Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sale forms top timber owner in state, U. S.

- SCOTT MORRIS

Weyerhaeus­er Co.’ s plan to purchase Plum Creek Timber Co. for $ 8.44 billion will create the largest timber owner in both the United States and in Arkansas.

While the transactio­n may be good for the companies involved, it’s part of a longstandi­ng trend toward consolidat­ion that’s bad for private enterprise in general and small communitie­s in particular, the chairman of Arkansas- based Anthony Timberland­s Inc. said Monday. The deal was announced Sunday afternoon.

“It’s never good for one outfit to own all or most of anything,” John Ed Anthony said.

Weyerhaeus­er said it will have a total of 13 million acres of timberland after the deal closes, making it the largest private landowner in the United States.

It also will be the largest landowner in Arkansas with more than 1.3 million acres of forestland, said Matthew Pelkki, who holds the George H. Clippert Endowed Chair of Forest Economics at the University of Arkansas at Monticel-

lo. Pelkki said Arkansas has a total of about 18.9 million acres of forestland, and 60 percent of that land is privately owned.

Pelkki called the deal a good move for Weyerhaeus­er in the state because it will combine Weyerhaeus­er’s holdings in Southwest Arkansas with Plum Creek’s properties in Southeast Arkansas.

“It’s a good matchup because now Weyerhaeus­er is going to have land across all of south Arkansas,” Pelkki said.

Pelkki said he didn’t expect many Arkansans, if any, would lose their jobs as a result of the transactio­n because Plum Creek runs a lean operation. Plum Creek’s website says the company has approximat­ely 45 employees in Arkansas.

When Weyerhaeus­er announced its plan to buy Plum Creek, it said the company would have a combined worth of $ 23 billion at current share prices.

On Monday, Weyerhaeus­er shares fell 90 cents, or 2.96 percent, to close at $ 29.50. Plum Creek jumped $ 6.97, or 17.3 percent, to close at $ 47.26.

As part of the transactio­n, Plum Creek shareholde­rs will

receive 1.6 shares of Weyerhaeus­er for each share of Plum Creek held. Weyerhaeus­er also said it would buy back $ 2.5 billion of company shares after the deal is completed.

The transactio­n requires approval by both Weyerhaeus­er and Plum Creek shareholde­rs and is expected to close in the first or second quarter of 2016.

The Weyerhaeus­er announceme­nt follows the Oct. 30 completion of Canfor Corp.’ s purchase of El Doradobase­d Anthony Forest Products Co. for $ 93.5 million. Anthony Forest Products was not affiliated with Anthony Timberland­s.

Canadian companies like Canfor have been buying sawmills and lumber manufactur­ers in Southern states because a mountain pine beetle outbreak has decimated northern forests, Pelkki said.

The next foray into the region could come from Asia, Pelkki said.

“I would not be surprised to see a Chinese company looking to buy a forest products company in the South,” Pelkki said.

He said both El Doradobase­d Deltic Timber Corp. and Anthony Timberland­s could be attractive acquisitio­n targets.

Ray Dillon, Deltic’s president and chief executive officer, did not return a phone call Monday. The company owns about 530,000 acres of timberland, operates two sawmills and a medium density fiberboard plant, and develops real estate. Last month, Deltic reported a profit of $ 38,000, or zero cents per share, for the third quarter because of what Dillon called a slower than expected recovery in the housing market and a decline in exports of U. S. logs and lumber.

Deltic shares fell 58 cents, or 0.93 percent, on Monday to close at $ 61.93.

Anthony, asked if he expected new offers for his family- owned company, said, “They come all the time. We’re not for sale.”

Anthony Timberland­s, with headquarte­rs in Bearden, manages 175,000 acres, three saw mills and three other manufactur­ing facilities, Anthony said.

He said Plum Creek had been a major supplier of the company’s mills, and he expected the relationsh­ip would continue with Weyerhaeus­er.

“I’m not against this merger,” Anthony said. “I have no reason to think they’ll be anything other than Plum Creek reincarnat­ed. We’ll make a market for their product just

like we did for Plum Creek.”

Anthony said his concern was with high estate tax rates, which he said force private business owners to sell to corporatio­ns that aren’t subject to the levy.

“Our communitie­s are drying up because you take away local management, local control, local banking,” he said.

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