Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for holding and welcome to Suzano's conference call to discuss the results for the fourth quarter of 2021. We would like to inform that all participants will be in a listen-only mode during the presentation that will be addressed by the CEO, Mr. Walter Schalka, and other executive officers. After the company's remarks are completed, there will be a question and answer section when further instructions will be given. Should any participant need assistance during this call, please press star zero to reach the operator. Before proceeding, please be aware that any forward-looking statements are based on the beliefs and assumptions of Suzano's management and all information currently available to the company. They involve risks, uncertainties and assumptions because they relate to future events and therefore depend on circumstances that may or may not occur in the future.
You should understand the general economic conditions, industry conditions and other operating factors could also affect the future results of Suzano and could cause results to differ materially from those expressed in such forward-looking statements. Now, I would like to turn the floor over to the company's CEO. Please, Mr. Walter Schalka, you may proceed.
Good morning, everyone. It's a great pleasure to have you here with us to discuss the fourth quarter results and annual results of Suzano. I'm very pleased to have with us today the major part of our C-level. Please, if you want to have any kind of questions, please be prepared to do it to all of us. I would like to share with you that I'm very proud of the results of 2021 of Suzano. I would like to thank you publicly all of our 16,000 employees and our leadership that delivered that all-time high results of our history. Not only that, we are preparing the company for the future as well. We had extremely good volumes on pulp last year.
The paper has the outstanding results, as Fabio is going to share with us. We are able to deliver almost BRL 23.5 billion of EBITDA last year, and that was extremely positive and could allow us to reduce our net debt from $12.3 billion to $10.4 billion last year, almost $1.9 billion reduction. We did have impact from inflation, and then our cash cost was impacted from our budget and from the previous year. We are preparing the company for the future. We have extremely good position on liquidity at this point of time, and our leverage right now is 2.4 times net debt over EBITDA.
More important than the results that we had last year is that we are preparing the company for the next coming years. As you may know, we have five different strategic avenues and we are pursuing all of them. We are, on a structural basis, continuing to reduce our costs for the next coming years. We've retrofit in some of our plants with the new project, Cerrado. In addition to that, we have extremely important development on the forest side, on the reduction on the average ratios from the forest to the plant. We continue to keep our relevance on the pulp market with our new project, Cerrado. Aires is going to share with us information about this project. We continue to have vertical integration as part of our strategy.
The fluff market have been performing extremely well. We have been working on the consumer goods that have been doing well. The paper it did all-time results last year, as Fabio is going to share. Our perception and we have been working at this innovability is critical for us. We have the new addressable markets for the future. We are delivering new opportunities. One example is Spinnova that last year had their IPO with extremely good acceptance of the market. We continue to play a very important leading sustainability role for the future, and carbon markets will become even more important for the future.
Now I'm going to pass to Cristina, that is going to share our views about ESG in the last year and for the coming years.
Thank you, Walter. Good morning, everybody. 2021 was a year of continuity and ambition elevation. On the environmental front, we are again pioneers in unique and breakthrough nature conservation goals. We established biodiversity corridors goals. To our knowledge, we are the only company with a target of such nature. On the climate change front, which is so essential to our business strategy, we are raising our own bar. We adhered to the Science Based Targets initiative and the Business Ambition for 1.5 degrees. Very importantly, recognizing the imminence of climate change, we anticipated our carbon removal target from 2030 to 2025. On social, we're cognizant of the role that companies can play in equalizing society. Suzano has given a central place to diversity and inclusion.
In that sense, we are aiming to have at least 50% of racial and/or gender diversity in the final hiring stages aligned with our long-term commitments. I am very proud to share that diversity and inclusion is a target for 100% of the people in leadership positions, impacting their variable compensation. Again, this shows Suzano can be a trendsetter. In our shared value approach and increasing scope of our community impact, we made very significant progress in the achievement of our long-term poverty reduction goal. In addition, Suzano's programs and projects had the domino effect of doubling income generation. Sustainable companies have good governance, and progress on this front is a necessary lever and catalyzer for progress on the environmental and social pillars. In that sense, we gave formality to practices that were already occurring, as you can see on the slide.
Formal responsibility for ESG and risk management, mandatory periodic performance evaluation for board members, and minimum attendance. Finally, I would like to highlight the celebration worthy achievements of Suzano from last year, that signals how we have increased embeddedness of sustainability in our business strategy and operation, as well as our evolution and transparency. We raised $3.1 billion in sustainability-linked bonds and sustainability-linked loans. This has been tied to greenhouse gas emissions intensity reduction, the reduction of our industrial water use, and diversity and inclusion targets, specifically increasing women in leadership positions. This now places, as of December 2021, our debt linked to ESG at almost 40% of the company's total debt. Suzano also had in June, our first ESG call, a quantum leap to enhance engagement with our stakeholders.
