Conifex Timber Inc. (“
Conifex”,
“
we” or “
us”) (TSX: CFF) today
reported results for the fourth quarter and year ended December 31,
2023. EBITDA* from continuing operations was negative $3.5
million for the quarter and negative $25.8 million for the year,
compared to EBITDA of $2.3 million in the fourth quarter of 2022
and $46.7 million for the year. Net loss was $30.6 million or
negative $0.77 per share for the year versus net income in the
preceding year of $0.61 per share.
Selected Financial
Highlights
The following table summarizes our selected
financial information for the comparative periods. Unless otherwise
noted, financial information reflects results of continuing
operations from our Mackenzie sawmill and power plant.
Selected Financial
Information(1)
(in millions of dollars, except per share, share and selected
operating information) |
Q42023 |
Q32023 |
2023 |
Q42022 |
2022 |
Revenue |
|
|
|
|
|
Lumber – Conifex produced |
23.9 |
|
26.6 |
|
95.3 |
|
22.1 |
|
176.6 |
Lumber – wholesale |
0.9 |
|
0.8 |
|
3.6 |
|
1.6 |
|
16.1 |
By-products and other |
2.7 |
|
4.3 |
|
18.1 |
|
2.8 |
|
25.2 |
Bioenergy |
7.7 |
|
7.1 |
|
24.1 |
|
0.2 |
|
13.4 |
|
35.2 |
|
38.7 |
|
141.1 |
|
26.7 |
|
231.3 |
Operating income (loss) |
(6.6 |
) |
(10.1 |
) |
(38.7 |
) |
(8.5 |
) |
27.5 |
EBITDA from continuing operations(2) |
(3.5 |
) |
(6.7 |
) |
(25.8 |
) |
2.3 |
|
46.7 |
Net income (loss) |
(5.3 |
) |
(8.0 |
) |
(30.6 |
) |
(0.2 |
) |
24.5 |
Basic and diluted earnings (loss) per share |
(0.14 |
) |
0.20 |
|
(0.77 |
) |
(0.00 |
) |
0.61 |
Cash dividends per share(3) |
- |
|
- |
|
- |
|
- |
|
0.20 |
Shares outstanding – weighted average (millions) |
40.4 |
|
40.2 |
|
40.0 |
|
39.9 |
|
40.1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reconciliation of EBITDA to net income (loss) |
|
|
|
|
|
Net
income (loss) from continuing operations |
(5.3 |
) |
(8.0 |
) |
(30.6 |
) |
(0.2 |
) |
24.5 |
Add: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Finance costs |
1.3 |
|
1.2 |
|
5.0 |
|
1.0 |
|
4.3 |
Amortization |
3.0 |
|
3.8 |
|
11.7 |
|
1.4 |
|
8.4 |
Income tax expense (recovery) |
(2.5 |
) |
(3.7 |
) |
(11.9 |
) |
0.1 |
|
9.5 |
EBITDA from continuing operations(2) |
(3.5 |
) |
(6.7 |
) |
(25.8 |
) |
2.3 |
|
46.7 |
*Conifex’s EBITDA calculation represents
earnings before finance costs, taxes, depreciation and
amortization. We disclose EBITDA as it is a measure used by
analysts and by our management to evaluate our performance. As
EBITDA is a non-GAAP measure that does not have any standardized
meaning prescribed by International Financial Reporting Standards,
it may not be comparable to EBITDA calculated by others and is not
a substitute for net earnings or cash flows, and therefore readers
should consider those measures in evaluating our performance.
