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Conifex Timber Inc T.CFF

Alternate Symbol(s):  CFXTF

Conifex Timber Inc. is a Canada-based forest products company, which operates fiber baskets in North America, northern British Columbia. The Company produces lumber products and renewable energy from its sawmill and bioenergy plant in Mackenzie, British Columbia. Its lumber products are sold in the United States, Canadian and Japanese markets. It also produces bioenergy at its power generation facility at Mackenzie, British Columbia. Its lumber products include J-GRADE, 2 AND BETTER, SELECT, STUDS, ECONOMY and 3. The Company operates a two-line sawmill in Mackenzie, British Columbia (the Mackenzie Mill). Its Mackenzie Mill has approximately 240 million board feet of annual lumber capacity on a two-shift basis. It operates a 36-megawatt biomass power generation plant in Mackenzie, British Columbia (the Power Plant), located at the site of its Mackenzie Mill. Its Power Plant's output capacity is in excess of 230 gigawatt hours (GWh) of electricity per year.


TSX:CFF - Post by User

Post by dosperroson Dec 16, 2020 3:13pm
161 Views
Post# 32120771

An anecdote -- supporting return of capital

An anecdote -- supporting return of capitalI've commented before about business people vs. forestry people in leadership roles.  One possible source of daylight is in ideas like "efficient" vs. inefficient" balance sheets.  We know that debt is a lower cost of capital than equity, so some debt is good.  It's not always intuitive though.  I mean this directive should come from the BOD, but the quality of these boards deos vary widely in the indsustry.

The anecdote is that in a past CFP call the BMO guy was pushing them on this.  The Canfor guys were not having it.  They don't like that term, and don't view hoards of cash on the balance sheet as bad.  Mark Wilde kept pushing them on their inefficient balance sheet and they just dig in and reiterate the shareholders get zero, and mgmt will keep the cash in a personal warchest for their own purposes.  You might say 'cash is good they bought Vida' but look at WFT that does a better job of this -- they take out OSB in an all-equity deal.  That's way better.

So, CFF is a bit more business focused.  I'd be surprised if Ken aspires to get much beyond debt free.  Building up cash on the balance sheet makes little sense.  That siad, like we all tend to agree on, they should articulate a vision here.

So, speculation and conjecture on my part, but in cases like this you generally benefit from folks who have business training vs. just lumberjacks made good.  I'm both, so I see it both ways -- not a jab at anyone just how things tend to play out.  CFF could be debt free very soon if pricing holds.  Then I hope we'll see a div on top of the NCIB.

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