Finally, on the ESG indexes and ratings, I wanna highlight and celebrate that Suzano reached an A-minus in all three Carbon Disclosure Project questionnaires: water, climate, and forest. We were coming from a B score. That's on the sustainability front, and now we're gonna speak of our paper business. Over to you, Fabio Almeida.
Thanks, Cristina, and good morning, everyone. The Paper and Packaging business unit has delivered a solid performance in the fourth quarter of 2021. Despite operational constraints and inflationary headwinds, we closed in 2021 with a record EBITDA for the business unit. Demand for paper-grade products has been strong in the domestic and international markets served by Suzano. Supported by solid demand, restrictions on the supply side due to logistics bottlenecks, and the need to recompose margins due to raw materials, energy and logistics inflation, our paper prices have risen in all markets and across all paper grades. According to IBGE, printing and writing demand in Brazil has grown 6% in the fourth quarter of 2021 when compared to the same period of 2020.
For the full year, demand has grown 19%, boosted by the easing of pandemic controls and the usage of offset paper for packaging purposes. Paper board demand has shrunk 6.3% in the fourth quarter on a year-over-year basis, given the strong comparison period of 2020 when the market was rebuilding inventories. For the year, demand for paper board grew 10% above historical trends. We have also seen solid demand for paper products in Latin America, North America, and Europe. On such context, our Q4 sales volumes were 4.3% higher than 2020 and in line with the pre-pandemic levels. Domestic sales represented 72% of our total sales in the quarter, a 5% increase compared to the same quarter of 2020.
On a quarter-over-quarter basis, our domestic sales improved 16% in volume due to a better seasonality and the continuous strong demand for packaging papers. Our net price during the quarter was 4% higher than our average price in Q3 2021, and 25% higher than Q4 2020. During the period, Suzano has successfully implemented the previously announced price increases for product lines and markets. We have also announced new price increases during Q4, which will be implemented over the next months. As a result of strong volumes and prices, revenue management and operational stability, our EBITDA has reached a new all-time high of BRL 552 million in the quarter, a 35% increase compared to the fourth quarter 2020, and a 44% increase on a year-over-year basis.
Looking ahead, our major short-term challenge remain minimizing the exogenous pressure of inflation and overcoming the continuous logistics disruptions. Regarding our continuous focus in operational efficiency, we are also strengthening our unique go-to-market strategy, reaching even more customers with our e-commerce platform, which already accounts for 24% of our total revenues and 64% when consider medium and small-sized customers. As an important milestone, sales of new products by Suzano grew about 10 times when compared to full year 2021 with full year 2020, aligned with our strategy to enlarge our addressable market and offer more sustainable packaging solutions to our customers and end users. Now, I will turn over to Leo, who will be presenting our pulp business results.
Thanks, Fabio, and good morning, everyone. Let's please move to page six of our presentation.
The results of our pulp business were again strong in the fourth quarter 2021, driven by robust sales volumes despite all logistic challenges. Price realization during the past quarters, combined with strong sales performance during the year, made us reach the record EBITDA for our pulp business unit since merger. As you will note on the top graph, our sales performance totaled 2.7 million tons in the fourth Q 2021, exceeding our sales volume in Q3 2021 and also in Q4 2020. I would like to emphasize that the great job of our sales and operational teams were determinants to reach such sales volumes. As important, maintaining our service levels to our customers despite all supply chain bottlenecks and our inventories, which remain quite tight.
The fourth quarter was marked by significant tightening of the supply demand balance as a consequence of not only supply chain constraints all over the world and of paper producers' low pulp and paper inventories, but also as a consequence of pulp demand, which has exceeded our expectations across all paper grades in Europe and North America, and also in China, where demand for hardwood pulp from our customers has topped historic levels, but still not enough to rebuild their inventories to comfortable levels. The tightening of the S&D balance, combined with inflation on input and manufacturing costs for pulp producers globally, and even more intensely on higher cash cost mills, have set a new threshold for marginal cost producers, favoring the pricing momentum, which we started to see in China and Southeast Asia during the second half of the past quarter.
According to Europulp, the pulp inventories at European ports closed the quarter at 1.1 million tons, 12% below the third quarter 2021, and more than 20% below historic monthly averages since 2018. Placed challenges to paper and paperboard producers who are running at high operating rates. In China, according to SCI, end-of-year pulp inventories at ports fell to 1.6 million tons, which is a 15% reduction compared to November. Almost 300,000 tons reduction in just one quarter, and 12% reduction compared to the third quarter 2021. Our average price for export markets for the quarter has reached $630 per ton, a 3% reduction versus our Q3 prices.