Selected Operating
Information
|
Q42023 |
Q32023 |
2023 |
Q42022 |
2022 |
Production – WSPF lumber (MMfbm)(4) |
|
33.2 |
|
48.9 |
|
155.8 |
|
27.9 |
|
165.9 |
Shipments – WSPF lumber (MMfbm) (4) |
|
39.1 |
|
41.9 |
|
152.6 |
|
31.6 |
|
174.3 |
Shipments – wholesale lumber (MMfbm)(4) |
|
1.1 |
|
0.9 |
|
4.1 |
|
1.5 |
|
10.6 |
Electricity production (GWh) |
|
43.5 |
|
56.0 |
|
177.6 |
|
- |
|
109.7 |
Average exchange rate – $/US$(5) |
|
0.734 |
|
0.746 |
|
0.741 |
|
0.736 |
|
0.768 |
Average WSPF 2x4 #2 & Btr lumber price (US$)(6) |
$402 |
$417 |
$391 |
$402 |
$771 |
Average WSPF 2x4 #2 & Btr lumber price ($)(7) |
$547 |
$559 |
$528 |
$546 |
$994 |
(1) Reflects results of continuing
operations.
(2) Conifex's EBITDA calculation represents
earnings before finance costs, taxes, depreciation and
amortization.
(3) Cash dividends of $0.20 per share were
declared and paid in August 2022.
(4) MMfbm represents million board feet.
(5) Bank of Canada, www.bankofcanada.ca.
(6) Random Lengths Publications Inc.
(7) Average SPF 2x4 #2 & Btr lumber prices
(US$) divided by average exchange rate.
Summary of 2023 Results
Consolidated Net EarningsWe generated net income
of ($30.6) million or ($0.77) per share in 2023. Net income was
$24.5 million or $0.61 per share in 2022. Our Power Plant resumed
operations in late January 2023 after approximately 7 months of
continuous maintenance related downtime starting in July 2022.
Lumber Operations
Our lumber production was 155.8 million board
feet in 2023, reflecting an annualized operating rate of 65%.
Lumber production was impacted by a reduction in our operating
schedule to a one-shift basis for a twelve-week period beginning in
October to address unsustainable lumber inventory levels. In
addition, a month long curtailment of the Mackenzie mill in June,
combined with a one week curtailment in February was necessitated
by a combination of a steep decline in lumber prices on softer
global market demand and government policies and practices
impacting our operations. Lumber production in 2022 was 165.9
million board feet, reflecting an annualized operating rate of 69%.
Similarly to 2023, the 2022 fiscal year’s production was materially
impacted by curtailments driven by softened market conditions and
imbalanced inventory levels.
Shipments of Conifex produced lumber totaled
152.6 million board feet in 2023. Shipments of Conifex produced
lumber decreased by 12% from 2022 as a result of lower production
volume and carrying a much higher level of dressed inventory into
2022 then was the case with 2023. Our wholesale lumber program
shipped 4.1 million board feet in 2023 compared to 10.6 million
board feet in 2022. Our wholesale lumber shipments decreased 61% as
the industry fundamentals didn’t incentivize as robust of a
wholesale program.
Revenues from lumber products were $98.9 million
in 2023 and represented a decrease of 49% from 2022. Lower revenues
were primarily driven by lower mill net realizations resulting from
greatly lower overall benchmark lumber prices in 2023, combined
with lower lumber shipments from reduced production levels.
The market slide in the second half of 2022
persisted into 2023, with inflationary pressures causing a
reduction in new home construction. US housing starts on a
seasonally adjusted annual basis declined, averaging 1.41 million
starts in 2023, down 8.8% from 2022. The reduced housing demand
resulted in a 47% decrease in the average Canadian
dollar-denominated Western Spruce/Pine/Fir
(“WSPF”) lumber price, falling from $994 in 2022
to $528 in 2023.
Cost of goods sold in 2023 was 12% lower than
2022 largely as a result of reduced production and shipment
volumes. Overall production costs in 2023 were modestly higher from
2022 as higher stumpage rates resulted in an increased log cost.
Unit manufacturing costs were elevated by low operating rates and
disruptions from production curtailments which negatively impacted
productivity and resulted in higher fixed cost per unit. We reduced
the inventory valuation adjustment to $1.3 million in 2023 as lower
benchmark lumber prices were offset by lower cost of inventory. An
inventory valuation adjustment of $2.2 million was recorded in
2022.
We expensed countervailing
("CV") and anti-dumping ("AD")
duty deposits of $3.0 million in 2023, a decrease of 69% from 2022.
