TSE:CFP Canfor Q1 2026 Earnings Report C$13.70 +0.21 (+1.56%) As of 03:04 PM Eastern ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Canfor EPS ResultsActual EPS-C$0.62Consensus EPS N/ABeat/MissN/AOne Year Ago EPSN/ACanfor Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$1.36 billionExpected RevenueN/ABeat/MissN/AYoY Revenue GrowthN/ACanfor Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2026Date5/6/2026TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateThursday, May 7, 2026Conference Call Time12:00PM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress ReleaseInterim ReportEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Canfor Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 7, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Canfor's lumber segment posted adjusted EBITDA of CAD 29 million in Q1, driven by higher North American prices and lower unit manufacturing costs, though southern yellow pine prices have begun to moderate recently. Negative Sentiment: The pulp business reported an adjusted EBITDA loss of CAD 8 million as elevated inventories and weak global demand persist, even after Q1 cost improvements and the March acquisition of Canfor Pulp. Positive Sentiment: Canfor ended Q1 with approximately CAD 970 million of available liquidity and net debt (ex-duty loan) of ~CAD 530 million, forecasts 2026 capex of CAD 210 million and expects capital spending to moderate materially thereafter to boost free cash flow. Positive Sentiment: Management expects a reduction in antidumping and countervailing duties beginning in October (preliminary AR7 suggests a meaningful step-down), which should improve the competitiveness of the Canadian lumber business. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallCanfor Q1 202600:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning. My name is Kevin, and I'll be your host today. Welcome to Canfor's Q1 2026 analyst call. At this time, all participants have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. A question and answer session will be available after today's presentation. During this call, Canfor's Chief Financial Officer will be referring to a slide presentation that is available in the investor relations section of the company's website. Operator00:00:21The company would like to point out that this call will include forward-looking statements. Please refer to the press release for the associated risk of such statements. I would now like to turn the meeting over to Susan Yurkovich, Canfor Corporation President and Chief Executive Officer. Please go ahead, Susan. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:00:39Thank you, Kevin. Good morning and thanks for joining Canfor's Q1 2026 results conference call. I'm gonna open with a few comments this morning before turning things over to Pat Elliott, our Chief Financial Officer. We're also joined by Stephen Mackie, Canfor's Chief Operating Officer, Kevin Pankratz, our Senior Vice President of Sales and Marketing, and Brian Yuen, our Vice President of Pulp and Paper Sales, who are gonna be available and happy to take questions at the end. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:01:06Our lumber business generated modest EBITDA in the Q1 with improved pricing supported by seasonally higher demand and more limited supply, partly reflecting the significant capacity reductions in our industry we've seen in the last couple of years. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:01:21While supply has been somewhat constrained, lumber prices have started to moderate in recent weeks, particularly for southern yellow pine, as demand continues to be impacted by the uncertainty facing the global economy. Similarly, our pulp business continues to face significant headwinds, with elevated inventories and weak global pulp demand offsetting modest cost improvements realized in the Q1. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:01:47Notwithstanding the current economic landscape, we continue to position the business to navigate the challenges facing our industry. Our goal remains to be more resilient and better able to deliver more stable returns over the cycle. We are focused on executing our strategy, strengthening our operating platform, improving our cost competitiveness, and diversifying our business. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:02:08Looking ahead, we anticipate further reductions to our cost structure as we continue to ramp up our low-cost capacity in the U.S. South and see a reduction in our antidumping and countervailing duties beginning in October. In Europe, while results have been challenging for several quarters, we are beginning to see modest low cost relief, higher pricing, and the benefits from our acquisition of the Karl Hedin assets last September. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:02:34Following significant capital investment in recent years, we're focused on operating our low-cost sawmills efficiently as we look to optimize regional fiber supply and maximize the returns on our investment. Going forward, we are anticipating significantly lower capital requirements due to the improvements in our underlying asset base. While markets are anticipated to remain challenging in the near term, our business is well-positioned to generate strong free cash flow as the market recovers. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:03:05In addition, we've maintained a solid balance sheet, which provides us with flexibility to pursue strategic growth should the right opportunities present themselves. I'll turn it over to Pat to provide an overview of our financial results. Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:03:17Thanks, Susan, and morning, everyone. In my comments this morning, as always, I'll speak to our Q1 financial highlights, which is included in an overview slide presentation located in the investor relations section of our website. Our lumber business generated adjusted EBITDA of CAD 29 million in the Q1, CAD 37 million higher than the previous quarter. These results have been adjusted to exclude a CAD 20 million recovery of a previously recorded inventory writedown. Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:03:43Improved earnings in the Q1 largely reflected an increase in North American lumber pricing, particularly for southern yellow pine, as well as lower unit manufacturing costs. While North American lumber prices benefited from tighter supply, global demand remains challenging. As a result, our European lumber business generated adjusted EBITDA loss of CAD 12 million, CAD 4 million lower than the prior quarter. Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:04:08Looking ahead, we anticipate a modest improvement in European lumber prices, driven by seasonally higher demand and reduced supply. In addition, log costs are anticipated to decrease slightly through the balance of 2026, which should support improved earnings going forward. Our pulp business reported an adjusted EBITDA loss of CAD 8 million in the Q1, CAD 8 million better than the prior. Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:04:30While our Q1 results benefited from improvements to our underlying cost structure, global pulp markets continue to be impacted by elevated inventories and weak demand, which we believe will persist. Following Canfor's acquisition of Canfor Pulp in March, our pulp business is better positioned to manage through the current market dynamics. Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:04:48Turning to our balance sheet, following a refinancing of our credit facility in March, it ended the Q1 with available liquidity of approximately CAD 970 million and net debt excluding the duty loan of approximately CAD 530 million. We forecast capital spend of CAD 210 million in 2026, and this includes CAD 35 million for pulp and remaining spend associated with our Bruza facility in Sweden and our Iron Mountain facility in Arkansas. Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:05:17Following completion of these projects, we expect capital spend to moderate further over the next several years, supported by our strong lumber platform. With that, we're now ready to take questions from analysts. Operator00:05:31Thank you. We will now take questions from financial analysts. Our first question comes from Ben Isaacson with Scotiabank. Your line is open. Ben IsaacsonAnalyst at Scotiabank00:05:56Thank you very much, and good morning. Susan or Pat, can you talk about where you are on your cost improvement journey on a portfolio-weighted basis? I think you mentioned you're looking to lower costs in the U.S. South, but is that to really wrap up a bigger program? How should we think about the magnitude and timing of those cost improvements going forward? Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:06:22Morning, Ben. I'll get Pat to take that. Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:06:25Thanks, Ben. Morning. Obviously the last number of years with the combination of rationalization of some of the higher cost assets that we had and the new investment that we made, the significant new investment that we made, particularly in the U.S. South, we've seen a continued drop in our operating cost footprint. I would say we're the vast majority of the way through that. As you know, we're still gonna be completing the Iron Mountain project here at the end of this year, which really goes live into next year. Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:06:51There's still some efficiencies to be gained from, like, our Axis project andDeRidder are doing great, but they're still probably a little bit more to squeeze there. Hard to quantify other than to say the majority of it is sort of baked into our results already in 2026. Ben IsaacsonAnalyst at Scotiabank00:07:06Great. Thank you. Then, just two more, if I may. On Vida, can you talk about what the parameters are to consolidate that and to kind of finalize that transaction? Is there a valuation formula that's set? Is now a good time considering the market outlook is weak? Would there be operational risk if you took full ownership of that? Can you just flush that out a bit? Thank you. Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:07:34Sure. I'll keep going, Ben. Yeah, so there's a fixed mechanism for that. Both the timing and the amount are fixed. They're not impacted by current events. So that is fixed. So there's no opportunity for either side to transact before that. I would kind of roll back to the original intent with the minority ownership structure was to keep in place those sort of strong operators who had a great track record of success in our business. So we're not looking to make any change, and frankly, the agreement doesn't allow for it. Ben IsaacsonAnalyst at Scotiabank00:08:08Great. Just finally on the 25% net debt to cap ratio, can you just remind us how your creditors treat that duty deposit loan as it relates to covenant calculations? Do we subtract 9% or 10%? Is that the right way to think of it? Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:08:25No, they include it, Ben. It's included in our calcs. Yes, it's included. Ben IsaacsonAnalyst at Scotiabank00:08:31Okay. Thank you very much. Operator00:08:35One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Sean Steuart with TD Cowen. Your line is open. Sean SteuartManaging Director at TD Cowen00:08:45Thanks. Good morning, everyone. Question, follow-up question on Europe. It sounds like you have some visibility that things are going to get better gradually there. Wondering if the slump though that we've seen over the last three quarters and presuming that's representative of what's going on across the industry in that part of Europe, has that changed the M&A opportunity set at all as more opportunities come to the fore and is your ambition there at all tempered by what you've seen over the last few quarters? Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:09:21Hi, Sean. It's Susan. You know, we still really like and believe in Sweden. Of course, we did make the acquisition of the three additional Hedin mills 2023, closed, I think, in September. Those are really good additions to our portfolio and also move us into sort of middle Sweden. We have a concentration of assets in southern Sweden. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:09:44This sort of takes us into a different region, less populated, I would say, with sawmills. We still like that. We have seen our log costs moderate. I think, you know, the industry there in total is taking a bit of more disciplined approach to the purchase of fiber. We see that coming. We see those prices moderating. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:10:09It's gonna take some time, but we do see that coming back in line. We still do like that market or that jurisdiction because there's just so many, you know, they've got a lot of market opportunities there. I don't know if Kevin may want to add a couple of comments, but we do have a lot of options for our products. We have a lot of different markets and a lot of opportunities to be able to reach a lot of different customers. I don't know, Kevin, if you want to add anything else. Kevin PankratzSVP of Sales and Marketing at Canfor00:10:37No, that's good, Susan. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:10:38Yeah. Sean SteuartManaging Director at TD Cowen00:10:40The ambition would be strictly to Sweden still or broader Scandinavian interest? Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:10:47We continue to look at, you know, variety. We look at surrounding areas. We're continuing to evaluate opportunities. We like having the diversified portfolio where we've got assets in Canada, also in the U.S. and now in Europe, and we like that mix for us. We'll, you know, we'll continue to evaluate things as we move forward. Sean SteuartManaging Director at TD Cowen00:11:10Okay. One other one, Susan, on the trade file. I know you're close to it. Any perspective on lumber potentially being brought into the broader USMCA renegotiation? Any perspective on that front? Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:11:28Yeah. Just to, you know, the USMCA or CUSMA, it's not a renegotiation, it's a review. It's a 16-year agreement, we are in year six, this is a review of that agreement. I know that lumber is definitely in the mix in these discussions. It's gonna be, you know, it's a complicated environment to have those discussions. I know certainly it is certainly is one of the top issues that the government continues to raise from Canada's perspective. It is gonna take some time. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:12:03I know there's a focus on not only the duties that we are paying, that we are familiar with paying, but also the Section 232 tariffs, which are that, of course, 10% burden to our business, and also picked up other industries. You know, it's gonna take some time. I don't see anything imminent, but of course, discussions are continuing on both sides of the border, and there will be a formal process that kicks off here. You know, it's underway now, but the formal portion of those discussions will kick off this summer. Sean SteuartManaging Director at TD Cowen00:12:37Thanks for that perspective. That's all I have for now. Operator00:12:40One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Matthew McKellar with RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open. Matthew McKellarVP at RBC Capital Markets00:12:51Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Can I maybe stick with trade for a moment? The preliminary AR7 results would suggest your duty rate could step significantly lower later this year with a tighter spread to the all others rate compared to today. What should we understand about what that step lower means for your business and, I guess, how you run your Canadian business in particular and market your lumber? Thanks. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:13:16Obviously, the duties coming down that the, you know, our perspective, the duties shouldn't be there in the first place, coming down is a good thing for our business. Obviously, you know, at 56%-57%, it's very challenging to operate our Canadian business. We've done a really good job of focusing on alternate markets, of course, the U.S. is still a very big market for our product. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:13:39They need our product, they want our product, we are still selling some there. Of course, having the duties come down by 16-ish% is gonna be helpful to our Canadian business for sure. Of course, as we move forward, we expect that duty rate to come down even further. You know, that's a good thing for our business. We are at the peak. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:14:01It's been a very challenging time to operate, but we are making our way through it, and we do see a light on the, at the end of the tunnel here. Matthew McKellarVP at RBC Capital Markets00:14:12Great. Thanks. Thanks very much. Maybe next, just in North American lumber, your outlook talked about an expectation that prices may soften as supply increases with the run of better lumber prices we've seen. I guess we've seen southern yellow pine come under some pressure over the last couple weeks. Could you speak to the supply response that you're seeing so far at an industry level and maybe what that has looked like to this point after a pretty healthy run for southern yellow pine? Thanks. Stephen MackieCOO at Canfor00:14:41Sure. Hey, Matthew, it's Stephen here. Maybe I'll start, and then I can let Kevin talk a little bit about the market more broadly from a price perspective. I think on the supply side, you know, it's