Which is a combination of stable prices in Europe and Americas, with lower and worse prices in Asia during the quarter. Currency depreciation has brought a positive effect on our prices in reais, which increased 3% during the quarter. Our consolidated 2021 price of $613 per ton was 32% higher than our 2020 price, or 38% higher when we analyze in reais terms. Now looking at our EBITDA performance, we have reached a new all-time high during the quarter, bringing our 2021 EBITDA to a record of BRL 21.4 billion with a 62% EBITDA margin. As mentioned, favored by increasing prices and FX and solid sales volumes despite higher production costs. Now looking forward, I would like to bring your attention to the following points.
By analyzing the MDIC statistics for hardwood pulp exports in 2021, it is possible to note that exports to China were reduced by almost 800,000 tons during the year. 800,000 tons. Which were mainly reverted to the European market. Most of this reduction in shipments was concentrated in the third and fourth quarters, for which the impact is yet not fully reflected in China's pulp availability and inventories. There is also a concentration of maintenance downtimes in the first quarter, which added to all unplanned downtimes, some of which supply chain related impact, impacting raw materials, should result in unexpected curtailments in bleached chemical pulp that will exceed 1,000,000 tons in just one quarter.
As a consequence of current price gaps between different regions of the world, we believe that most of this supply shock will continue to be felt in China. Additionally, price differentials which favor fluff pulp and favor dissolving pulp should keep all flex capacity directed towards these grades. As the supply curtailments that I have mentioned should be even more intensified by the challenging logistics scenario globally, we expect that the supply and demand fundamentals will continue to be quite favorable and supportive during the next months. With that said, I would now like to invite Aires to present our cash cost performance for the quarter.
Thank you, Leo. Good morning, everyone. Moving on to slide seven. The fourth quarter 2021 cash cost performance, both quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year, continued to be impacted by commodity inflation, especially grain, which in turn mainly affects input costs and the wood costs on harvesting and transportation activities. Some chemicals and steel price also took a toll against our performance. As you can see, the impact of commodity price alone accounted for 86% of total cash cost pressure in the last quarter and more than 6% on the 2021's performance. It's also worth mentioning that the quarter-over-quarter cash cost increase of 5% was in line with our forecast. Our strategy in the energy market in the context of water prices late last year resulted in a higher benefit on the cash cost compared to previous quarter.
Partially offsetting the exogenous headwinds already mentioned. For the coming quarter, commodity impacts continue to be challenging. Grains recently reached their highest price levels since 2014, and so will continue to impact the input costs and fuels. In such context, we foresee pulp cash costs ex downtimes moving north could achieve a high single digit or a low double digit in the first quarter, reaching its peak for 2022. The first quarter will also be marked by a large number of scheduled maintenance downtimes at our mills, which will represent approximately 85 BRL per ton impact on total cash production costs. Before turning to Marcelo Bacci, who will continue the presentation, I would like to emphasize that Suzano keeps focus on the modernization projects in each mills to improve even more the structural competitiveness on the longer run. Marcelo, the floor is yours.
Thank you, Aires, and good morning, everyone. Moving to page eight, we show that the Q4 was another period of very strong cash generation, and as a consequence of further deleveraging of our company. We have now reached a nominal net debt of $10.4 billion, which is $1.8 billion below the number of one year ago. That caused a leverage reduction from 4.2x to 2.4x during the year, which is very significant. We have been able to reduce our net debt, not only by $1.8 billion, but by 1.8x EBITDA during the year. It's a remarkable performance. Our debt amortization schedule is very light for the coming three years.
We have now enhanced even more our liquidity position with the new revolving credit facility that was increased from $500 million to $1.27 billion that we recently announced. Moving to page nine, we see our hedging portfolio. We've been taking advantage of the currency markets to improve continuously the quality of our portfolio. We now have, for the normal portfolio of cash flow hedges, an average put of 5.49 and an average call of 6.47, covering 70% of the gap, the currency gap we have for the coming 18 months.
In addition to that, we have started building a longer book of hedges for the Cerrado project that already has about $500 million in notional, with an average put of 6.07 and an average call of 7.66. This portfolio gives us a lot of protection, very relevant protection against the potential appreciation of the currency. Moving to page 10, we show that we closed 2021 with a CapEx figure of BRL 6.3 billion, well in line with the guidance we've been giving to the market. We reaffirm a CapEx program of BRL 13.6 billion for 2022, of which BRL 7.3 billion are related to the Cerrado project. That is specifically the next topic that Aires will cover for us.
