Plywood Monthly Price - Sri Lanka Rupee per Sheet

Data as of March 2026

Range
Jun 2011 - Jan 2019: 247.525 (37.16%)
Chart

Description: Plywood (Africa and Southeast Asia), Lauan, 3-ply, extra, 91 cm x 182 cm x 4 mm, wholesale price, spot Tokyo

Unit: Sri Lanka Rupee per Sheet



Source: Japan Lumber Journal; International Tropical Timber Organization; Nikkei Newsletter on Commodities; World Bank.

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Plywood is an engineered wood panel made by bonding thin layers of veneer with adjacent grain directions crossed for strength and dimensional stability. In commodity markets, it is commonly quoted by sheet, with thickness, species, grade, and origin determining the relevant contract or benchmark. A widely cited reference point is plywood, 1/4 inch, Lauan, Tokyo, quoted in U.S. cents per sheet. Lauan plywood refers to panels made from tropical hardwood veneers, historically associated with Southeast Asian supply chains and Japanese import demand.

Plywood is used in construction, furniture, packaging, flooring underlayment, concrete formwork, and general manufacturing. Its value comes from combining relatively low cost with predictable strength, machinability, and resistance to warping compared with solid wood of similar dimensions. Because it is a manufactured product rather than a raw agricultural crop, its pricing reflects both timber availability and industrial processing conditions. Standardization by thickness and grade makes sheet-based pricing useful for comparing market conditions across regions and time.

Supply Drivers

Plywood supply depends on the availability of suitable logs, veneer production capacity, adhesive inputs, energy costs, and transport logistics. Tropical hardwood plywood, including Lauan-based products, is tied to forest resources in Southeast Asia and other humid tropical regions where fast-growing broadleaf species and plantation timber are available. Temperate plywood supply is more closely associated with softwood forests in North America, Northern Europe, and parts of East Asia. In both cases, forestry cycles are long, and harvesting is constrained by regeneration, land access, and environmental regulation.

Production is sensitive to mill utilization, because veneer peeling, drying, pressing, and finishing require specialized equipment and steady throughput. Bottlenecks can arise in log transport, port handling, and inland freight, especially when mills are distant from forest areas or export terminals. Quality also matters: defects in logs, moisture variation, and species differences affect yield and grade recovery. Tropical plywood supply is additionally exposed to forest disease, logging restrictions, and certification requirements, while softwood plywood depends on sawlog availability and the economics of competing uses such as lumber and pulp.

Demand Drivers

Plywood demand is driven primarily by construction, renovation, furniture, packaging, and industrial fabrication. In building markets, it is used for sheathing, subfloors, roofing, and formwork, where strength-to-weight ratio and panel stability are important. Demand tends to rise with housing activity, commercial construction, and infrastructure spending, while repair and remodeling provide a steadier base of consumption. Because plywood is a derived material, its demand also reflects the availability and relative price of substitute panels such as oriented strand board, particleboard, medium-density fiberboard, and solid lumber.

Seasonality matters in many regions because construction activity often follows weather patterns and building schedules. In colder climates, outdoor building demand is typically stronger in warmer months, while tropical and subtropical markets may show different seasonal rhythms tied to rainfall and logistics. Consumer demand is influenced by income growth, urbanization, and the expansion of furniture and interior finishing markets. Regulatory standards for fire performance, formaldehyde emissions, and building codes also shape product specifications and the mix of grades used. Because plywood is a semi-durable input, replacement demand can be less elastic than new construction demand, but it remains closely linked to broader building cycles.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Plywood prices are influenced by general construction activity, industrial production, and freight costs, all of which move with the business cycle. Because many internationally traded panels are priced in U.S. dollars, exchange-rate changes affect local-currency costs for importers and exporters. Higher interest rates can reduce building activity and raise financing costs for inventories and construction projects, which tends to soften demand for panels. Energy prices matter because drying, pressing, and transport are energy-intensive.

Storage is possible but costly, since panels occupy space and can degrade if exposed to moisture, so market structure often reflects near-term supply and demand balance rather than long-term warehousing. In markets with limited inventories, prices can respond quickly to disruptions in logging, shipping, or mill operations. Plywood is not typically used as a financial hedge in the way some raw materials are, but it can show cyclical behavior alongside housing-related equities, lumber, and broader construction materials.

MonthPriceChange
Jun 2011666.05-
Jul 2011670.930.73%
Aug 2011679.851.33%
Sep 2011695.102.24%
Oct 2011683.10-1.73%
Nov 2011685.640.37%
Dec 2011700.522.17%
Jan 2012700.510.00%
Feb 2012717.812.47%
Mar 2012766.856.83%
Apr 2012786.842.61%
May 2012789.800.38%
Jun 2012801.061.43%
Jul 2012805.820.59%
Aug 2012801.25-0.57%
Sep 2012801.19-0.01%
Oct 2012787.30-1.73%
Nov 2012797.071.24%
Dec 2012787.72-1.17%
Jan 2013777.38-1.31%
Feb 2013742.68-4.46%
Mar 2013729.67-1.75%
Apr 2013703.98-3.52%
May 2013682.93-2.99%
Jun 2013717.385.04%
Jul 2013718.160.11%
Aug 2013736.012.49%
Sep 2013729.23-0.92%
Oct 2013731.770.35%
Nov 2013714.91-2.30%
Dec 2013689.57-3.54%
Jan 2014687.21-0.34%
Feb 2014700.201.89%
Mar 2014696.96-0.46%
Apr 2014695.60-0.19%
May 2014699.860.61%
Jun 2014697.14-0.39%
Jul 2014699.210.30%
Aug 2014690.53-1.24%
Sep 2014663.16-3.96%
Oct 2014660.37-0.42%
Nov 2014615.10-6.85%
Dec 2014599.36-2.56%
Jan 2015606.991.27%
Feb 2015610.770.62%
Mar 2015602.88-1.29%
Apr 2015607.130.70%
May 2015603.54-0.59%
Jun 2015590.87-2.10%
Jul 2015591.630.13%
Aug 2015593.460.31%
Sep 2015631.016.33%
Oct 2015641.231.62%
Nov 2015632.28-1.40%
Dec 2015643.621.79%
Jan 2016664.693.27%
Feb 2016684.683.01%
Mar 2016696.101.67%
Apr 2016717.143.02%
May 2016730.031.80%
Jun 2016752.183.03%
Jul 2016762.781.41%
Aug 2016785.242.94%
Sep 2016781.30-0.50%
Oct 2016772.79-1.09%
Nov 2016745.66-3.51%
Dec 2016700.24-6.09%
Jan 2017711.941.67%
Feb 2017728.792.37%
Mar 2017731.820.42%
Apr 2017752.492.82%
May 2017741.20-1.50%
Jun 2017752.371.51%
Jul 2017745.94-0.86%
Aug 2017761.372.07%
Sep 2017754.23-0.94%
Oct 2017742.40-1.57%
Nov 2017743.620.16%
Dec 2017740.58-0.41%
Jan 2018756.892.20%
Feb 2018783.333.49%
Mar 2018801.732.35%
Apr 2018792.82-1.11%
May 2018785.94-0.87%
Jun 2018789.500.45%
Jul 2018780.62-1.12%
Aug 2018788.561.02%
Sep 2018802.531.77%
Oct 2018828.883.28%
Nov 2018851.772.76%
Dec 2018876.062.85%
Jan 2019913.584.28%

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