The duty deposits were based on a combined rate of 8.99% until
December 1, 2021, 17.91% until August 8, 2022, 8.59% until July 31,
2023, and 8.05% thereafter.
The following table reconciles cash deposits
paid during the year to the amount recognized in our statement of
net income and comprehensive income.
(in millions of dollars) |
Q42023 |
Q32023 |
2023 |
Q42022 |
2022 |
Softwood lumber duty impact |
|
|
|
|
|
Cash deposits paid |
1.1 |
(0.3 |
) |
11.3 |
|
1.1 |
15.3 |
|
Adjustment to final published rates |
- |
- |
|
(8.3 |
) |
- |
(5.7 |
) |
Softwood lumber duties, net |
1.1 |
(0.3 |
) |
3.0 |
|
1.1 |
9.6 |
|
Cash deposits paid during 2023 decreased
compared to the previous year due to the combined effect of lower
lumber shipment volumes and lower cash deposit rates in effect
during the first eight months of 2022.
We recognized a recovery of $8.3 million
including the prescribed interest rates to the overpayments in 2023
pertaining to the difference between the cash deposit rates in
effect at the time of shipment and the final published rates of
17.91% and 8.59%, respectively, for shipments made to the US market
in the years ended December 31, 2019 and 2020. The net duty
recoverable has been included as a long-term asset on our balance
sheet.
Cumulative duties of US$34.3 million paid by
Conifex net of sales since inception of the current trade dispute
remain held in trust by the US pending the conclusion of all
appeals of US decisions. In 2019, we sold our right to refunds of
cumulative duties to June 30, 2019 of US$32.7 million for proceeds
of US$13.9 million. We have recorded the duty deposits as an
expense, except for US$8.3 million, which are recorded as a
long-term receivable.
Bioenergy Operations
Our Power Plant sold 177.6 GWh of electricity
under our EPA with BC Hydro in 2023, representing approximately 80%
of targeted operating rates. In 2022, our Power Plant sold 109.7
GWh of electricity, representing 50% of targeted operating rates.
The increase in 2023 production was driven by more operating days
and higher production rates. Production in 2022 was impacted by
damage to the power plant's turbine discovered in July 2022 and not
re-commissioned until February 2023.
Electricity production contributed revenues of
$24.1 million in 2023, an increase of $10.7 million, or 80% over
2022. Total revenue for 2022 was $13.4 million, down significantly
from planned revenues as a result of the plant being inoperable in
the second half of the year due to the turbine damage. We
recognized $2.1 million as other income in our statement of net
income and comprehensive income in 2023 to reflect the remaining
portion of the insurance claim on the turbine failure for lost
income under our business interruption policy.
Selling, General and Administrative Costs
Selling, general and administrative
("SG&A") costs of $9.1 million in 2023
reflected a decrease of 17% from $11.0 million in 2022. The
year-over-year decrease is primarily attributable to lower,
variable compensation costs, including non-cash equity-based
compensation, and the vesting of long-term incentive awards that
were below the accrued amount.
Finance Costs and Accretion
Finance costs and accretion relate primarily to
our term loan supporting our bioenergy operations (the
“Power Term Loan”). Finance costs and accretion of
$5.0 million in 2023 were 16% higher than finance costs of $4.3
million in 2022, primarily as a result of additional costs related
to an operating line on the lumber segment.
Gain or Loss on Derivative Financial
Instruments
From time to time, we may enter into lumber
future contracts to manage our commodity lumber price exposures. We
do not use derivatives for trading or speculative purposes. Gains
or losses on lumber derivative instruments are recognized as they
are settled or as they are marked to market for each reporting
period.
During 2023, we did not enter into any lumber
futures contracts.
We had no outstanding futures contracts in place
as at December 31, 2023.
Other Income
We recognized other income of $2.1 million in
2023 and $9.6 million in 2022 from our business interruption
insurance claims related to the Power Plant.