Thank you, Marcelo. Although facing an adverse global scenario of COVID-19 pandemic and perceived supply chain disruptions in the last decades, Cerrado Project is advancing as planned, being on time and on budget. The picture on slide 11 shows the mill site status in the end of fourth quarter 2021. As important milestones in the quarter, we can highlight the progress of 80% of site work earthwork, which are crucial for the subsequent works in the rainy season, the conclusion of negotiations for a new chemical plant with Sinogen, and the agreement with Rumo to transport the future pulp volumes through Malha Norte to transport. Walter.
Well, I would like to leave the major takeaways to you. There is in the last page of the presentation. I think that despite COVID situation, despite inflation and supply chain challenges that we had last year, we had number one outstanding performance in every single part of our operations. Achieving record results and a very strong balance sheet for the future, preparing for our major investment program that we have ahead of us. We had as well a major improvement on ESG, a major improvement on our value creation to our shareholders. Just remembering that we convert debt to equity in $1.8 billion, as Marcelo mentioned. That means almost $1.5 per share on conversion debt to equity.
In addition to that, we have the Cerrado Project that is on time, on budget, and they will deliver a major value creation to our shareholders as well. Our perception is that we are addressing all the five different strategic avenues in a very positive way. Before we start the Q&A session, I would like to invite everyone to join us on March 30 to our annual Suzano Day that is going to be in a few weeks from now on March 30. It's an open invitation for you to join us on the session. Now let's go for the Q&A session.
Thank you. The floor is now open for questions. If you have a question, please press star one. The first question comes from Rafael Barcellos with Santander.
Hello, everyone. Thanks for taking my question. My first question is about pulp prices. I mean, could you please comment on the implementation of the $50 price hike announced for February orders? And other than that, what do you expect in terms of demand after the Chinese New Year? And my second question is about your strategic view on Suzano's operations. I mean, some printing and writing producers have been shifting production to packaging grades. So do you think Suzano could do something similar with its paper division? And other than that, on the pulp division side, do you think Suzano could shift some hardwood pulp production to niche markets like fluff or even dissolving pulp? And of course, here I'm talking about the pulp mills that you have a higher cash cost, right? Thank you.
Rafael, good morning. Thank you for your question. I'm gonna start with the one related to pulp prices. Before coming into February, because obviously, as we're still in the middle of the month, we cannot disclose the our effectiveness to date. I would like just to reinforce what went on in January as we have closed this month. In January, we had maintained our prices stable in North America, in the Americas and in Europe. In China, our price increase of $30 was completely implemented with no discount whatsoever. As you know, we have announced now for February $50 increase for Asia, all of the Asian market, $30 in Europe and $40 in North America. We are very confident of a successful implementation due to all the S&D favorable scenario, which I have mentioned in my opening speech.
In terms of demand in China, post-Chinese New Year, we see the following. First of all, this is usually a peak season for paper and board demand. A lot of activity, a lot of publishing and scholastic activity, which demands paper and board products. We have seen that the paper and board stocks are decreasing. We still do not have the January numbers. The December numbers was that the closing figures in China was that the final paper and board stocks were 6% lower than the third quarter 2021. The stocks are quite low of paper and boards as well. Our customers are reporting that the downstream demand is quite healthy. We see that the COVID control actions in China are being more flexible, and that the opening of other Southeastern Asian economies should support better demand and export from China.
Actually, exports from China of paper and board have been increasing directly in paper and board itself, and also indirectly in finished products from China. We have seen a positive demand so far. Just to recap, all consulting companies are seeing a positive year in China, right? Tissue with a 4% growth and board with an impressive 7% growth compared to last year.
Thank you very much, Rafael, for your question. I'm going to take the second question. It's related to our paper business for the future and the potential conversion of machines. We do believe that the printing and writing market will continue to have the secular decline in the coming years, and this will create one more balanced situation. We have right now a very tight market, global market, at this point of time.
Since we've had a lot of conversions and we have some improvements in on the demand as well, then we are very pleased that the market is very tight at this point of time. We are serving our customers and performing our agreements on a very proper way. On the other hand, we are not considering to convert any of our facilities or plants to other grades of paper. We have been growing in the fluff market. We are very pleased with the development that we are doing. I would like just to remind you that four years ago, the fluff project was just a PowerPoint. Right now we are performing extremely well. We are working at full capacity.
