Aug 6, 2013
Executives
Sallie B. Bailey - Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice President Curtis M.
Stevens - Chief Executive Officer, Director, Member of Executive Committee and Member of Environmental & Compliance Committee
Analysts
Gail S. Glazerman - UBS Investment Bank, Research Division Mark W.
Connelly - Credit Agricole Securities (USA) Inc., Research Division Mark Wilde - Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division Chip A. Dillon - Vertical Research Partners, LLC Mark A.
Weintraub - The Buckingham Research Group Incorporated Steven Chercover - D.A. Davidson & Co., Research Division Alex Ovshey Ovshey - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division Paul C.
Quinn - RBC Capital Markets, LLC, Research Division George L. Staphos - BofA Merrill Lynch, Research Division
Operator
Good day, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Q2 2013 Louisiana-Pacific Corporation Earnings Conference Call. My name is Allison, and I'll be your operator for today.
[Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this call is being recorded for replay purposes. I'd now like to turn the call over to Sallie Bailey, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.
Please proceed, ma'am.
Sallie B. Bailey
Thank you very much, Allison, and good morning. Thank you for joining our conference call to discuss LP's financial results for the second quarter of 2013 and year-to-date result.
I am Sallie Bailey, LP's Chief Financial Officer, and with me today are Curt Stevens, LP's Chief Executive Officer; as well as Mike Kinney and Becky Barckley, our primary Investor Relations contacts. I will begin the discussion with a review of the financial results for the second quarter of 2013 and the first 6 months of 2013.
This will be followed by some comments on the performance of the individual segments and selected balance sheet items. After I finish my remarks, Curt will discuss the general market environment in which LP has been operating, provide his perspective on our operating results for the second quarter of 2013 and give some thoughts on the outlook for the second half of 2013.
As we have done in the past, we have opened up this call to the public and are doing a webcast. The webcast can be accessed at www.lpcorp.com.
Additionally, to help with the discussion, we've provided a presentation with supplemental information that should be reviewed in conjunction with the earnings release. I will be referencing these slides in my comments this morning.
We have also filed an 8-K this morning with some supplemental information, as well as our Form 10-Q. I want to remind all the participants about the forward-looking statements comment on Slide 2 of the presentation.
Please also be aware of the discussion of our use of non-GAAP financial information included on Slide 3 of the presentation. The Appendix attached to the presentation has some of the necessary reconciliations that have been supplemented by the Form 8-K filing we made this morning.
Rather than reading these 2 statements, I incorporate them with this reference. Before I get started on the detailed discussion of LP's financial results for the second quarter, I'd like to give you some color on our end markets.
The second quarter began with seasonally adjusted housing starts through March at just above $1 million, and North Central 7/16 OSB average selling price at $420. Second quarter ended with seasonally adjusted housing starts at 836,000, and North Central 7/16 OSB average selling price at $265.
While we were adding shifts and capacity at the start of the quarter to meet customer demand for our product, we ended the quarter by taking off shifts also to meet customers demand, consistent with our comments about remaining agile in meeting our customer needs. We believe that our customers' built inventory in the first quarter and the initial weeks of second quarter to meet forecasted demand.
In the second half of the second quarter, these same customers were working to take down their inventory levels. Other factors impacting demand for our product were weather related, as well as supply-chain issues such as labor shortages, lot shortages, lower levels of government services for inspections and available financing.
With that, let me go into the details. Moving to Slide 4 of the presentation for a discussion of the second quarter 2013 and first half consolidated results.
We reported net sales of $573 million for the second quarter of 2013, a 34% increase from the net sales reported for the second quarter of 2012. In the second quarter 2013, we recorded net income of $94 million, or $0.65 per diluted share.
These results included a gain of $36 million on the acquisition of the remaining 50% ownership of the Peace Valley mill. In the second part of 2012, we reported a net loss of $37 million, or $0.27 per diluted share, and $428 million of net sales.
We recorded a $52 million pretax charge associated with the early debt extinguishment. This represents the make whole provision for the debt, which was tendered plus associated deferred costs.
