Wood Pulp Monthly Price - Mexican Peso per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
May 2016 - Mar 2020: 3,637.828 (22.89%)
Chart

Description: Woodpulp (Sweden), softwood, sulphate, bleached, air-dry weight, c.i.f. North Sea ports

Unit: Mexican Peso per Metric Ton



Source: Statistisches Bundesamt, Germany; Allman Manadsstatistik, Sweden; World Bank.

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Wood pulp is the fibrous raw material used to make paper, paperboard, tissue, and a range of cellulose-based products. On commodity markets, it is commonly priced as bleached softwood kraft pulp, with the benchmark often quoted on a delivered basis such as CIF North Sea ports. Prices are typically expressed in US dollars per metric ton. Bleached softwood kraft pulp is valued for its long fibers, which provide strength in printing and writing papers, packaging grades, and tissue blends. Hardwood pulp, by contrast, is used where smoother formation and different absorbency characteristics are desired. Wood pulp is produced by mechanically or chemically separating cellulose fibers from wood, then bleaching and drying the pulp into marketable bales. Because it is an industrial intermediate rather than a final consumer good, its market reflects both forestry economics and downstream paper and packaging demand.

Supply Drivers

Wood pulp supply is shaped by forest biology, mill capacity, and transport logistics. The main producing regions are North America, Northern Europe, South America, and parts of Asia, where climate, plantation forestry, and access to ports support large-scale pulp production. Softwood and hardwood species differ in fiber length and growth rates, so regional forest composition influences the mix of pulp grades available. In plantation-based systems, harvest cycles are governed by tree growth periods, land availability, and replanting schedules. In natural-forest systems, supply depends more on logging access, environmental constraints, and transport from remote forest areas to mills.

Chemical pulping requires substantial capital investment, energy, water, and chemical recovery systems, so mill outages, maintenance shutdowns, and environmental compliance can affect supply. Pulp is bulky and expensive to move, which makes port access, rail links, and shipping capacity important. Weather can disrupt logging, road access, and port operations, while fire, drought, storms, and pest pressure can affect timber availability. Because trees take many years to mature, supply responds slowly to price signals, and short-run changes often come from mill utilization rather than new forest output.

Demand Drivers

Demand for wood pulp is driven mainly by paper, tissue, and packaging production. Printing and writing grades use pulp for brightness, formation, and strength, while tissue and hygiene products require softness, absorbency, and bulk. Packaging demand links pulp consumption to trade in consumer goods, food distribution, and industrial shipping, since corrugated board and cartonboard rely on fiber inputs. Substitution occurs between virgin pulp and recovered paper fiber, but the two are not perfect substitutes because recycled fiber loses strength and quality over repeated cycles. This creates a persistent role for virgin pulp in grades that require long fibers or high brightness.

Demand also reflects demographic and income factors. Tissue and hygiene consumption tends to rise with urbanization, sanitation standards, and household income, while printing and writing demand is structurally affected by digital substitution. Seasonal patterns can appear in packaging and tissue production, but the broader market is tied to industrial output and consumer spending. Regulatory and environmental standards influence fiber sourcing, recycling rates, and product specifications, which can shift the balance between hardwood and softwood pulp. Because pulp is an input to many downstream products, demand is spread across several industries rather than concentrated in a single end use.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Wood pulp prices are influenced by exchange rates, especially the US dollar because international trade is commonly denominated in dollars. A stronger dollar tends to raise local-currency costs for non-dollar buyers and can affect import demand. Freight rates matter because pulp is shipped in bulk over long distances, and delivered pricing reflects ocean transport and port costs. Energy prices also matter through mill power, chemical recovery, and logistics costs. Inventory cycles can create periods of tightness or surplus because pulp is storable, though storage is costly and quality can deteriorate over time. As a result, the market can move between firmer and softer pricing structures depending on the balance of mill supply, shipping availability, and downstream purchasing behavior.

MonthPriceChange
May 201615,894.87-
Jun 201616,318.292.66%
Jul 201616,285.70-0.20%
Aug 201616,156.60-0.79%
Sep 201616,814.044.07%
Oct 201616,539.59-1.63%
Nov 201617,549.426.11%
Dec 201617,945.252.26%
Jan 201718,753.724.51%
Feb 201717,761.74-5.29%
Mar 201716,873.68-5.00%
Apr 201716,424.66-2.66%
May 201716,421.35-0.02%
Jun 201715,868.95-3.36%
Jul 201715,561.41-1.94%
Aug 201715,580.850.12%
Sep 201715,604.770.15%
Oct 201716,456.205.46%
Nov 201716,601.880.89%
Dec 201716,783.571.09%
Jan 201816,582.56-1.20%
Feb 201816,310.24-1.64%
Mar 201816,303.48-0.04%
Apr 201816,088.79-1.32%
May 201817,145.146.57%
Jun 201817,765.303.62%
Jul 201816,615.88-6.47%
Aug 201816,500.32-0.70%
Sep 201816,634.540.81%
Oct 201816,798.070.98%
Nov 201817,720.285.49%
Dec 201817,628.53-0.52%
Jan 201916,768.42-4.88%
Feb 201916,801.700.20%
Mar 201916,841.770.24%
Apr 201916,613.06-1.36%
May 201916,732.510.72%
Jun 201916,865.160.79%
Jul 201916,677.32-1.11%
Aug 201917,224.413.28%
Sep 201917,113.38-0.64%
Oct 201916,916.51-1.15%
Nov 201916,902.75-0.08%
Dec 201916,737.45-0.98%
Jan 202016,454.71-1.69%
Feb 202016,454.870.00%
Mar 202019,532.7018.70%

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