Foreign Exchange Translation Gain or Loss
Foreign exchange translation gain or loss on our
statement of net income results from the revaluation of US
dollar-denominated cash and working capital balances to reflect the
change in the value of the Canadian dollar relative to the value of
the US dollar. US dollar-denominated monetary assets and
liabilities are translated using the period end rate.
The US dollar averaged US$0.741 for each
Canadian dollar during 2023, a level which represented a weakening
of the Canadian dollar over the previous year.
The foreign exchange translation impacts arising
from the variability in exchange rates at each measurement period
on cash, duties on deposit, and working capital balances resulted
in a foreign exchange translation loss of $0.5 million in 2023,
compared to a foreign exchange gain of $1.2 million in 2022.
Income Tax
We recorded income tax recovery in 2023 of $11.9
million, compared to income tax expense of $9.6 million in 2022.
Our effective tax rate was 27% in the current year and 28% in 2022.
See note 20 of our consolidated financial statements for the years
ended December 31, 2023 and 2022 for a reconciliation of income
taxes calculated at the statutory rate to the income tax
expense.
Deferred income taxes reflect the net tax
effects of temporary differences between the carrying amounts of
assets and liabilities on our balance sheet and the amounts used
for income tax purposes. As at December 31, 2023, we have
recognized a deferred income tax liability of nil and a deferred
tax asset of $2.9 million.
Summary of Fourth Quarter 2023
Results
Consolidated Net EarningsDuring the fourth
quarter of 2023, we incurred a net loss from continuing operations
of $5.3 million or $0.14 per share compared to a net loss of $8.0
million or $0.20 per share in the previous quarter and net loss of
$0.2 million or nil per share in the fourth quarter of 2022. The
net loss in the fourth quarter of 2023 was primarily the result of
the lower lumber sales prices, partially offset by a strong quarter
of power generation.
North American lumber market prices continued to
be below breakeven in the fourth quarter of 2023. Canadian
dollar-denominated benchmark WSPF prices, which averaged $547 in
the fourth quarter, decreased by 2% or $12 from the previous
quarter and were virtually identical to the fourth quarter of 2022.
The ongoing period of lower market prices were attributed to lower
demand from reduced new home construction activity in the US,
elevated offshore lumber import levels to US markets, and
inflationary pressures negatively impacting repair and remodeling
activities. US housing starts on a seasonally adjusted annual basis
averaged 1.45 million in the fourth quarter of 2023, up 6% from the
previous quarter and 6% from the fourth quarter of 2022.
Lumber Operations
We produced 33.2 million board feet of lumber in
the fourth quarter of 2023, representing approximately 55% of
annualized capacity. Lumber production was affected by a 12 week
temporary curtailment that had the Mackenzie Mill operating on a 4
day basis, as well as a week off over the holiday season. In the
previous quarter, lumber production totaled 48.9 million board
feet. Lumber production of 27.9 million board feet or approximately
47% of operating capacity in the fourth quarter of 2022 was
impacted by two-week curtailment of the Mackenzie Mill and lower
operating rates.
Shipments of Conifex produced lumber totaled
39.1 million board feet in the fourth quarter of 2023, representing
a decrease of 7% from the 41.9 million board feet of lumber shipped
in the previous quarter. Shipments in the fourth quarter of 2022
totalled 31.6 million board feet. Lumber shipments were constrained
by lower lumber production from the temporary curtailment of our
Mackenzie Mill during the quarter. Our wholesale lumber program
shipped 0.9 million board feet in the fourth quarter of 2023,
representing a 13% increase from the 0.8 million board feet shipped
in the third quarter of 2023 and a 44% decrease from the 1.5
million board feet shipped in the fourth quarter of 2022. Wholesale
lumber shipments were negatively impacted by a slowdown in
construction activity in Japan.
Revenues from lumber products were $24.8 million
in the fourth quarter of 2023 representing a decline of 9% from the
previous quarter and a 5% increase from the fourth quarter of 2022.
Compared to the previous quarter, decreased revenues in the current
quarter were driven by lower shipment volumes, combined with a
reduction in mill net realizations. The revenue increase in the
current quarter over the same period in the prior year was also
driven by higher shipped volume.