The adjusted income from continuing operations for the quarter was $59 million or $0.41 per share, based on a normalized tax rate of 35%, compared to income of $3 million, or $0.02 per share, in the second quarter of 2013. Adjusted EBITDA from continuing operations was $122 million for the quarter compared to EBITDA of $37 million in the second quarter of 2012.
On a year-to-date basis, we recorded $1.1 million (sic) [billion] in net sales, $159 million in net income and earnings per share of $1.10, as compared to net sales of $789 million, a net loss of $49 million and a loss per share of $0.35 in the first half of 2012. On a non-GAAP basis, we recorded adjusted income from continuing operations of $118 million, earnings per share of $0.82 and adjusted EBITDA of $243 million for the first 6 months of 2013.
A significant improvement over the first 6 months of 2012 when we recorded $6 million of adjusted loss from continuing operations and a loss per share of $0.04 and adjusted EBITDA of $58 million. I will now move to Slide 5 and review of our segment results, beginning with OSB.
OSB recorded operating profit of $95 million on $306 million of sales in the quarter, compared to operating profit of $17 million on $195 million of sales in the second quarter of 2012. For the quarter, we are reporting adjusted EBITDA of $108 million compared to adjusted EBITDA of $28 million in the second quarter of 2012.
We had a 2% increase in volume and our average sales price was 59% higher relative to the second quarter of 2012. The improvement in pricing was the most significant contributor to the approved OSB performance, almost $110 million.
Our pricing rate of improvement will differ from Random Lengths' North Central 7/16 changes due to our geographic -- different geographical footprint, broader product offerings and value-added products. Random Lengths' North Central 7/16 pricing was up 48% over the second quarter of 2012.
As we have indicated in the past, our pricing will stay above Random Lengths in a market with falling prices, and our pricing tends to lag in markets with improving prices. Offsetting the impact of higher pricing is the increase in raw materials, as well as start-up costs on both Clarke County and Dawson Creek.
Curt will update you on those operations during his comments. We closed the Peace Valley transaction on May 31.
And the joint venture accounting, 100% of the sale of Peace Valley product have been included in LP sales. And the cost of sales had been reported at market rather than at the cost of production.
Now that we own 100% of the mill, all the sales will continue to be included in our reported results, but the cost of sales will reflect the cost of production for the mill. This will give you greater visibility on the margins in our OSB business.
In the second quarter, LP's 50% interest in the earnings from the joint venture is recorded on our income statement in equity and income or loss of unconsolidated affiliates for the months of April and May. This amount is also delineated in our reconciliation of EBITDA from continuing operations filed as part of our 8-K this morning.
In the second quarter of 2013, Peace Valley contributed $7.8 million to OSB's adjusted EBITDA, as compared to $3 million in the second quarter of 2012. For the month of June, the Peace Valley results are consolidated.
However, given the impact of purchase accounting on a transaction, LP will not recognize the benefit of a lower cost reduction until the third quarter. You'll also note some changes on our balance sheet as a result of the acquisition of the remaining 50% interest in the Peace Valley mill.
Plant property and equipment increased $146 million, timber licenses increased by $34 million and we added $10 million of goodwill. The investment in and affiliates to -- and advances to affiliates balance decreased by $74 million due to the acquisition.
For the first 6 months, OSB had an operating income of $194 million compared to $17 million in 2012. Adjusted EBITDA for the comparable period was $216 million compared to $38 million in the comparable period of 2012.
The impact of pricing between the years was $233 million and accounted for the majority of the change. The remaining difference is due to higher raw material costs and the costs associated with starting up our Clarke County and Dawson mills.
Slide 6 reports the result of the Siding business. This segment includes our SmartSide and CanExel siding products and commodity OSB produced in our Hayward mill.
The Siding segment reported sales of $153 million in the second quarter of 2013, an increase of 11% from $137 million reported in the second quarter of 2012. The Siding segment reported operating income of $27 million compared to $19 million in the second quarter of 2012 and adjusted EBITDA of $32 million, an increase of $8 million compared to the second quarter of 2012.
OSB contributed $5 million for the result. For the quarter, SmartSide average sales prices were up 2% and volumes increased 8%.
