S. and Canada.

“It's difficult to get, the lead times are out ,” said Lorne Winship, general manager at Pacific Homes, a West Coast

builder specializi­ng in custom prefabrica­ted homes, adding that the premium over plywood is “absolutely crazy.”

While the rally is hurting builders and buyers of new houses who already suffered from surging lumber prices earlier this year, i t's bringing windfalls to manufactur­ers such as Norbord Inc. and Weyerhaeus­er Co.

OSB soared to a record $729 per thousand square feet in September and held that level through mid-October while Southern pine plywood prices plunged in the past month, according to lumber pricing company Random Lengths.

The engineered-wood product is at a premium to Southern yellow pine plywood for the first time since 2006, RBC Capital Markets analyst Paul Quinn said.

“We expect that this is at least partially due to higher housing starts given that buyers were less willing to substitute,” Quinn said in an Oct. 1 2 report, adding t hat OSB is used more heavily than plywood in new residentia­l constructi­on.

Manufactur­ing OSB requires a different process and equipment than making plywood, meaning l umber companies can't switch over production to address changing markets.

Tight supplies have caused delivery delays f or smaller builders like Pacific Homes, owned by Winnipeg- based All-Fab Building Components Inc. Winship said he's being told OSB deliveries to his Vancouver Island company will take two to three months now instead of the typical two weeks. His woes are somewhat eased by falling costs of other lumber materials.

Lumber futures have tumbled from August' s record highs, though they're still up 26% this year. That's contribute­d to a volatile year for North America's lumber industry, with COVID- 19 and wildfires causing disruption­s amid escalating demand. Do-it-yourselfer­s, fortified by government stimulus checks, took on home renovation­s during pandemic lockdowns as homebuilde­rs broke ground on an increasing number of new projects.

Elevated wood costs lifted the selling price of an average, new single-family home in the U.S. by $15,841 since mid-April, said David Logan, director of tax and trade policy analysis for the National Associatio­n of Home Builders. Almost a third of that increase — $4,600 — came from higher OSB prices.

“Buyers have become more defensive in recent weeks,” Logan said in an interview. “They're ordering f or very short- term needs, thinking with the fall in plywood prices that OSB prices are likely to follow.”

The surge in OSB demand is expected to benefit the few companies that make the material, with Norbord, Louisiana- Pacific Corp ., Koch Industry Inc.' s Georgia-Pacific, and Weyerhaeus­er accounting for nearly 75% of North American production.

Those companies may benefit from the rally in their upcoming earnings, according to Scotia Capital forest-products analyst Benoit Laprade. Norbord, whose 29% market share makes the Toronto-based firm North America's biggest producer, is expected to report its “best ever” third- quarter results, while Louisiana-Pacific and Weyerhaeus­er also are expected to see strong revenue from OSB sales, he said in an interview.

As the Northern Hemisphere heads into winter and lumber prices decline, analysts expect OSB prices to follow. Laprade expects some OSB to sell about $410 in the fourth quarter.

“We do see some seasonal slowing in demand but overall if you look at the broad supply-demand dynamics, it' s favorable for all producers,” Kevin Mason, managing director at ERA Forest Products Research, said in an interview.

“At the end of the day, the consumer's going to have to bear the brunt of this.”

LUMBER FUTURES HAVE TUMBLED FROM AUGUST' S RECORD HIGHS, THOUGH THEY'RE STILL UP 26% THIS YEAR.

 ?? [PHOTO PROVIDED/OLEKSANDR RADO/DREAMSTIME/ TNS] ?? Contractor­s install plywood panels on a home under constructi­on. Oriented Strand Board now fetches a higher price as increased demand and tight supplies lead to delivery delays and elevated constructi­on costs in the U.S. and Canada.
[PHOTO PROVIDED/OLEKSANDR RADO/DREAMSTIME/ TNS] Contractor­s install plywood panels on a home under constructi­on. Oriented Strand Board now fetches a higher price as increased demand and tight supplies lead to delivery delays and elevated constructi­on costs in the U.S. and Canada.
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[METRO CREATIVE CONNECTION]

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