We have several customers on all the continents right now, with large customers moving from long fiber to short fiber or combine the two fibers as well. That is very positive. We are discussing internally what would be the next step that we are going to do in the fluff market. Thank you.
Okay. Thank you.
The next question comes from Daniel Sasson with Itaú BBA.
Good morning, everyone. Thanks for the opportunity. My first question is if you have any updates on the certification process of carbon credits. You mentioned last year that you had identified projects that could translate into close to 22 million tons of CO2 certified equivalent credits. I'd like to understand how this process is developing. My second question, maybe to Aires, if you could comment a bit on your view for your cash cost performance in 2022 versus the 2021 level. Is there more pressure from raw materials coming from you know, overall inflation that will press through your results? Or do you think that most of that is behind and we could see relatively stable cash costs going forward? Thank you.
Thank you, Daniel. I'm going to take your first question related with the global carbon market. I think it's very clear to us that this is going to be the way of financing the decarbonization of the world. We are going to see through a cap and trade system worldwide that carbon price will go up on the next coming years. This will allow the companies that would be making additionalities in terms of reductions on their carbon emission or carbon sequestration that could allow them to make some kind of monetization of these credits. We have been going through a certification of our credits in one side and waiting for the new law in Brazil that allow the negotiations of this.
We hope that this is going to happen during this year, and this would create a new opportunity to our shareholders to monetize this so important value on carbon credits in the coming years. Now I'm going to pass to Aires.
Daniel, thank you for your question. We believe that we are experiencing a cycle momentum in the cash costs, especially with the level of commodity prices. Probably our first quarter will be the worst of this cycle. It will be affected mainly by grains, the production at the highest levels in the last 10 years. We have a large number of scheduled downtimes in this period. We believe that after the first quarter, especially in the fields, we'll experience some reduction that will turn our cash costs to normal levels, slowly but in a continuous way until the end of the year.
Okay. Thanks a lot.
The next question comes from Leonardo Correa with Banco BTG Pactual.
Yes. Good morning, everyone. Thank you. My first question is on the supply picture for pulp this year. There seems to be a big divide in the market on expectations. Some think there will be major oversupply coming from all these additions. What we've been hearing at the margin has been several data points and news items which have been corroborating a thesis of slower supply, a series of maintenance stoppages, strikes. I just wanted to hear from you what your expectations are for supply, especially in the light of some of the issues, right, regarding logistics globally and supply chains. Wanted you to focus more on the supply picture.
The second question is a bit more specific, so sorry about that, but for Bacci to help us out. I mean, looking through the cash flow numbers, right, Suzano has two cash flow drags, right? Which aren't new, but could potentially be shifting over the next quarters, right? First, on the derivatives, right, Bacci, I mean, the company was criticized for the policy over the past years, and of course, things didn't play out accordingly given the currency movements, the sharp currency movements and the losses. We're now at a level where, I mean, potentially the BRL could be appreciating going forward. There already is a pretty significant interest rate differential here in Brazil versus abroad.
How do you see these expenses, right, these derivative expenses going forward? I mean, do you see a potential reversal over the next quarters? I'm also referring to the numbers specifically on leases, right? I mean, I noticed that these numbers have been increasing over the past couple of quarters. Just wanted to hear your thoughts on that as well. Thank you.
Hi, Leo. Good morning. Thank you for your question. I'm gonna take the supply side, part of it. Obviously in the short term, the S&D is very tight and supportive. Even looking at the full year 2022, which I think relates to your question, obviously, we will have to follow the dynamics and fundamentals and how they play out during the next month. I would like to highlight two main points. First of all.
All the project delays which were recently announced, that is favorable. When we couple that with the logistic constraints, we will see a reflection of a slower time to market of new pulp. This will make that the volumes that will be coming in will be more gradual and more balanced. When we add to that or when we add on top of that all the increasing unexpected downtimes, as you appropriately laid down in your question, some of which are supply chain related, impacting raw materials to pulp producers, and that's still going on. Our analysis of the supply and demand for 2022 shows a much improved S&D scenario. Actually, most market consultancies have already revised their numbers and now are reporting operating rates for 2022, which vary between 90% and 92%.
As we all know, this indicates a quite healthy and supportive S&D scenario. On top of that, there are three points that we always like to add, which are not factored into all of these forecasts or most of these forecasts, which are hardwood is gaining share on top of softwood, and most recently also gaining share from recycled fibers and recycled grades. The price gap between dissolving pulp and fluff and hardwood will obviously make flex capacity be utilized on these grades. Last but not least, several ongoing projects with brand owners to develop sustainable alternatives to single-use plastics or other less sustainable materials. This will all add and increase the demand of hardwood and of bleached chemical pulp as well.