Cost of goods sold in the fourth quarter of 2023
decreased by 20% from the previous quarter. The decrease from the
prior quarter was mainly due to lower shipment volumes in the
current quarter. However, unit log and manufacturing costs also
increased in comparison to the previous quarter as a result of
higher fixed cost absorption partially offset by a reversal of
inventory write-downs, based on volume reductions, of $2.7 million.
We recorded inventory valuation reserves in the fourth quarter of
2023 as a result of the decline in lumber pricing at the end of the
year which adversely impacted cost of goods sold.
Our investment in capital expenditures related
to our lumber operations in 2023 decreased substantially from
2022.
We recorded CV and AD duty deposits expense of
$1.1 million in the fourth quarter of 2023, a recovery of $0.3
million in the previous quarter and expense of $1.1 million in the
fourth quarter of 2022.
Bioenergy Operations
Our Power Plant sold 43.5 GWh of electricity in
the fourth quarter of 2023 compared to 56 GWh in the previous
quarter. The decrease quarter over quarter reflects reduced
operating days in the fourth quarter due to operational upsets
resulting in minor lost time. Electricity production in the fourth
quarter of 2022 was nil due to the Power Plant being
non-operational from the turbine damage discovered during our 2022
maintenance shut down.
Electricity production contributed revenues of
$7.7 million in the fourth quarter of 2023, an increase of 9% from
the previous quarter and 100% from the fourth quarter of 2022, due
to the power plant being inoperable during the quarter.
Selling, General and Administrative Costs
SG&A costs were $0.6 million in the fourth
quarter of 2023, $1.9 million in the previous quarter and $1.4
million in the fourth quarter of 2022. The reduction in SG&A
costs compared to the previous quarter was largely due to the
revaluation of long-term incentive awards. Reduced SG&A costs
in the current quarter compared to the comparative quarter in the
preceding year were primarily related to the valuation of long term
incentive awards.
Finance Costs and Accretion
Finance costs and accretion totaled $1.3 million
in the fourth quarter of 2023, $1.2 million in the previous quarter
and $1.0 million in the fourth quarter of 2022. Finance costs in
the current quarter were higher than the fourth quarter of 2022 due
to a higher balance drawn on the operating line, partially offset
by lower long term power debt.
Other Income
Other income totaled $2.2 million in the fourth
quarter of 2023 compared to $9.6 million in the fourth quarter of
2022. Other income primarily consists of the business interruption
claim proceeds in respect to the turbine failure during 2022.
Foreign Exchange Translation Gain or Loss
The US dollar averaged US$0.734 for each
Canadian dollar during the fourth quarter of 2023, a level which
represented a weakening of the Canadian dollar over the previous
quarter and the fourth quarter of 2022.
The foreign exchange translation impacts arising
from the variability in exchange rates at each measurement period
on cash and working capital balances resulted in a foreign exchange
translation loss of $0.3 million in the fourth quarter of 2023,
compared to a foreign exchange gain of $0.2 million in the third
quarter of 2023 and a loss of $0.2 million in the fourth quarter of
2022.
Income Tax
The fourth and third quarter 2023 results
include nil current tax recovery, compared to a current tax
recovery of $0.8 million in the fourth quarter of 2022. We recorded
deferred income tax recovery of $2.5 million in the fourth quarter
of 2023, $3.7 million recovery in the previous quarter and deferred
income tax expense of $0.9 million in the fourth quarter of
2022.
Financial Position and
Liquidity
Overall debt was $63.8 million at December 31,
2023 compared to $62.8 million at December 31, 2022, with the
change mainly driven by an additional $5.0 million drawn against
our secured revolving credit facility with Wells Fargo (the
“Revolving Credit Facility”) to bolster operating
working capital. The increase in debt was partially offset by Power
Term Loan repayments of $3.5 million during the year. Our Power
Term Loan, which is largely non-recourse to our lumber operations,
represents substantially all of our outstanding long-term debt. At
December 31, 2023, we had $50.3 million outstanding on our Power
Term Loan, while our remaining long-term debt, consisting of
leases, totalled $2.0 million.
