Hard Logs Monthly Price - Kuwaiti Dinar per Cubic meter

Data as of March 2026

Range
Jun 2020 - Mar 2026: -27.663 (-32.49%)
Chart

Description: Logs (Malaysia), meranti, Sarawak, sale price charged by importers, Tokyo beginning February 1993; previously average of Sabah and Sarawak weighted by Japanese import volumes

Unit: Kuwaiti Dinar per Cubic meter



Source: International Tropical Timber Organization; Mokuzai Shikyo Geppo; World Bank.

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Hard logs are roundwood from dense hardwood species used as industrial timber, veneer feedstock, and sawmill input. In commodity pricing, they are commonly quoted by species group, quality grade, origin, and destination market, with the benchmark often expressed as an import price at a major consuming port. For this category, the standard reference is the import price in Japan for best-quality Malaysian meranti, quoted in US dollars per cubic meter. That benchmark reflects the value of large, straight, defect-free logs that can be sawn into high-grade lumber or peeled into veneer.

Hard logs are distinct from softwood logs because they are generally slower-growing, more heterogeneous in species and quality, and more dependent on selective harvesting. Their market value is shaped by log diameter, length, straightness, moisture content, and defect rates, all of which affect recovery yields in downstream processing. End uses include furniture, flooring, joinery, plywood, veneer, and other appearance-grade wood products. Because logs are bulky and costly to transport, trade is strongly influenced by shipping economics, port handling, and the proximity of forest resources to export infrastructure.

Supply Drivers

Supply of hard logs is governed by forest ecology, harvesting rules, and transport access. Tropical hardwood supply is concentrated in forested regions of Southeast Asia, parts of Africa, and selected areas of the Amazon basin, where species diversity and climate support large-diameter hardwood growth. Within these regions, commercial supply depends on the availability of mature stands, concession systems, and the ability to extract logs from remote forest interiors. Because many hardwood species grow slowly and regenerate unevenly, supply responds only gradually to changes in logging intensity.

Weather and terrain matter because logging operations rely on dry-season access roads, river transport, and heavy equipment that can be disrupted by rainfall and soft ground. In tropical forests, selective harvesting is often constrained by environmental regulation, protected-area boundaries, and the need to avoid excessive damage to residual stands. Species-specific constraints also matter: some hardwoods are scarce, difficult to identify, or limited by diameter and straightness requirements. Processing and export are further shaped by sawmill capacity, log yard handling, and port logistics, which can create bottlenecks even when standing timber is available. Since logs are expensive to move relative to their value, freight rates and inland transport conditions are persistent supply determinants.

Demand Drivers

Demand for hard logs comes mainly from sawmills, veneer mills, plywood plants, and furniture manufacturers that require dense, visually attractive, or dimensionally stable wood. End-use demand is tied to construction, interior finishing, cabinetry, flooring, and export-oriented wood products. Because hardwoods are often chosen for appearance and durability, demand is influenced by consumer preferences for premium timber products and by the availability of substitute materials such as softwood lumber, engineered wood, bamboo products, metal, and plastics.

Industrial demand is also shaped by the structure of downstream processing. Veneer and plywood producers favor logs with large diameters and low defect rates, while sawmills seek recoverable lumber volume and consistent grading. Seasonal patterns can appear where construction activity, monsoon conditions, or shipping schedules affect procurement, but the deeper driver is the long production cycle of forest resources and the limited substitutability of high-grade logs in certain applications. In many markets, demand is strongest where woodworking industries are established and where imported logs are processed into higher-value products for domestic use or re-export. Regulatory preferences for certified or legally sourced timber also influence demand by affecting which origins can access premium buyers.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Hard log prices are sensitive to exchange rates because international trade is commonly denominated in US dollars while costs and revenues are incurred in local currencies. Freight rates, port charges, and fuel costs also matter because logs are bulky and low in value density relative to many manufactured goods. When transport becomes more expensive, delivered prices can diverge sharply from stumpage or export prices.

Interest rates affect working capital for log traders, sawmills, and inventory holders, since logs require storage, handling, and financing before processing or resale. Where inventories are held in yards or at ports, carrying costs can encourage prompt turnover and influence nearby price relationships. Broader construction and manufacturing cycles affect demand for wood products, linking hard logs indirectly to industrial activity. Because logs are a physical commodity with storage and quality-loss considerations, market structure often reflects local supply-demand balances rather than purely financial pricing.

MonthPriceChange
Jun 202085.15-
Jul 202085.610.54%
Aug 202085.840.27%
Sep 202086.250.47%
Oct 202086.550.35%
Nov 202087.150.70%
Dec 202087.260.13%
Jan 202186.96-0.35%
Feb 202185.45-1.74%
Mar 202182.73-3.19%
Apr 202182.26-0.56%
May 202182.08-0.22%
Jun 202181.36-0.87%
Jul 202181.20-0.21%
Aug 202181.510.39%
Sep 202181.33-0.23%
Oct 202179.38-2.39%
Nov 202178.91-0.59%
Dec 202179.050.17%
Jan 202278.36-0.87%
Feb 202278.17-0.24%
Mar 202276.26-2.43%
Apr 202271.97-5.64%
May 202270.82-1.59%
Jun 202268.10-3.84%
Jul 202266.90-1.76%
Aug 202267.611.06%
Sep 202264.32-4.86%
Oct 202262.63-2.63%
Nov 202264.553.06%
Dec 202267.674.84%
Jan 202369.743.05%
Feb 202368.52-1.74%
Mar 202368.24-0.42%
Apr 202368.320.13%
May 202366.63-2.48%
Jun 202364.72-2.87%
Jul 202364.71-0.01%
Aug 202363.25-2.26%
Sep 202362.19-1.67%
Oct 202361.48-1.15%
Nov 202361.29-0.30%
Dec 202363.653.85%
Jan 202462.62-1.63%
Feb 202461.28-2.14%
Mar 202461.07-0.34%
Apr 202459.61-2.39%
May 202458.62-1.66%
Jun 202457.82-1.37%
Jul 202457.67-0.24%
Aug 202462.137.73%
Sep 202463.402.03%
Oct 202460.89-3.95%
Nov 202459.53-2.23%
Dec 202459.43-0.17%
Jan 202558.66-1.30%
Feb 202560.533.19%
Mar 202561.541.67%
Apr 202563.413.05%
May 202563.12-0.46%
Jun 202563.04-0.12%
Jul 202561.84-1.90%
Aug 202561.56-0.45%
Sep 202561.37-0.31%
Oct 202560.04-2.17%
Nov 202558.70-2.24%
Dec 202558.34-0.60%
Jan 202658.07-0.46%
Feb 202658.590.89%
Mar 202657.49-1.87%

Commodities Market

  • Buyers: Request price quotes
  • Sellers: List your products
Sign up to get an email when we update our commodities data

 


Your email will never be shared, sold, nor rented. We hate SPAM as much you do.
Coming Soon