Hello, this is Marcelo speaking. On the derivative side, you know that we have a policy that is well known by the market and that we've been applying consistently over the years. We now have a portfolio of about $4 billion of cash flow hedges covering the next 18 months. As I showed in the numbers, is protecting us very well from a potential appreciation of the currency. We don't take any bets or any views on the currency. We just apply consistently the policy. Of course, if the real continues to appreciate, we will have a reasonable protection because at the end of the day, a more appreciated currency is negative for the company.
The function of the hedging portfolio is to give a protection which is always going to be partial against that. On the leases side, the number of lease payments is increasing over time for two reasons. One is that we are improving and increasing the size of our forestry base, and part of that is on leased land. Also we've been increasing the number of vessels that we lease for our own use as dedicated vessels. This is improving the quality of our operations both on the forestry and on the shipping side. Of course, the cost for that is in the form of lease payments that is increasing over time.
Perfect. Thank you.
The next question comes from Thiago Lofiego with Bradesco BBI.
Thank you. Good morning, everyone. A couple of questions here. The first one to Grimaldi. Grimaldi, if you could comment specifically on the dissolving wood pulp market. As you mentioned, the spreads are pretty high versus hardwood pulp and other pulp grades. Do you see any swing mills that have not yet shifted to the dissolving pulp market that might shift in the near term? That's more of a general question. Within that, same question specifically about Brazil, do you think this mill is likely to shift to dissolving wood pulp in the near term? Just would like to hear your views there. The second question to Bacci. Bacci, the accounts receivables were pretty high in the fourth quarter.
Should we expect that access to be fully reversed now in the first quarter? Just to understand the dynamics there. Thank you.
Hi, Thiago. Good morning, and thank you for your question. On the dissolving side, what we see is the following. There is close to 7.5 million ton capacity of dissolving pulp in the world, of which roughly 28-30% is flex capacity. At this time, with this big gap in prices that exceed $330, we believe, obviously we're not completely sure of that because we cannot, we don't have that depth in terms of what our competition is doing. But we believe that most of this flex capacity is being used as dissolving pulp and not as paper grade pulp. Regarding your question on Brazil, we unfortunately cannot answer that. All our information is the public information, which is exactly the same one that you have.
I will not be able to help you much in that sense.
Thiago, on the receivable side, we have, as you know, with all the turmoil on the logistics, we had an abnormal concentration of sales at the end of the quarter. That created a situation where the normal sale of receivables that we do was delayed. At this point, we have done that already, but that caused a temporary increase of receivables at the end of the quarter.
Okay. Thank you, Grimaldi. Thank you, Bacci.
The next question comes from Carlos de Alba with Morgan Stanley.
Yeah. Good morning, everyone. Thank you very much for your presentation. Just a few questions on my end. Also looking at the results, SG&A increased more than what we were expecting, but also looking at the prior quarters, it was also higher year-on-year and quarter-on-quarter. What should we expect there in terms of going forward the level of a more normalized level of results? Then, coming back to the market, paper prices increased in the fourth quarter as it was said before. You expect these increases to be implemented in the coming quarters, I think I understood that. Could you maybe give us more color as to why the lag between the announcement and the price implementation?
If you could remind us of the level of prices and for what products you increased those. Finally, and sorry for squeezing a third quarter there. Bacci, is there any pattern or concentration of CapEx spending in a particular semester or quarter in the year? That would be quite useful. Thank you.
Carlos, thank you for your questions. On the SG&A side, we have two effects here. The fourth quarter is normally when we adjust our provision for variable compensation that, of course, we cannot do before because we don't know the performance of the year. As we approach the end of the year, we increased that provision, and the same happened at the end of 2020. When you compare to the previous quarter, you have basically the difference of this additional provision. On a year-over-year basis, we have inflationary effects that were partially compensated by efficiency, but there was some effect. Looking forward, we expect these inflationary pressures to continue, but we are working to compensate that with more efficiency.
On the CapEx side, we normally have some concentration in the first quarter, but this year with the Cerrado Project, we will probably have a more stable performance of CapEx over the year. No specific concentrations.
Carlos, it's Fabio here. Thanks for your question. Regarding paper prices, our paper price have risen 9% in dollar terms in our export markets in the fourth quarter. We're quite stable in the domestic market, mainly due to seasonality. As you know, we have a large volume of that goes to the federal books program, and we sell that in reals, and it's long-term contract. That was the reason that in the fourth quarter, in the domestic market, prices were stable. Regarding your questions about price announcements, we have announced a price increase for our coated woodfree for the domestic market, 35% increase, which we believe will be implemented in installments during the next months.