On March 7, 2024, we announced that we had
completed the Amendment with Wells Fargo in respect of the
Revolving Credit Facility. Wells Fargo agreed, subject to certain
terms and conditions, to amend Conifex’s existing lumber business
credit facility and provide certain accommodations thereunder.
Following the Amendment, the Revolving Credit Facility is secured
by substantially all Conifex’s lumber business assets.
Pursuant to the Amendment, Wells Fargo agreed to
provide additional short-term liquidity, continue funding revolving
loans and refrain from exercising certain of its rights under the
Facility until May 31, 2024, subject to certain terms and
conditions. The Amendment follows Conifex's non-maintenance of the
minimum excess availability and fixed charge coverage ratio
required by the terms of the Facility. Among other conditions,
Conifex shall commence a process to secure replacement funding in
an amount sufficient to repay in full the Facility. Conifex has
engaged Raymond James Ltd. to assist in the process.
Like other Canadian lumber producers, we were
required to begin depositing cash on account of softwood lumber
duties imposed by the United States government in April 2017.
Cumulative duties of US$34.3 million paid by Conifex, net of
certain prior sales of such refunds, since the inception of the
current trade dispute remain held in trust by the US pending the
administrative reviews and conclusion of all appeals of US
decisions. We expect future cash flow will continue to be adversely
impacted by the CV and AD duty deposits to the extent additional
costs on US destined shipments are not mitigated by higher lumber
prices.
Outlook
We believe SPF supplies are contracting at the
same time demand is increasing, and lumber prices will move
higher.
The BC Ministry of Forests discloses that the
log harvest in the interior region of BC, which totalled 47 million
cubic metres in 2018, plummeted to 27 million cubic metres in 2023.
The Ministry also discloses in the most recent provincial budget
that the interior region of BC log harvest is forecast to come in
at 26 million cubic metres annually in the current and following
three years. This harvest contraction will reduce SPF lumber
production from the interior region of BC by 4.8 or 4.9 billion
board feet annually. This supply contraction is huge – it is
equivalent to approximately 8% of North American softwood lumber
consumption and sufficient to offset the incremental lumber supply
from more than 20 new industrial scale sawmills brought on stream
in the US South over the past five years. With mounting evidence
that US housing starts will increase in 2024 and 2025, these
supply/demand dynamics support our expectations for rising prices
for SPF lumber.
Revenue Diversification
Opportunity
In December 2022, the Lieutenant-Governor in
Council for the Province of British Columbia
(“LGIC”) issued an order in council (the
“OIC”) directing the British Columbia Utilities
Commission to, among other things, accept BC Hydro's request to
suspend its obligation to supply service to certain new
cryptocurrency mining projects in British Columbia for a period of
18 months, which OIC impacted two of our proposed high performance
computing ("HPC") projects.
As a result, in April 2023, we filed a petition
in the Supreme Court of British Columbia (the
"BCSC") seeking judicial review of the OIC and an
order quashing and setting aside the OIC as unauthorized or
otherwise invalid. Arguments were made before the BCSC in October
2023. On February 2, 2024, we received notice that our petition was
dismissed. We continue to believe that the moratorium to
discriminate against a certain class of customers is unjustified
and we have filed on appeal of the BCSC's decision.
Concurrently with the filing of the petition, we
filed a notice of civil claim against BC Hydro in the Supreme Court
of British Columbia seeking an order requiring BC Hydro to supply
service to our HPC projects.
Conference Call
We have scheduled a conference call on
Wednesday, March 27 at 2:00 PM Pacific time / 5:00 PM Eastern time
to discuss the fourth quarter and 2023 financial and operating
results. To participate in the call, please dial 416-340-2217 or
toll free 1-800-806-5484 and entering participant passcode
7741593#. The call will also be available on instant replay access
until April 3, 2024 by dialling 1-800-408-3053 and entering
participant passcode 3265407#.
Our management's discussion and analysis and
financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2023 are
available under Conifex's profile on SEDAR+ at
www.sedarplus.ca.
