Foresters
give timber owners insight into special pricing opportunities
You planted your trees 28 years ago. During
that time you have thinned your timber, plowed firebreaks, conducted prescribed
burns and maintained roads and boundaries. According to the management plan
your forester prepared years ago, your trees are nearing the end of their
economic life, and a final harvest is projected for 2009, just two years away.
Now you need to start thinking about how you will market your timber.
You may watch and study the lumber and paper
market prices. You may subscribe to Timber
Mart-South or some other stumpage price index report. You may religiously
study the prices published in the Georgia
Farm Bureau News. All of this is good, but I suggest you need an active
forester in the market working for you.
Market prices do not move up and down along a
perfect curve. There are periodic spikes and dips in the market from one mill
to another. For example, I occasionally get a call from a mill or timber buyer
delivering to a specific mill in need, desperately needing a special type
product to keep the mill running. At these times of need, they are often
willing to pay a premium price. If you have a product they need, for example
pine sawlog trees, then you can take advantage of this spike in the market to
maximize the return on your timber investment.
When you are within three years or so of your
anticipated harvest, you should begin to closely watch the timber market for a
spike in prices, or better yet, have your Georgia Farm Bureau forester watch
for you. He is in touch with the timber buyers and fully aware of what is
happening in your local market. This spike in prices is often a local increase
on a specific timber product and not an across-the-industry market adjustment.
Unless you are in the business you may not even be aware of the change in price
you are about to miss out on.
I manage several timber properties that are
nearing harvest time, and we are watching for just the right time to sell.
These timber owners plan on selling in the next year or two and have no need to
sell before then unless prices were to spike upward. It usually takes a
forester in the market to help take advantage of such an opportunity.
This actually happened recently when we had a
mill call with a specific need in a defined area. The mill was ready to pay
more than we had seen in the market for quite some time. You usually need to be
prepared to move quickly so as not waste an opportunity to profit from a
specific need at a specific moment in time.
This is another example of why it is
important to not only keep up with the timber industry overall, but to know
your local timber market as well, in order to maximize your profits from the
sell of your timber.
If you are considering selling your land or timber asset, call your Georgia Farm Bureau land and forestry experts to help make sure you get the most from your sale! Contact Jim Griffith at (478) 471-0440.
Jim
Griffith is general manager of the GFB Timber & Real Estate Companies.