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Interfor ships more lumber from Canada after China tariffs on US

By CP STAFF   

Industry Forestry Manufacturing China Interfor lumber manufacturing tariffs trade

Ramp up despite shipping costs that are roughly 50% higher than from American points in the south.

VANCOUVER — Interfor Corp. says the company has increased lumber shipments from Canada to China as a result of tariffs imposed on its US production.

“We’ve seen a marked increase in volume from Canada,” said Barton Bender, vice-president of sales at Interfor on an earnings conference call Feb. 8.

“We’re still active on some products in the South to China. We’ve tried to keep our shipments fairly consistent to that market. So the combination of the two, we think Canada is a net benefactor of those tariffs. And our volumes have shown so.”

The increased shipments from Canada come after China imposed retaliatory tariffs of up to 25% on some US goods last year, as the world’s two biggest economies continue with tense trade talks.

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The ramp up in Canadian exports across the Pacific come despite shipping costs that are roughly 50 per cent higher than from the Southern US, Bender said.

Interfor, along with other Canadian forestry companies, have invested in US lumber production in recent years as they faced log supply issues in BC and softwood tariffs on exports to the US.

The constraints on BC operations, along with falling prices, pushed Interfor to curtail some BC capacity in the fourth quarter, said company CEO Duncan Davies on the call.

“The decision to curtail operations in the BC Interior in the fourth quarter was taken partly in response to the drop in sales returns and partly in response to the rapid increase of log costs in the region during the second half of the year.”

The industry has been on a rollercoaster of prices in the past year as they spiked to record highs last summer before plummeting in the fourth quarter in part over US housing market concerns.

Elevated prices in the first half of the year helped lead to “the best year in Interfor’s history” from a financial perspective, Davies said.

The company earned $112 million or $1.60 per share for 2018, compared with $97 million or $1.39 per share a year earlier.

Fourth-quarter results came in at a loss of $13.2 million or 19 cents per share, compared with earnings of $36.2 million or 52 cents per share for the same quarter in 2017.

The adjusted fourth-quarter loss was 29 cents per share, worse than the 20-cent loss expected by analysts according to Thomson Reuters Eikon.

 

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