Hard Sawnwood Monthly Price - Singapore Dollar per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Mar 2021 - Mar 2026: -84.278 (-8.31%)
Chart

Description: Sawnwood (Malaysia), dark red seraya/meranti, select and better quality, average 7 to 8 inches; length average 12 to 14 inches; thickness 1 to 2 inch(es); kiln dry, c. & f. UK ports, with 5% agents commission including premium for products of certified sustainable forest beginning January 2005; previously excluding the premium

Unit: Singapore Dollar per Metric Ton



Source: International Tropical Timber Market Report; Tropical Timbers; 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 sawnwood is a traded timber product made by sawing logs from hardwood species into boards, planks, and other dimensional lumber. On commodity markets it is commonly priced by volume, with the benchmark quoted in US dollars per cubic meter. A widely used reference grade is hard sawnwood, dark red meranti, select and better quality, delivered CIF to a UK port, which reflects both the species mix and the cost of ocean freight and insurance to a major import market. Hardwood lumber is used in furniture, joinery, flooring, interior fittings, doors, and other applications where strength, appearance, and workability matter. Compared with softwood, hardwood sawnwood is generally denser, slower growing, and more heterogeneous in quality, so pricing depends heavily on species, grade, moisture content, and origin. Trade in this market links forest regions in Southeast Asia, Africa, and parts of the Americas with construction and manufacturing demand in Europe and other importing regions.

Supply Drivers

Supply is shaped by forest biology, logging access, and processing capacity. Hardwood trees typically grow more slowly than softwood species, so usable log supply depends on long rotation periods, forest management practices, and the availability of mature stands. Tropical hardwoods such as meranti are associated with Southeast Asian forest regions, while other hardwood species come from Central and South America, Central Africa, and temperate forest zones. Harvesting is constrained by road access, river transport, port capacity, and the cost of moving bulky, low-value logs and lumber over long distances. Because sawing and drying require specialized mills and seasoning facilities, supply also depends on industrial infrastructure near forest areas.

Weather affects output through logging conditions, flooding, drought stress, and storm damage. Biological constraints such as pests, fungal decay, and species-specific regeneration rates influence long-run availability. Certification rules, forest concessions, and land-use regulation also shape the flow of exportable lumber by limiting legal harvest from natural forests and encouraging plantation or managed-forest supply. Since hardwood lumber is graded by appearance and structural quality, the share of high-grade boards is limited by log characteristics, making supply less standardized than many agricultural commodities.

Demand Drivers

Demand comes from construction, furniture, cabinetry, flooring, and interior finishing. Hardwood sawnwood is valued for appearance, durability, and machinability, so it competes with softwood lumber, engineered wood products, metal, plastics, and composite materials depending on the application. In visible uses such as joinery and furniture, species color, grain pattern, and finishing properties matter as much as strength. In structural uses, hardwood may substitute for softwood only where higher density or wear resistance is needed, while engineered wood can replace solid lumber where uniformity and cost are more important.

Consumption is tied to housing activity, renovation cycles, commercial fit-out, and furniture manufacturing. Demand is also influenced by income levels because hardwood products are often used in higher-value consumer goods and interior finishes. Seasonal patterns can appear in construction and shipping, but the larger driver is the pace of building and manufacturing activity in importing economies. Environmental standards, certification requirements, and restrictions on illegal logging affect sourcing choices and can shift demand among species and origins rather than eliminate underlying use. Over time, substitution toward engineered panels and alternative materials moderates demand growth in some segments, while premium hardwood retains a role where aesthetics and durability are important.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Because hard sawnwood is traded internationally, prices are influenced by the US dollar exchange rate, freight costs, and financing conditions. A stronger dollar tends to make dollar-denominated timber more expensive for non-dollar buyers, while shipping and insurance costs affect CIF benchmarks directly. Interest rates matter through housing, construction, and inventory financing: higher borrowing costs can reduce downstream demand and encourage leaner stocks. Storage is costly because lumber occupies space, can degrade with moisture, and may require seasoning, so market structure often reflects limited warehousing and shipment timing rather than large inventories. As a result, regional supply disruptions and transport bottlenecks can move prices more than in storable bulk commodities.

MonthPriceChange
Mar 20211,014.21-
Apr 20211,006.43-0.77%
May 20211,021.471.49%
Jun 20211,019.36-0.21%
Jul 20211,019.420.01%
Aug 20211,019.18-0.02%
Sep 20211,009.63-0.94%
Oct 20211,008.37-0.12%
Nov 2021994.75-1.35%
Dec 2021991.09-0.37%
Jan 2022998.150.71%
Feb 2022993.69-0.45%
Mar 2022975.98-1.78%
Apr 2022963.85-1.24%
May 2022938.28-2.65%
Jun 2022929.56-0.93%
Jul 2022911.28-1.97%
Aug 2022904.51-0.74%
Sep 2022873.30-3.45%
Oct 2022876.090.32%
Nov 2022888.541.42%
Dec 2022897.891.05%
Jan 2023882.91-1.67%
Feb 2023877.15-0.65%
Mar 2023887.161.14%
Apr 2023903.541.85%
May 2023910.820.81%
Jun 2023926.481.72%
Jul 2023935.901.02%
Aug 2023935.07-0.09%
Sep 2023922.17-1.38%
Oct 2023907.63-1.58%
Nov 2023913.060.60%
Dec 2023921.430.92%
Jan 2024924.670.35%
Feb 2024925.580.10%
Mar 2024928.310.30%
Apr 2024926.43-0.20%
May 2024930.220.41%
Jun 2024936.460.67%
Jul 2024943.610.76%
Aug 2024927.42-1.72%
Sep 2024933.940.70%
Oct 2024931.74-0.24%
Nov 2024928.35-0.36%
Dec 2024928.810.05%
Jan 2025916.94-1.28%
Feb 2025920.350.37%
Mar 2025940.262.16%
Apr 2025949.490.98%
May 2025942.89-0.70%
Jun 2025948.550.60%
Jul 2025943.26-0.56%
Aug 2025941.87-0.15%
Sep 2025945.630.40%
Oct 2025942.26-0.36%
Nov 2025932.67-1.02%
Dec 2025942.401.04%
Jan 2026947.070.50%
Feb 2026938.70-0.88%
Mar 2026929.93-0.93%

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