The export market for New Zealand forestry products is stabilising.
It has been helped by the weakening kiwi dollar, reduced inventories in China and increased domestic housing demand in the US, say industry analysts.
Meanwhile, domestic demand was strong, fuelled by buoyant housing markets in Auckland, growth in the Tauranga housing market, and the continuing Canterbury rebuild, they said.
Export log prices rose in June after three months of significant falls, said Peter Weblin, Rotorua-based chief marketing manager for forestry management company PF Olsen.
Most at-wharf-gate dollar June pricing appeared to be based on A-grade at about US$100 ($147), up from a low of US$95 in May, he said. Log stocks in China continued to fall steadily through May, reducing by nearly 200,000cu m to an estimated 3.87 million cubic metres. That was down from the peak of 4.27 million cu m at the start of April.