Tuesday, June 16, 2026
ADVT 
National

Jim Pattison Makes Offer To Take Canfor Corp. Private At $16 Per Share

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Aug, 2019 04:44 PM

    VANCOUVER - Shares of Canfor Corp. surged more than 70 per cent in mid-morning trading after a Jim Pattison Group company made a $16 a share bid to take the company private.

     

    Pattison's Great Pacific Capital Corp., which already owns about 51 per cent of the lumber producer, made the all-cash offer over the weekend that was a 60-per-cent premium to the company's 60 day average price and an 81.8-per-cent premium to Friday's close.

     

    Canfor shares were trading up $6.37, or 72.4 per cent, at $15.17 on the Toronto Stock Exchange after closing at $8.80 Friday.

     

    Great Pacific says the proposed transaction, which values Canfor at about $2 billion, will allow for the elimination of the significant costs related to maintaining a public company listing and allow for reinvestment of that money in the company's operations.

     

    It says the company is facing important strategic and capital decisions that it believes are best suited to a private company with a long-term focus.

     

    Canfor says it has formed a special committee of independent directors to review the offer and consider its strategic alternatives.

     

    CIBC Capital Markets analyst Hamir Patel said in an analyst note that he estimates the share offer represents a much lower valuation on capacity than other forestry deals in recent years.

     

    He figures the $16 a share offer values Canfor's capacity of 6.55 billion board feet a year at US$298 per thousand board feet, well below the US$615 per thousand board feet West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd. paid for Gilman Co. in 2017 and the US$525 per thousand board feet Canfor paid for Elliott Sawmilling last year.

     

    The lower valuation reflects Canfor's high exposure to B.C., where log costs have spiked from a supply crunch, as well as significant deterioration in market conditions over the last year, said Patel.

     

    RBC Dominion Securities Inc. analyst Paul Quinn said in a note that he believes the deal has a high probability of closing as proposed, given how much of the company's shares The Jim Pattison Group already owns.

     

    Quinn said the "vote of confidence" could spark more interest the forestry sector, which especially in B.C. has seen significant challenges in recent months.

     
     

    The sector has struggled after lumber prices dropped by more than half from record highs last summer as the U.S. housing market slowed. At the same time, B.C.'s sector has been struggling after the fallout of the mountain pine beetle and wildfires have led to a shortage of available timber, raising the costs of fibre for lumber producers.

     
     

    Companies have responded by significantly cutting back capacity in the province, including numerous curtailments and several permanent mill closures.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadians 'Stand Together' Against Bullying On Annual Pink Shirt Day

    Today is Pink Shirt Day in many Canadian schools, communities and workplaces.

    Canadians 'Stand Together' Against Bullying On Annual Pink Shirt Day

    Study Says It Makes Sense To Have Mass Transit To Banff National Park From Calgary

    BANFF, Alta. — A feasibility study released today says bus or passenger rail service between Calgary and Banff National Park would make sense.

    Study Says It Makes Sense To Have Mass Transit To Banff National Park From Calgary

    My Moose Is Bigger Than Your Moose: Norwegian Politician To Visit Saskatchewan

    My Moose Is Bigger Than Your Moose: Norwegian Politician To Visit Saskatchewan
    The deputy mayor of a Norwegian municipality with a sculpture that set off a mighty moose match with a Saskatchewan prairie city is to arrive for a visit later this week.    

    My Moose Is Bigger Than Your Moose: Norwegian Politician To Visit Saskatchewan

    Canada's Dark War-Time Past Illuminated In NFB Project With Writer Joy Kogawa

    "It's wonderful to me that the story that I lived through can be part of this generation's knowledge," the writer and poet says from her home in Toronto.

    Canada's Dark War-Time Past Illuminated In NFB Project With Writer Joy Kogawa

    B.C. Auditor General Says Urban Ambulance Response Times Well Below Targets

    VICTORIA — Auditor general Carol Bellringer says emergency ambulance response times in British Columbia's urban areas are well below their time targets.

    B.C. Auditor General Says Urban Ambulance Response Times Well Below Targets

    Woman Wrongfully Held In Hospital For Almost One Year Without Court Order: Judge

    Woman Wrongfully Held In Hospital For Almost One Year Without Court Order: Judge
    In a ruling released this week, Justice Lisa Warren describes the 39-year-old woman as "highly vulnerable" and says she suffers from cognitive impairments, mental health issues and fetal alcohol spectrum disorder.

    Woman Wrongfully Held In Hospital For Almost One Year Without Court Order: Judge