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Made-in-U.S.A. Lumber Futures Are Coming to Wall Street
Abundant pine trees in the South have made it North America’s most productive lumber region.
Abundant pine trees in the South have made it North America’s most productive lumber region. - Angela Owens/WSJ

Lumber producers have migrated from Canada to the U.S. South. Now lumber-futures trading is heading to the Southern pineries as well.

The exchange operator CME Group said it would launch trading in Southern yellow pine futures on March 31, a response to rising export taxes on Canadian lumber that have pushed benchmark wood prices well above those paid in the South.

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The futures contracts—ticker: SYP—will give the South’s loblolly planters, loggers, sawmills, pressure treaters and builders a mechanism to manage their exposure to price swings that is more in line with the local market than existing futures.

The lumber futures that trade now are tied to deliveries of boards made from Northern conifers, namely Canadian spruce, pine and fir. Builders like those species for the wood’s light weight and easy nailing. Existing futures exclude Southern yellow pine, which is a lot heavier and preferred for fences and decks because it works well with waterproofing and stain.

Traders and the exchange have for years discussed Southern yellow pine futures as the region’s production grew to be more than 36% of North American softwood lumber output.

Now that Northern lumber is a lot more expensive, they are saying the time is right.

“There was a breakdown in the correlation between Southern yellow pine prices and the spruce-pine-fir prices, especially since a lot of it came from Canada,” said David Becker, risk-solutions director at Fastmarkets, which owns the lumber-trade publication and pricing service Random Lengths. It reports the Southern pine price benchmark that the new futures will be settled against.

Random Lengths’s Southern Pine Composite Index ended last week at $422 per thousand board feet. Lumber futures, meanwhile, rose to a 30-month high, ending Monday at $666 as traders reacted to President Trump’s swerving tariff threats.

Canfor, which owns sawmills in Canada and the U.S. South, told investors Friday that it believed lumber was among the products that received a one-month exemption from a 25% tariff Trump placed on Canadian goods earlier in the week.

Chief Executive Susan Yurkovich said customs brokers weren’t collecting the 25% tariff. That might not last, though. Later Friday, Trump made fresh threats to add tariffs to Canadian lumber.