Because we have contracts, long-term contracts, and we need to wait for the term of these contracts in order for the price to kick in. We have also increased prices in North America by 9% effective March 2022.
Thank you very much. All the best.
The next question comes from Marcio Farid with Goldman Sachs.
Great. Thanks. Good morning, everyone. I have a couple of follow-ups. First one on the supply chain bottlenecks. I'm quite surprised to see Suzano being you know, delivering strong volumes in a quarter that was supposed to be very challenging, right? That probably proves that your supply chain is more reliable than most. Just wanted to understand if you can expect that to continue over the next few quarters and if you're seeing any signs of improvement in terms of you know, supply chain delays and supply risks in the short term. Just thinking about port logistics and international shipping as well. And the second question, Leo, you did mention obviously China momentum has been quite strong.
One of the things that has been noticed is that, you know, paper prices in China hardly reacting to the very high inflationary cost environment that we have, right? Not only fiber, but also chemicals, logistics, and fuels, everything. You know, just trying to understand how do we, you know, see paper price momentum in China picking up in the next few quarters versus your comments on low inventories and very high end demand for the region? Thanks.
Okay, Marcio. Good morning. This is Leo here. Thanks for your question. The line was not that clear, so if I don't answer it completely, you let me know, please. On the supply chain side, we actually see the situation getting worse in this first quarter of the year due to a lot of COVID contaminations in ship crews and also in port congestions throughout the world. We see this tightening and actually making the whole situation even more challenging. At this time, we don't see sensible improvements at least until the first half of 2022, which actually could easily remain until the end of the year and could maintain this pulp availability quite pressured as it is today.
There's also a factor of supply chain that we are following very closely, which is the truck and rail car situation in several regions like Europe, U.S., and especially Canada, where we are tracking local strikes. That obviously can impact further supply of wood and raw material to pulp producers and tighten even further the market. COVID is also impacting the Chinese ports. Today, the Chinese ports are operating at closed loops. No one comes in or out. There are limited number of pilots who are those who bring the vessels to berth. This is all delaying unloading operations in anywhere from 7-15 days. The situation's quite critical at the moment. We are struggling to maintain our high service levels to our customers.
I believe your second question was related to pricing and the margins of the paper producers in China and the inflationary pressure. This is actually one of the KPIs.
Of course.
Yeah. This is actually one of the KPIs that we're monitoring closely, their margins and what's going on there. We saw price increases going on at the end of last year and at the tentative in pre-Chinese New Year. Our sources say that pre-Chinese New Year, the RMB 200 price increase was implemented roughly to 60%-70%, but there is a strong belief that as we are now in a strong peak season, that increase will now be all implemented until the end of the month of February. Actually, our customers are already reporting a plan to have further price increases for the next months, which we all believe is very reasonable.
Because today the sentiment in the Chinese markets is that there is no room or no room at all to speculate against rising pulp and raw material costs. Prices have to come up to support this rising pulp and raw material costs that I have mentioned. It's also important to say that we track this margin. Or not actually margin, but the spread between their prices and pulp prices. They reached the lowest gap in mid-2021, and they have been recovering ever since. Today, printing, writing, board, and tissue all are trending over average historical values. Just as a reference, this gap, that's one of the ways to look at margin between tissue prices and pulp prices, has increased 300% since mid-2021.
The whole chain is much more healthy than it was a couple of quarters ago.
Perfect. Thanks a lot, Leo.
The next question comes from Caio Ribeiro with Bank of America.
Yes. Hi, good morning, everyone. Thank you for the opportunity. Going back to pulp price hikes, I just wanted to see, you know, how likely another pulp price hike in China for March is, in your view. Also, you know, on this topic, in the recent past, you know, we've seen paper makers in China struggling to recompose margins, in moments when pulp prices are rising very fast. We saw that last year. I know you mentioned that paper makers are hiking prices and, you know, there are expectations of further paper price hikes ahead. Would you wait for those prices to move up, and for the implementation to be successful before announcing another pulp price hike?
Secondly, going back to pulp cash costs per ton, I just wanted to see if, longer term, whether that target that you had by 2024 of BRL 560 per ton, whether you consider that to be still achievable? Thank you.
Caio, good morning. Thanks for your question. This is Leonardo here. The first part of it related to future prices. We obviously cannot go into much detail as this interferes with our commercial strategy and tactics for the coming months. What we can say is that the short term or the supply and demand fundamentals, at least for the next months, are quite supportive. If we look at the resale prices and also the prices that the Chinese and Asian producers are selling on their markets, we note more than a $100 gap over imported eucalyptus pulp price. This is also an indicator of what can come into place.
