Soft Logs Monthly Price - Canadian Dollar per Cubic meter

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2021 - Mar 2026: -51.317 (-17.55%)
Chart

Description: Soft Logs, Average Export price from the U.S. for Douglas Fir, Canadian Dollar per Cubic meter

Unit: Canadian Dollar per Cubic meter



Source: International Monetary Fund

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Soft logs are roundwood harvested from coniferous tree species such as pine, spruce, fir, and similar softwood species used in industrial processing. In commodity markets, they are typically priced by volume, commonly in US dollars per cubic meter, with benchmark series often based on average export prices from the United States. Soft logs are an upstream forestry input rather than a finished material, and their value reflects species, log dimensions, quality, moisture content, and suitability for sawmilling, veneer, pulp, or engineered wood production. They are distinct from lumber because they are sold in log form before primary processing.

The main end uses are sawn timber, plywood, veneer, pulp, paper, and panel products. Soft logs also feed biomass and energy applications in some regions, although industrial wood processing remains the core demand channel. Because logs are bulky and expensive to transport relative to value, trade is shaped by proximity to mills, ports, and inland transport networks. Pricing therefore reflects both forest biology and industrial geography, making soft logs a classic example of a commodity whose market structure is determined by long-lived regional supply chains.

Supply Drivers

Soft log supply is governed by forest biology, land ownership, harvest rotation, and transport access. Major producing regions include North America, northern and central Europe, Russia, and parts of the Southern Hemisphere where plantation forestry is established. Softwood species grow best in temperate and boreal climates, where long rotations and large land bases support commercial forestry. In plantation systems, supply is more regular because trees are planted, thinned, and harvested on managed cycles; in natural forests, supply depends more on allowable cuts, regeneration, and ecological constraints.

Weather and climate affect supply through drought, frost, windthrow, wildfire, and insect outbreaks. These factors can alter harvest timing, damage standing timber, and change log quality. Forest pests and disease can also shift the species mix available to mills. Harvesting is capital intensive and depends on roads, logging equipment, and seasonal ground conditions, especially where frozen soils or dry periods are needed for access. Because trees require many years to mature, supply responds slowly to price signals. Milling capacity, export terminals, and inland freight corridors also matter: logs are heavy and low value per unit weight, so transport costs can determine whether a stand is economically harvestable.

Demand Drivers

Demand for soft logs is driven by construction, packaging, furniture, paper, and industrial wood processing. Sawmills convert logs into lumber for framing, flooring, and general building materials, while veneer and plywood mills require logs with specific diameter and straightness characteristics. Pulp mills use lower-grade logs and residual fiber for paper, tissue, and panel products. This creates a quality ladder in which higher-grade logs command premiums and lower-grade material competes with pulpwood and biomass uses.

Housing activity is a major structural demand driver because softwood lumber is widely used in residential construction and renovation. Demand also rises with broader industrial output, freight packaging needs, and consumer spending on wood-based goods. Substitution occurs across wood products: engineered wood can replace some solid lumber applications, while steel, concrete, plastics, and composites can substitute in certain building or packaging uses. Seasonal patterns matter because construction and harvesting are often constrained by weather. Demand is also influenced by long-run shifts in paper consumption, recycling rates, and the adoption of engineered wood products, all of which change the mix of log grades required by mills.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Soft log prices are sensitive to exchange rates because international trade is commonly denominated in US dollars while production costs are incurred in local currencies. A stronger dollar can make exports less competitive for foreign buyers, while a weaker dollar can support trade flows. Interest rates matter indirectly through housing, construction finance, and inventory holding costs at mills and exporters. Because logs are bulky and costly to store, market structure often reflects local supply-demand balances rather than deep financial warehousing dynamics.

Inflation affects harvesting, labor, fuel, equipment, and freight costs, which feed into delivered log prices. Soft logs do not function as a classic financial hedge, but they can correlate with broader industrial activity and housing cycles. Where storage is limited, nearby supply and mill demand can create short-term price pressure, while transport bottlenecks can widen regional price differences. The market is therefore shaped more by physical logistics and processing capacity than by speculative storage economics.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 2021292.36-
May 2021286.37-2.05%
Jun 2021287.200.29%
Jul 2021312.458.79%
Aug 2021293.52-6.06%
Sep 2021326.1611.12%
Oct 2021301.73-7.49%
Nov 2021295.06-2.21%
Dec 2021309.084.75%
Jan 2022309.210.04%
Feb 2022343.1210.97%
Mar 2022373.598.88%
Apr 2022336.53-9.92%
May 2022381.9813.51%
Jun 2022365.90-4.21%
Jul 2022360.10-1.59%
Aug 2022358.17-0.53%
Sep 2022346.97-3.13%
Oct 2022354.122.06%
Nov 2022362.082.25%
Dec 2022336.48-7.07%
Jan 2023315.69-6.18%
Feb 2023298.47-5.46%
Mar 2023300.910.82%
Apr 2023284.65-5.40%
May 2023294.873.59%
Jun 2023281.41-4.56%
Jul 2023293.334.23%
Aug 2023280.44-4.40%
Sep 2023291.073.79%
Oct 2023298.972.71%
Nov 2023281.17-5.95%
Dec 2023271.21-3.54%
Jan 2024294.138.45%
Feb 2024276.67-5.94%
Mar 2024267.19-3.43%
Apr 2024277.213.75%
May 2024264.71-4.51%
Jun 2024270.802.30%
Jul 2024258.14-4.68%
Aug 2024244.49-5.29%
Sep 2024263.437.75%
Oct 2024270.262.59%
Nov 2024260.90-3.46%
Dec 2024253.56-2.82%
Jan 2025302.8819.45%
Feb 2025276.14-8.83%
Mar 2025278.060.69%
Apr 2025303.189.03%
May 2025308.351.71%
Jun 2025289.16-6.22%
Jul 2025288.06-0.38%
Aug 2025303.805.47%
Sep 2025268.81-11.52%
Oct 2025272.621.42%
Nov 2025282.613.66%
Dec 2025264.46-6.42%
Jan 2026243.43-7.95%
Feb 2026239.98-1.42%
Mar 2026241.040.44%

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