really difficult for us to sort of comment on what others are doing or may be doing. We do still believe that the operating rates across the U.S. South are lower than historical norms, generally for the industry. Stephen MackieCOO at Canfor00:15:03However, within our own operations, which is really all we can comment on, you know that we have made a lot of challenging decisions over the last number of years to rationalize higher cost capacity across our operating platform and optimize our portfolio of assets, make investments in additional low-cost capacity. Stephen MackieCOO at Canfor00:15:21Our focus has been to run our remaining operating facilities at full capacity, and that's what we've been working to do, is maximize the utilization rates across our fleet, and that was true in Q1 and will be true going forward. I think there's probably some waiting capacity that we may have seen folks add a few hours and take advantage of a little bit higher pricing in Southern Pine. Kevin, I don't know if you wanna add anything. Kevin PankratzSVP of Sales and Marketing at Canfor00:15:45Yeah, no, just from the Matthew McKellar, you nailed it there with the run-up in pricing from the lows that we saw in mid-December. A real, you know, rapid increase in pricing. That what really was the big catalyst, of course, was extremely low customer inventories in the field, coupled with a demand response that we hadn't seen in a while, like a fairly strong Q1 demand supported by the housing start numbers that we've recently seen. Going into Q2, we do typically see a seasonal, down drop in pricing. Of course, we're starting to see some cracks happen in that space there. Kevin PankratzSVP of Sales and Marketing at Canfor00:16:22I think what house builders and our customers are guiding to us too is just a bit more moderated demand given the uncertainty that we're seeing as a result of energy and Iran war. Matthew McKellarVP at RBC Capital Markets00:16:35Great. If I could maybe just sneak one last one in. Are there any differences we should understand about the implications of the Iran war as it relates to cost pressures or maybe even demand implications that would be different between your North American and European operations? Very, you know, difference to call out between the two segments? Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:16:56Well, I mean, you know, there's a lot of cost pressures all, in all parts of our business. Certainly, you know, we've had uncertainty in sort of because of tariff on, tariff off and a lot of volatility in the decisions coming out of the U.S. Of course, the Iran conflict adds additional uncertainty in the globe, and sort of that's certainly having an impact. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:17:25It's kinda hard to estimate what that would be and what the split would be between our European operations and our North American operations. Again, as Stephen mentioned, the focus for us is really just running as efficiently as we possibly can. I don't know, Stephen, if you wanna add anything? Stephen MackieCOO at Canfor00:17:43No, I think that's good, Susan. Matthew McKellarVP at RBC Capital Markets00:17:46Great. Thanks for all the help. I'll turn it back. Operator00:17:50One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Hamir Patel with CIBC Capital Markets. Your line is open. Hamir PatelAnalyst at CIBC Capital Markets00:18:01Hi. Good morning. Pat, you referenced CapEx this year of CAD 210 million stepping down in 2027. How should we think about just how steep that decline could be in 2027, and would that sort of be a new normal? Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:18:18Yeah. Yeah, thanks, Hamir. Yeah, obviously the 2027 capital plan is not finalized yet, but in terms of guidance, I think you're around in that 150+ level, so, you know, kind of another 20%-25% lower than where we are today. Hamir PatelAnalyst at CIBC Capital Markets00:18:34Okay, great. I guess a question for Susan. You know, now that you've taken in Canfor Pulp, how do you think about some of the sort of longer strategic decisions that you might need to do to right-size that pulp platform and you know, where sort of maybe mid-cycle production for Canfor Pulp likely settles? Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:18:56Yeah. Thanks, Hamir. Morning. Of course, you know, we've just concluded that in March, I guess it was about March 17th. We're obviously doing that work right now. We're looking at all the options for that business. Certainly, it's a challenging business, that's the work that we're doing right now. Hamir PatelAnalyst at CIBC Capital Markets00:19:16Yep. Fair enough. That's all I had. I'll turn it over. Thanks. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:19:21Thanks, Hamir. Operator00:19:23At this time, I'm not showing any further questions. I'd like to turn the call back to Susan for any closing remarks. Please go ahead, Susan. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:19:30Thanks very much for joining us. We'll see you all next quarter. Operator00:19:36Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's presentation. We thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect and have a wonderful day.