"A tale of two pulp grades?" Wilde asks. Hardwood fundamentals are still weaker than that of softwood, he notes. For February, China hardwood shipments were down 30.4% y/y to 219,000 metric tons and North America fell 17.4% y/y to 208,000 metric tons. The softwood market remained relatively stable with overall shipments up 2.8% y/y. In contrast with hardwood, y/y improvement was driven by China, where shipments were up 14.9% to 325,000 metric tons. This continued strength helped to offset weakness in North America, where softwood shipments declined 5.7% y/y, Wilde says.
The data are marginally supportive of recent $30/metric ton price hike announcements for softwood pulp slated for April 1, Wilde explains. "Despite the two-day increase in hardwood inventories, we believe the recently announced $30 BEK hike will be successfully implemented considering that overall pulp inventories were basically flat, softwood prices are rising, and some of the shipment weakness in February may have resulted from weather conditions and/or month-to-month demand volatility. Our expectation is still that pulp demand/supply will remain relatively balanced in the months ahead," he notes.
TAPPI
http://www.tappi.org/