Volume increased in our SmartSide siding line due to continued penetration in several key focus markets including retail, repair and remodel markets and sheds. Improvements due to higher volumes in prices were offset by higher raw material costs, resins and overlays, as well as additional sales and marketing expenses.
CanExel prices were down 2% in U.S. dollars, but up 2% in Canadian dollars, mostly related to mix, and volumes were up 4% in the quarter.
On a year-to-date basis, the Siding segment reported $287 million in sale, $48 million in profit and $56 million in adjusted EBITDA. For the first 6 months of 2012, the Siding segment recorded sales of $250 million, profit of $36 million and adjusted EBITDA of $45 million.
The improvement from the first 6 months of 2012 is driven by increased volume of 13% in SmartSide and higher sales price, and about $11 million related to improved OSB pricing, offset by higher raw material costs, especially resins and overlays. Please turn to Slide 7 of the presentation, we'll show the results from our Engineered Wood Products segment.
This segment includes I-Joist, Laminated Strand Lumber, Laminated Veneer Lumber plus other related products. This segment also includes the sale of I-Joist and LVL products produced by the Abitibi joint venture or under a sales arrangement with Murphy Plywood.
The Engineered Wood Products segment recorded sales of $61 million in the second quarter of 2013, up from $52 million in the second quarter of 2012. The segment's operating loss in the second quarter of 2013 was $5 million, as compared to a loss of $3 million in the second quarter 2012.
For the second quarter of 2013, adjusted EBITDA from continuing operations decreased $1 million as compared to the second quarter of 2012. Volumes of I-Joist were up 2%, while volumes of LVL and LSL were up 15% compared to the same quarter last year, primarily due to higher LSL sales.
Pricing was up 13% in I-Joist and 5% in LVL and LSL, reflecting price increases in all product lines introduced to offset rising raw material costs. Higher costs for lumber, OSB, and veneer negatively impacted the results of the EWP business in the second quarter of 2013 and the first 6 months of 2013, when compared to the same period in 2012.
On a year-to-date basis, Engineered Wood Products reported net sales of $124 million, a loss of $9 million and negative EBITDA of $2 million. In the first 6 months of 2012, Engineered Wood Products reported net sales of $100 million, a loss of $6 million and negative EBITDA of $1 million.
Sales volumes in I-Joist were up 16% and volumes for LSL and LVL were up 14%. Moving to Slide 8 of the presentation.
For the quarter, our South American segment recorded sales of $44 million, approximately the same level of sales as the second quarter of 2012. Operating income increased 50% from $4 million in the second quarter of 2012 to $6 million in the second quarter of 2013.
South America's adjusted EBITDA from continuing operations was $9 million for the second quarter of 2013, compared to $6 million recorded in the second quarter of 2012. Volumes in Chile were down 5%, while volumes in Brazil were down 10% compared to the same quarter last year.
The sales volume decrease in Chile was primarily due to selling less imported product. In Brazil, the lower volume was due to lower export sales, as compared to the second quarter of 2012, and taking some downtime in Brazil for maintenance.
Pricing was up 6% in Chile and up 9% in Brazil. In local currency, Chile recorded a 5% increase and Brazil recorded 10% improvement in pricing.
For the first 6 months of 2013, South America recorded net sales of $89 million, a profit of $13 million and adjusted EBITDA of $18 million. For this first 6 months of 2012, South America recorded net sales of $85 million, profit of $7 million and adjusted EBITDA of $12 million.
Our Molding business, U.S. Green Fiber joint venture and various other nonoperating facilities are shown on the other building products segment.
Overall, we are showing a loss of $2 million from the second quarter of 2013, which is comparable to the second quarter of 2012. Operating results for the first 6 months of 2013 were flat with the 2012 results for the same period.
Total SG&A costs were $36 million in the second quarter of 2013 compared to $31 million in the same quarter in 2012. For the first 6 months of 2013, SG&A costs were $71 million compared to $62 million for the first 6 months of 2012.
The increase in SG&A costs is primarily due to costs associated with our systems upgrade project, higher sales and marketing expenses in our Siding business and higher incentive compensation accruals. We recorded a $3.6 million foreign exchange loss in the quarter compared to a $2.6 million loss in the same quarter last year.
