I recently listened to the Plum Creek earnings report and management specifically commented upon weather conditions in the southeast US creating supply problems. To quote from a SeekingAlpha article:
A lot of this lumber is filling inventories; it is concern over wet weather. As we mentioned, lot of these mills especially in the southern United States are very short inventory, and therefore there is not a lot of lumber inventory in the system.
I was down in Mississippi, Louisiana, and Arkansas last week, and what my guess is that half the forests are inoperable, and I don’t what it was like two months ago. I know they got some 9 inches of rain in one day. It’s a severe problem, and most areas you can’t operate in today. They need two or three or four weeks of dry weather so that we can get into a lot of these areas. That’s why inventories are so tight in that region. So it’s a huge issue.
Furthermore quite a few directors and officers of Plum Creek sold some of their holdings a few days after the earnings report:
CROWE BARBARA L 591For a total of 14,174 shares. No one purchased shares, all were sales. (Source)
JIRSA ROBERT J 224
TUCKER DANIEL L 251
HOLLEY RICK R 4,376
BROWN DAVID A. 611
HOBBS JOHN B 178
LINDQUIST THOMAS M 2,097
RICKLEFS HENRY K 582
Wilson Nancy L 254
KRAFT JAMES A 604
LAMBERT DAVID W 1,076
KILBERG JAMES A 1,275
NEILSON LARRY D 776
REED THOMAS M 655
FITZMAURICE JOAN K 624
I'm not disparaging Plum Creek or their officers / managers for selling off a small portion of their shares, but doesn't the comment about a short term weather phenomenon spiking lumber prices and quite a few officers unanimously selling their shares cause you to reconsider the short term valuation of the company?
I have followed Plum Creek on and off for several years and right now have a very small (just one contract) short call spread position on the company. It is a company I may very well own in the future if the price is right. Right now I do not foresee a strong housing rebound and my position is due to valuation issues. The price of both lumber and PCL have already had their run in my opinion.
p. s. I would not call lumber futures a 'secret sauce' unconventional indicator. It is a publicly traded futures contract available on stockcharts.com and everywhere else. The implication you are revealing your sekrets is vaguely insulting.