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesKevin PankratzSVP of Sales and MarketingPat ElliottCFOStephen MackieCOOSusan YurkovichPresident and CEOAnalystsBen IsaacsonAnalyst at ScotiabankHamir PatelAnalyst at CIBC Capital MarketsMatthew McKellarVP at RBC Capital MarketsSean SteuartManaging Director at TD CowenPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress ReleaseInterim report Canfor Earnings HeadlinesCanfor (TSE:CFP) Shares Cross Above Two Hundred Day Moving Average - Here's WhyMay 29 at 3:17 AM | americanbankingnews.comAssessing Canfor (TSX:CFP) Valuation After Recent Share Price Weakness And Big Gap To Sales And DCF EstimatesMay 19, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comYour book is insideThe "Sucker's Bet" Most New Options Traders Fall For Most people who try options lose money the same way. They don't know the rules. They don't know what to avoid. And they hand their account to Wall Street on a silver platter. Normally $29.97. Free today.May 29 at 1:00 AM | Profits Run (Ad)Vida AB to close two sawmills in southern SwedenMay 18, 2026 | financialpost.comFCanfor Corporation (CFP:CA) Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptMay 8, 2026 | seekingalpha.comCanfor Corporation: Canfor reports results for the first quarter of 2026May 6, 2026 | finanznachrichten.deSee More Canfor Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Canfor? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Canfor and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About CanforCanfor (TSE:CFP) Corp is a global leader in the manufacturing of high-value low-carbon forest products including dimension and specialty lumber, engineered wood products, pulp and paper, wood pellets and green energy. Proudly headquartered in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canfor Corp produces renewable products from sustainably managed forests, at more than 50 facilities across its diversified operating platform in Canada, the United States and Europe. Canfor Corp has a 77% stake in Vida AB, Sweden's largest privately owned sawmill company and also owns, approximately, a 54.8% interest in Canfor Pulp.View Canfor ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Latest Articles Shares Fall, Targets Rise—Markets and Analysts Diverge on SynopsysDollar Tree Keeps Winning After Family Dollar DivorceSalesforce Stock Finds Support as AI Momentum BuildsMarvell’s Pullback May Be the Setup Bulls Were Waiting ForSnowflake and the Snowballing Impact of its AI FlywheelPalomar’s High-Risk Insurance Strategy Is Paying Off BigThis Quantum Computing Stock May Be Closer to a Breakout Than You Think Upcoming Earnings Hewlett Packard Enterprise (6/1/2026)Palo Alto Networks (6/2/2026)Broadcom (6/3/2026)CrowdStrike (6/3/2026)Medtronic (6/3/2026)Ciena (6/4/2026)Oracle (6/10/2026)Adobe (6/11/2026)Accenture (6/18/2026)FedEx (6/23/2026) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning. My name is Kevin, and I'll be your host today. Welcome to Canfor's Q1 2026 analyst call. At this time, all participants have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. A question and answer session will be available after today's presentation. During this call, Canfor's Chief Financial Officer will be referring to a slide presentation that is available in the investor relations section of the company's website. Operator00:00:21The company would like to point out that this call will include forward-looking statements. Please refer to the press release for the associated risk of such statements. I would now like to turn the meeting over to Susan Yurkovich, Canfor Corporation President and Chief Executive Officer. Please go ahead, Susan. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:00:39Thank you, Kevin. Good morning and thanks for joining Canfor's Q1 2026 results conference call. I'm gonna open with a few comments this morning before turning things over to Pat Elliott, our Chief Financial Officer. We're also joined by Stephen Mackie, Canfor's Chief Operating Officer, Kevin Pankratz, our Senior Vice President of Sales and Marketing, and Brian Yuen, our Vice President of Pulp and Paper Sales, who are gonna be available and happy to take questions at the end. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:01:06Our lumber business generated modest EBITDA in the Q1 with improved pricing supported by seasonally higher demand and more limited supply, partly reflecting the significant capacity reductions in our industry we've seen in the last couple of years. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:01:21While supply has been somewhat constrained, lumber prices have started to moderate in recent weeks, particularly for southern yellow pine, as demand continues to be impacted by the uncertainty facing the global economy. Similarly, our pulp business continues to face significant headwinds, with elevated inventories and weak global pulp demand offsetting modest cost improvements realized in the Q1. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:01:47Notwithstanding the current economic landscape, we continue to position the business to navigate the challenges facing our industry. Our goal remains to be more resilient and better able to deliver more stable returns over the cycle. We are focused on executing our strategy, strengthening our operating platform, improving our cost competitiveness, and diversifying our business. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:02:08Looking ahead, we anticipate further reductions to our cost structure as we continue to ramp up our low-cost capacity in the U.S. South and see a reduction in our antidumping and countervailing duties beginning in October. In Europe, while results have been challenging for several quarters, we are beginning to see modest low cost relief, higher pricing, and the benefits from our acquisition of the Karl Hedin assets last September. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:02:34Following significant capital investment in recent years, we're focused on operating our low-cost sawmills efficiently as we look to optimize regional fiber supply and maximize the returns on our investment. Going forward, we are anticipating significantly lower capital requirements due to the improvements in our underlying asset base. While markets are anticipated to remain challenging in the near term, our business is well-positioned to generate strong free cash flow as the market recovers. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:03:05In addition, we've maintained a solid balance sheet, which provides us with flexibility to pursue strategic growth should the right opportunities present themselves. I'll turn it over to Pat to provide an overview of our financial results. Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:03:17Thanks, Susan, and morning, everyone. In my comments this morning, as always, I'll speak to our Q1 financial highlights, which is included in an overview slide presentation located in the investor relations section of our website. Our lumber business generated adjusted EBITDA of CAD 29 million in the Q1, CAD 37 million higher than the previous quarter. These results have been adjusted to exclude a CAD 20 million recovery of a previously recorded inventory writedown. Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:03:43Improved earnings in the Q1 largely reflected an increase in North American lumber pricing, particularly for southern yellow pine, as well as lower unit manufacturing costs. While North American lumber prices benefited from tighter supply, global demand remains challenging. As a result, our European lumber business generated adjusted EBITDA loss of CAD 12 million, CAD 4 million lower than the prior quarter. Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:04:08Looking ahead, we anticipate a modest improvement in European lumber prices, driven by seasonally higher demand and reduced supply. In addition, log costs are anticipated to decrease slightly through the balance of 2026, which should support improved earnings going forward. Our pulp business reported an adjusted EBITDA loss of CAD 8 million in the Q1, CAD 8 million better than the prior. Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:04:30While our Q1 results benefited from improvements to our underlying cost structure, global pulp markets continue to be impacted by elevated inventories and weak demand, which we believe will persist. Following Canfor's acquisition of Canfor Pulp in March, our pulp business is better positioned to manage through the current market dynamics. Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:04:48Turning to our balance sheet, following a refinancing of our credit facility in March, it ended the Q1 with available liquidity of approximately CAD 970 million and net debt excluding the duty loan of approximately CAD 530 million. We forecast capital spend of CAD 210 million in 2026, and this includes CAD 35 million for pulp and remaining spend associated with our Bruza facility in Sweden and our Iron Mountain facility in Arkansas. Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:05:17Following completion of these projects, we expect capital spend to moderate further over the next several years, supported by our strong lumber platform. With that, we're now ready to take questions from analysts. Operator00:05:31Thank you. We will now take questions from financial analysts. Our first question comes from Ben Isaacson with Scotiabank. Your line is open. Ben IsaacsonAnalyst at Scotiabank00:05:56Thank you very much, and good morning. Susan or Pat, can you talk about where you are on your cost improvement journey on a portfolio-weighted basis? I think you mentioned you're looking to lower costs in the U.S. South, but is that to really wrap up a bigger program? How should we think about the magnitude and timing of those cost improvements going forward? Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:06:22Morning, Ben. I'll get Pat to take that. Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:06:25Thanks, Ben. Morning. Obviously the last number of years with the combination of rationalization of some of the higher cost assets that we had and the new investment that we made, the significant new investment that we made, particularly in the U.S. South, we've seen a continued drop in our operating cost footprint. I would say we're the vast majority of the way through that. As you know, we're still gonna be completing the Iron Mountain project here at the end of this year, which really goes live into next year. Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:06:51There's still some efficiencies to be gained from, like, our Axis project andDeRidder are doing great, but they're still probably a little bit more to squeeze there. Hard to quantify other than to say the majority of it is sort of baked into our results already in 2026. Ben IsaacsonAnalyst at Scotiabank00:07:06Great. Thank you. Then, just two more, if I may. On Vida, can you talk about what the parameters are to consolidate that and to kind of finalize that transaction? Is there a valuation formula that's set? Is now a good time considering the market outlook is weak? Would there be operational risk if you took full ownership of that? Can you just flush that out a bit? Thank you. Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:07:34Sure. I'll keep going, Ben. Yeah, so there's a fixed mechanism for that. Both the timing and the amount are fixed. They're not impacted by current events. So that is fixed. So there's no opportunity for either side to transact before that. I would kind of roll back to the original intent with the minority ownership structure was to keep in place those sort of strong operators who had a great track record of success in our business. So we're not looking to make any change, and frankly, the agreement doesn't allow for it. Ben IsaacsonAnalyst at Scotiabank00:08:08Great. Just finally on the 25% net debt to cap ratio, can you just remind us how your creditors treat that duty deposit loan as it relates to covenant calculations? Do we subtract 9% or 10%? Is that the right way to think of it? Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:08:25No, they include it, Ben. It's included in our calcs. Yes, it's included. Ben IsaacsonAnalyst at Scotiabank00:08:31Okay. Thank you very much. Operator00:08:35One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Sean Steuart with TD Cowen. Your line is open. Sean SteuartManaging Director at TD Cowen00:08:45Thanks. Good morning, everyone. Question, follow-up question on Europe. It sounds like you have some visibility that things are going to get better gradually there. Wondering if the slump though that we've seen over the last three quarters and presuming that's representative of what's going on across the industry in that part of Europe, has that changed the M&A opportunity set at all as more opportunities come to the fore and is your ambition there at all tempered by what you've seen over the last few quarters? Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:09:21Hi, Sean. It's Susan. You know, we still really like and believe in Sweden. Of course, we did make the acquisition of the three additional Hedin mills 2023, closed, I think, in September. Those are really good additions to our portfolio and also move us into sort of middle Sweden. We have a concentration of assets in southern Sweden. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:09:44This sort of takes us into a different region, less populated, I would say, with sawmills. We still like that. We have seen our log costs moderate. I think, you know, the industry there in total is taking a bit of more disciplined approach to the purchase of fiber. We see that coming. We see those prices moderating. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:10:09It's gonna take some time, but we do see that coming back in line. We still do like that market or that jurisdiction because there's just so many, you know, they've got a lot of market opportunities there. I don't know if Kevin may want to add a couple of comments, but we do have a lot of options for our products. We have a lot of different markets and a lot of opportunities to be able to reach a lot of different customers. I don't know, Kevin, if you want to add anything else. Kevin PankratzSVP of Sales and Marketing at Canfor00:10:37No, that's good, Susan. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:10:38Yeah. Sean SteuartManaging Director at TD Cowen00:10:40The ambition would be strictly to Sweden still or broader Scandinavian interest? Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:10:47We continue to look at, you know, variety. We look at surrounding areas. We're continuing to evaluate opportunities. We like having the diversified portfolio where we've got assets in Canada, also in the U.S. and now in Europe, and we like that mix for us. We'll, you know, we'll continue to evaluate things as we move forward. Sean SteuartManaging Director at TD Cowen00:11:10Okay. One other one, Susan, on the trade file. I know you're close to it. Any perspective on lumber potentially being brought into the broader USMCA renegotiation? Any perspective on that front? Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:11:28Yeah. Just to, you know, the USMCA or CUSMA, it's not a renegotiation, it's a review. It's a 16-year agreement, we are in year six, this is a review of that agreement. I know that lumber is definitely in the mix in these discussions. It's gonna be, you know, it's a complicated environment to have those discussions. I know certainly it is certainly is one of the top issues that the government continues to raise from Canada's perspective. It is gonna take some time. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:12:03I know there's a focus on not only the duties that we are paying, that we are familiar with paying, but also the Section 232 tariffs, which are that, of course, 10% burden to our business, and also picked up other industries. You know, it's gonna take some time. I don't see anything imminent, but of course, discussions are continuing on both sides of the border, and there will be a formal process that kicks off here. You know, it's underway now, but the formal portion of those discussions will kick off this summer. Sean SteuartManaging Director at TD Cowen00:12:37Thanks for that perspective. That's all I have for now. Operator00:12:40One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Matthew McKellar with RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open. Matthew McKellarVP at RBC Capital Markets00:12:51Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Can I maybe stick with trade for a moment? The preliminary AR7 results would suggest your duty rate could step significantly lower later this year with a tighter spread to the all others rate compared to today. What should we understand about what that step lower means for your business and, I guess, how you run your Canadian business in particular and market your lumber? Thanks. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:13:16Obviously, the duties coming down that the, you know, our perspective, the duties shouldn't be there in the first place, coming down is a good thing for our business. Obviously, you know, at 56%-57%, it's very challenging to operate our Canadian business. We've done a really good job of focusing on alternate markets, of course, the U.S. is still a very big market for our product. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:13:39They need our product, they want our product, we are still selling some there. Of course, having the duties come down by 16-ish% is gonna be helpful to our Canadian business for sure. Of course, as we move forward, we expect that duty rate to come down even further. You know, that's a good thing for our business. We are at the peak. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:14:01It's been a very challenging time to operate, but we are making our way through it, and we do see a light on the, at the end of the tunnel here. Matthew McKellarVP at RBC Capital Markets00:14:12Great. Thanks. Thanks very much. Maybe next, just in North American lumber, your outlook talked about an expectation that prices may soften as supply increases with the run of better lumber prices we've seen. I guess we've seen southern yellow pine come under some pressure over the last couple weeks. Could you speak to the supply response that you're seeing so far at an industry level and maybe what that has looked like to this point after a pretty healthy run for southern yellow pine? Thanks. Stephen MackieCOO at Canfor00:14:41Sure. Hey, Matthew, it's Stephen here. Maybe I'll start, and then I can let Kevin talk a little bit about the market more broadly from a price perspective. I think on the supply side, you know, it's really difficult for us to sort of comment on what others are doing or may be doing. We do still believe that the operating rates across the U.S. South are lower than historical norms, generally for the industry. Stephen MackieCOO at Canfor00:15:03However, within our own operations, which is really all we can comment on, you know that we have made a lot of challenging decisions over the last number of years to rationalize higher cost capacity across our operating platform and optimize our portfolio of assets, make investments in additional low-cost capacity. Stephen MackieCOO at Canfor00:15:21Our focus has been to run our remaining operating facilities at full capacity, and that's what we've been working to do, is maximize the utilization rates across our fleet, and that was true in Q1 and will be true going forward. I think there's probably some waiting capacity that we may have seen folks add a few hours and take advantage of a little bit higher pricing in Southern Pine. Kevin, I don't know if you wanna add anything. Kevin PankratzSVP of Sales and Marketing at Canfor00:15:45Yeah, no, just from the Matthew McKellar, you nailed it there with the run-up in pricing from the lows that we saw in mid-December. A real, you know, rapid increase in pricing. That what really was the big catalyst, of course, was extremely low customer inventories in the field, coupled with a demand response that we hadn't seen in a while, like a fairly strong Q1 demand supported by the housing start numbers that we've recently seen. Going into Q2, we do typically see a seasonal, down drop in pricing. Of course, we're starting to see some cracks happen in that space there. Kevin PankratzSVP of Sales and Marketing at Canfor00:16:22I think what house builders and our customers are guiding to us too is just a bit more moderated demand given the uncertainty that we're seeing as a result of energy and Iran war. Matthew McKellarVP at RBC Capital Markets00:16:35Great. If I could maybe just sneak one last one in. Are there any differences we should understand about the implications of the Iran war as it relates to cost pressures or maybe even demand implications that would be different between your North American and European operations? Very, you know, difference to call out between the two segments? Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:16:56Well, I mean, you know, there's a lot of cost pressures all, in all parts of our business. Certainly, you know, we've had uncertainty in sort of because of tariff on, tariff off and a lot of volatility in the decisions coming out of the U.S. Of course, the Iran conflict adds additional uncertainty in the globe, and sort of that's certainly having an impact. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:17:25It's kinda hard to estimate what that would be and what the split would be between our European operations and our North American operations. Again, as Stephen mentioned, the focus for us is really just running as efficiently as we possibly can. I don't know, Stephen, if you wanna add anything? Stephen MackieCOO at Canfor00:17:43No, I think that's good, Susan. Matthew McKellarVP at RBC Capital Markets00:17:46Great. Thanks for all the help. I'll turn it back. Operator00:17:50One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Hamir Patel with CIBC Capital Markets. Your line is open. Hamir PatelAnalyst at CIBC Capital Markets00:18:01Hi. Good morning. Pat, you referenced CapEx this year of CAD 210 million stepping down in 2027. How should we think about just how steep that decline could be in 2027, and would that sort of be a new normal? Pat ElliottCFO at Canfor00:18:18Yeah. Yeah, thanks, Hamir. Yeah, obviously the 2027 capital plan is not finalized yet, but in terms of guidance, I think you're around in that 150+ level, so, you know, kind of another 20%-25% lower than where we are today. Hamir PatelAnalyst at CIBC Capital Markets00:18:34Okay, great. I guess a question for Susan. You know, now that you've taken in Canfor Pulp, how do you think about some of the sort of longer strategic decisions that you might need to do to right-size that pulp platform and you know, where sort of maybe mid-cycle production for Canfor Pulp likely settles? Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:18:56Yeah. Thanks, Hamir. Morning. Of course, you know, we've just concluded that in March, I guess it was about March 17th. We're obviously doing that work right now. We're looking at all the options for that business. Certainly, it's a challenging business, that's the work that we're doing right now. Hamir PatelAnalyst at CIBC Capital Markets00:19:16Yep. Fair enough. That's all I had. I'll turn it over. Thanks. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:19:21Thanks, Hamir. Operator00:19:23At this time, I'm not showing any further questions. I'd like to turn the call back to Susan for any closing remarks. Please go ahead, Susan. Susan YurkovichPresident and CEO at Canfor00:19:30Thanks very much for joining us. We'll see you all next quarter. Operator00:19:36Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's presentation. We thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect and have a wonderful day.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesKevin PankratzSVP of Sales and MarketingPat ElliottCFOStephen MackieCOOSusan YurkovichPresident and CEOAnalystsBen IsaacsonAnalyst at ScotiabankHamir PatelAnalyst at CIBC Capital MarketsMatthew McKellarVP at RBC Capital MarketsSean SteuartManaging Director at TD CowenPowered by