Hicksville, N.Y.—According to one of the leading industry associations as
well as some wood flooring executives, the hardwood category enjoyed a strong
2004, with even more positive developments seen on the horizon for 2005.
Hardwood flooring shipments for October 2004 were 60,493,000 board feet, the
highest level since June of 2004, according to industry sources. Figures for the
same month in 2003 show shipments of 66,107,000 board feet. The October 2003
numbers, however, were a statistical anomaly in that those figures included a
significant amount of product from a specific manufacturer that was reported as
October shipments but in reality had shipped earlier in the year.
More compelling is the fact that October represents the second best month for
shipments in 2004 and is the third month this year shipments have topped 60
million board feet. Prior to 2004 (and excluding the October 2003 anomaly), the
60 million-foot figure was last topped in June 2001. Cumulative shipments for
the past 12 months were 667,790,000 board feet, some 34 million feet, or 5%,
higher than the same 12-month period one year earlier. Year-to-date shipments
for the first 10 months of 2004 are 563,845,000 board feet, about 6.5% higher
than the same period in 2003. Shipments through 10 months of 2003 were
529,169,000 board feet.
“We’ve experienced double digit increases [for 2004],” said Chris Thompson,
Mirage’s vice president of sales and marketing, “and have exceeded our
expectations.” While 2005 will see some “modest increases” in price due to
energy and other costs, noted Thompson, “we still had excellent growth across
the board in 2004, including both traditional and exotic wood products. Our
exotics did well, but to meet budget you’ve got to grow across the board and
that’s what we did.” While the year has been solid, he noted, 2004 saw some
obstacles for Mirage.
“The biggest challenge we faced this year involved capacity. What we did
about that was, we doubled the capacity of our engineered product. If you asked
any of our customers, that would probably have been their biggest issue with our
company, that they wanted more engineered products. So, to address the issue, we
doubled our capacity for 2005.” “On a broad scale, an issue for 2005 that
everyone in the industry faces is the housing market,” he explained, “and what
is going to happen there with the impact of rising interest rates. What can we
do about the interest rates? I don’t know if there is anything you can do about
it. You just have to be aware of it and make whatever modifications or
adjustments you can along the way with regard to what is happening in the
marketplace.”
Economically speaking for 2005, Thompson noted, if the first month following
the election is any indication, things look extremely positive. “Many dealers
said, in October, leading up to the election, that their retail businesses had
been very stagnant. What I’ve heard since, from across the board on the retail
side is, things have been extremely positive for the last month.” John Woolsey,
director of marketing for Anderson, noting the hurdles the mill overcame during
the past year, said, “We did very well in 2004—it was another record year for
us. We almost doubled our display placements with our new, Anderson Appalachian
Fashion Showcase unit. We almost put as many of those out as we had existing
displays in the marketplace. Several buying groups took on the line during the
year. We’re not making product for them, it’s under our own brand. This is
important to us as we believe our brand has value in the marketplace.
“We’ve also strengthened our distribution nationwide,” he added. “These were
all things that were actively on our list that we felt we needed to accomplish
in order to have the growth that we’re looking for both this year and also,
going into 2005.” On pricing, Woolsey noted, Anderson had some very slight
adjustments and “we hadn’t raised our price in about eight years. We did have
some small increases, all of which were under 3%. They were selective.” On
trends, Woolsey noted, the handcrafted products Anderson is known for is what
the company had the most success with throughout the year. “That is not strictly
limited to handscraped products, as we’ve seen a lot of them come into the
market this year.
What is interesting is, Virgina Vintage, our primary handscraped product, and
Delamano, both of them had huge increases this year. So we haven’t seen much
effect from all the competitive and Chinese handscraped products that have now
come into the market. Whether we will in the future, we just don’t know. “The
biggest problem I’ve seen with exotics in 2004,” he continued, “was
availability, particularly the stuff coming out of South Amercia. I know one
company in particular that had real challenges getting product out of the ports
of Brazil in late spring and early summer. I don’t know if it has resolved all
of the problems yet or not but it was common knowledge in the marketplace. There
are a couple problems with all your exotics.
“One of them is,” he explained, “consistency, meaning the shipment that you
get this month is the same as the shipment you received the month before and
matches the sample you have in your rack. Secondly, you’re pulling product on
the water. You’re at the mercy of, not only your ports and labor unrest, but
also the ports they’re debarking from. “Exotic is such a broad category now,”
added Woolsey. “We can talk about it coming from the Pacific Rim, Central or
South Amercia or even Africa and Australia. Certainly, they’ve generated
interest in the marketplace and we have seen increases in ours. And we’ll
probably introduce more for next year.”
Two things Anderson is very sensitive to is, he noted, is being able to
assure consistency in supply and also in product. The other is “what we call,
chain of custody. That is, there is a lot of product, particularly coming out of
the Pacific Rim, that is coming from illegal logging, both from Indonesia and
Malasyia. We’re very committed to making sure that everything we sell doesn’t
come from either illegal logging activities and activities that are stripping
the environment. This goes way back with our company.”Market research continues
to show the solid market is shrinking, noted Woolsey.
“It’s shrinking at about 3% a year, while at the same time engineered is
growing at about 3% per year. So there is a 6% a year change going on since
2001. We’ve seen this consistently. This means, however, that solids are still a
substantial part of the marketplace and they are not going to go away. But, at
the same time, from Anderson’s perspective, we are staying out of the
commodities solid business. “We’ve entered, what I’d call,” he explained, “the
high-end, BMW handcrafted solid business, and the industry will see more of that
next year.” Going into next year, Woolsey noted, assuming the economy continues
to expand, “the displays we’ve invested in are going to pay off next year, as
well as our relationships with the buying groups, so we hope to do even better
in 2005.”