DewDiligence
3 years ago
WY is no PCL:
PCL, which was a pure-play timberlands company, was a fine inflation hedge. On the other hand, WY (which acquired PCL in an all-stock deal in 2015) is no such thing. In 1Q22, only 15% of WY’s EBITDA came from its timberlands segment. The remaining 85% of 1Q22 EBITDA came from: lumber and other manufactured wood products (77%); and real-estate/energy (7%).
For the trailing four quarters (i.e. 2Q21-1Q22), the EBITDA breakdown was essentially the same as in 1Q22: timberlands 16%; lumber and manufactured wood products (77%); and real-estate/energy (7%).
See slide #23 at: https://investor.weyerhaeuser.com/download/WY+Q1+2022+Earnings+web+slides.pdf
All told, WY is a essentially a taxable manufacturing company that is structured as an REIT at the parent-company level. As such, it’s more of a bet on the US housing market than a timber-based inflation hedge.
DewDiligence
5 years ago
WY implements COVID-19-related cutbacks to manufacturing operations—timberland operations are little changed:
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/106535/000156459020014260/wy-ex991_22.htm In response to recent changes in customer sentiment and order flow, Weyerhaeuser is dynamically adjusting operating capacity at certain of its manufacturing facilities. For the month of April, the company expects to reduce operating capacity by approximately 20 percent for lumber, 15 percent for oriented strand board, and 15 to 25 percent for engineered wood products through a combination of temporary mill curtailments and reduced shift postures.
…The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has designated the forest products industry as an “essential critical infrastructure workforce.” This designation recognizes the importance of timber and wood products operations in supporting critical infrastructure and construction projects and the manufacture of important personal hygiene items. I.e., wood pulp feedstock for toilet paper and diapers.