For further information, please contact:
Trevor PrudenChief Financial Officer(604)
216-2949
About Conifex Timber Inc.
Conifex and its subsidiaries' primary business
currently includes timber harvesting, reforestation, forest
management, sawmilling logs into lumber and wood chips, and value
added lumber finishing and distribution. Conifex's lumber products
are sold in the United States, Canadian and Japanese markets.
Conifex also produces bioenergy at its power generation facility at
Mackenzie, BC.
Forward-Looking Statements
Certain statements in this news release may
constitute “forward-looking statements”. Forward-looking statements
are statements that address or discuss activities, events or
developments that Conifex expects or anticipates may occur in the
future. When used in this news release, words such as “estimates”,
“expects”, “plans”, “anticipates”, “projects”, “will”, “believes”,
“intends” “should”, “could”, “may” and other similar terminology
are intended to identify such forward-looking statements.
Forward-looking statements reflect the current expectations and
beliefs of Conifex’s management. Because forward-looking statements
involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors,
actual results, performance or achievements of Conifex or the
industry may be materially different from those implied by such
forward-looking statements. Examples of such forward-looking
information that may be contained in this news release include
statements regarding: the realization of expected benefits of
completed, current and any contemplated capital projects and the
expected timing and budgets for such projects, including the
build-out of electrical and other support infrastructure required
at high-performance computing or data center locations; the growth
and future prospects of our business; our expectations regarding
our results of operations and performance; our planned operating
format and expected operating rates; our perception of the
industries or markets in which we operate and anticipated trends in
such markets and in the countries in which we do business; our
ability to supply our manufacturing operations with wood fibre and
our expected cost for wood fibre; our expectation for market
volatility associated with, among other things, the softwood lumber
dispute with the United States of America; that we could be
negatively impacted by the duties or other protective measures on
our products, such as antidumping duties or countervailing duties
on softwood lumber; continued positive relations with Indigenous
groups; the development of a longer-term capital plan and the
expected benefits therefrom; demand and prices for our products;
our ability to develop new revenue streams; the availability and
use of credit facilities or proceeds therefrom; future capital
expenditures; expectations regarding our liquidity levels; and our
expectations for U.S. dollar benchmark prices. Material factors or
assumptions that were applied in drawing a conclusion or making an
estimate set out in the forward-looking statements may include, but
are not limited to, our future debt levels; that we will complete
our projects in the expected timeframes and as budgeted; that we
will effectively market our products; that capital expenditure
levels will be consistent with those estimated by our management;
our ability to ship our products in a timely manner; that there
will be no additional unforeseen disruptions affecting the
operation of our power generation plant and that we will be able to
continue to deliver power therefrom; our ability to obtain
financing on acceptable terms, or at all; that interest and foreign
exchange rates will not vary materially from current levels; the
general health of the capital markets and the lumber industry; and
the general stability of the economic environments within the
countries in which we operate or do business. Forward-looking
statements involve significant uncertainties, should not be read as
a guarantee of future performance or results, and will not
necessarily be an accurate indication of whether or not such
results will be achieved. A number of factors could cause actual
results to differ materially from the results discussed in the
forward-looking statements, including, without limitation: those
relating to potential disruptions to production and delivery,
including as a result of equipment failures, labour issues, the
complex integration of processes and equipment and other similar
factors; labour relations; failure to meet regulatory requirements;
changes in the market; potential downturns in economic conditions;
fluctuations in the price and supply of required materials,
including log costs; fluctuations in the market price for products
sold; foreign exchange fluctuations; trade restrictions or import
duties imposed by foreign governments; availability of financing
(as necessary); and other risk factors detailed in our filings with
the Canadian Securities Regulatory Authorities available on SEDAR+
at www.sedarplus.ca. These risks, as well as others, could cause
actual results and events to vary significantly. Accordingly,
readers should exercise caution in relying upon forward-looking
statements and Conifex undertakes no obligation to publicly revise
them to reflect subsequent events or circumstances, except as
required by law.
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