As you relate to customers' paper and board customers recomposing margins, as I mentioned in the previous question, this is one of the key variables that we track and follow. We want to make sure that the whole chain is healthy, so that is supportive. I cannot come into more details as obviously this is part of our commercial strategy and how we evaluate the levels, timing, of future increases.
Hi, Caio. Thanks for your question. As we have done annually, we bring the update of our total service operation costs in our next Suzano Day at the end of March.
Okay. Fair enough. Thank you.
Just to complement the answer, it's very important that we have been working on the structural long-term reduction on our costs with several actions as plant retrofits and increase on our land base and our forest activities close to our plants. This allow us to have lower costs in the future. On the short term, we have this impact on inflation, and we are going to give more transparency to you during the March 30 Suzano Day.
Perfect. Thank you all.
The next question comes from Cadu Szpigel with UBS.
Good morning, everyone. Thanks for the opportunity. I have a question to Leo. Leo, can you please comment on the overall level of pulp inventories at the end of the year? You said that inventories declined on a quarterly basis, and according to our calculations, inventories are down to the lowest level since 2018. I just wanted to check if you could see this maybe leading to a weaker sales performance in the coming quarters, especially with the amount of maintenance downtimes happening at the moment. Thank you very much.
Thanks, Cadu. Thanks for the one and only question to me. Yes. Just to revise what I said in my speech, we have obviously seen, and this is public information, that European stocks were down at the end of the year, according to Europulp, at 1.1 million tons. We think this is below optimum, especially in this challenging supply chain situation that we see in Europe with a slower discharge and then also internal logistics situation in the market while all producers are running at very high operating rates.
Just an additional information, which is, I think, will add further color to my answer. Our market sources just one day ago anticipated that there should be further inventory reductions in January. We are tracking, or they are tracking and have been reporting to us what's going on in Italian ports, which is a good presentation of what's going on in Europe. The expectation is of a new 6% reduction of stocks by the end of January when the January numbers are public. Even more and even further reduction in January. When we look at China, we saw the 1.6 million ton stock for the closing of the year, and the reports are now already official.
There is even a new reduction for January, a new 5% reduction. Stocks are coming down another 100,000 tons and will reach 1.5 or have reached 1.5 million tons. We are tracking what's going on on the ports and the level of activity on Chinese ports, and it doesn't seem to be a lot of vessels coming in at this time, which is related to what I mentioned in terms of the MDIC numbers and the reduction of the exports from South America into China. Our forecast, our expectations is that all this supply scenario will be so tight that the stocks will be low or lower coming forward and not recovering at least in the next couple of months.
With all the additional paper and board and tissue capacity which was added to China, our review is that a healthy level of stock to support all this production is much closer to two million tons than to 1.5 million tons. We think that this brings the market to a very tight S&D situation.
Great. Thanks, Leo. Can you comment on Suzano's own inventory position and how do they compare to historical levels?
Obviously, our inventory position, we cannot give a lot of guidance because that reflects our commercial policy. What we have been saying and I think is quite clear from our sales performance versus our production numbers, which despite we are not reporting you know our capacities, is that our stocks are operating at very low levels. We are keeping the stocks at low levels and supporting long-term and long commitment customers and maintaining our service levels there. Our stocks are quite low at this time and below optimum operational levels.
Great. Thanks, Leo.
As there are no questions, I would like to turn the floor over to the company CEO for the final considerations. Please, Mr. Walter Schalka, you may proceed.
I would like to thank all of you to join us on this session. I think it was very interesting discussion that we had. I would like just to highlight to you our vision of the future. We are impacting not only the two billion customers that we have every single month with our products, but we are impacting the society as a whole. With eight billion people working on a dimension of two major issues that we have on our society. That is how we are going to address the climate change on one side, how we are going to address the inequalities and diversity and inclusion that is quite necessary.
I'm very pleased that we have been evolving on our numbers, and we are going to share this information to you on the right time on all of our targets, ESG targets for the future. We have been developing the company and preparing the company for the future as well. We have creating value to our shareholders, but we are sharing value with all the stakeholders, and that's very positive as well as part of our culture, and we continue to do this. Our vision is that on a very humble position, Suzano is very well prepared for the future. We continue to develop our activities. We continue to move and transform the company on a better company that could impact positively the society. Thank you very much for join us, and have a very happy day. Thank you very much.
Thank you. Suzano fourth quarter results conference call is finished. Have a nice day.