For the 6 months period, we recorded a $4.3 million loss in 2013, compared to a $2.7 million loss in 2012. Interest expense was $10 million in the quarter, compared to $13 million in the second quarter of 2012.
This reduction was primarily related to the lower interest expense we recorded due to the refinancing, as well as lower amortization referred to our lower deferred debt expense. For the first 6 months of 2013, interest expense was $20 million.
This compared to $26 million in the first 6 months of 2012. Moving to Slide 9 of the presentation.
As of June 30, 2013, we had cash, cash equivalents, investments and restricted cash of $645 million; working capital of $873 million; net cash of $251 million. And in addition to the $631 million of cash on our balance sheet, we had $100 million availability on our asset-based line facility.
CapEx expenditures for the 6 months were $26 million. This does not include the $67 million net of cash acquired we spent on the Peace Valley acquisition.
We generated $147 million of operating cash for the quarter and $164 million of operating cash flow in the first 6 months of 2013. And as we discussed in our last conference call, we are planning to spend approximately $85 million for capital expenditures in 2013.
Now we'll turn the call over to Curt for his comments.
Curtis M. Stevens
Thank you, Sallie. That was a very detailed review, lots of numbers there.
I will make a few comments today on our performance for the last quarter, also talk about some of the other accomplishments that we had last quarter, including the startup of the 2 mills that Sallie mentioned, including my views on the housing market and provide some comments on what I see for the second half of this year. For the second quarter in a row, our safety performance was very good with a year-to-date total incident rate of 0.48 and the rolling 12-month total incident rate of 0.37.
Again, safety remains the #1 objective at LP. As Sallie just reviewed, overall sales increased by about 45 -- by 35%.
We're at $0.67 per diluted share, 41% on an adjusted basis. And for the second quarter in a row, we had over $120 million in adjusted EBITDA.
OSB prices moderated in the quarter from Q1, but were still up substantially from last year. As in the first quarter, higher shipments of our SmartSide strand products had another strong quarter in South America and contributed to our improved performance.
While Q2 was a very good quarter, it was also a bit confusing, as we saw weakening demand in pricing in OSB, a reported decline in housing starts in June and turmoil in the mortgage markets as rate spiked following comments by the Federal Reserve. This is the same time that the homebuilders are universally telling the story of improved housing demand, more pricing power and concerns about material shortages.
So here, I'm going to share some of my theories. Weather played a big part in lower housing starts, we had very cold weather in April in the northern tier in the U.S.
and unusually wet weather in Texas and the Carolinas in June. Builders were delayed by labor shortages, both skilled and unskilled.
We also heard about delays in inspections and other local government-supplied support services. We believe that these issues have combined to lengthen the build cycle by 30 to 45 days.
The channel did add inventory in Q1 and the first part of Q2, but they didn't see the pull-through at the builder level due to what I just discussed. We now believe the channel has moved through this and are buying to replenish their inventories.
Credit remains very tight, particularly for the small and medium builders. Chairman Benanke's comments on ending bond buying at the U.S.
sent mortgage markets into a tailspin. The U.S.
experienced the largest month-over-month increase in mortgage rates in 26 years between May and June. However, I am confident these issues will be addressed in the coming months and that builders will be able to satisfy the pent-up demand for housing.
LP responded to these reduced demand for OSB by taking some downtime in several of our facilities. We increased our export sales and we slowed the planned start-up volumes at Clarke County and Dawson Creek.
I am hopeful that the demand for our products will increase and we can continue to reverse some of these actions. Other accomplishments in the second quarter at the end to May, as Sallie mentioned, we did complete the acquisition of Canfor's 50% interest in our Peace Valley joint venture.
We will now be able to enjoy the full profits of this operation less Canfor's earn-out. It will simplify our accounting, so it will be more easily understood by our investors, and we'll be able to integrate this more completely into our broader OSB operations.
As Sallie explained, there was some rather complicated accounting for the stepped [ph] acquisition, which resulted at about a $36 million reported gain. Our Siding business continues to grow with the highest quarterly SmartSide strand volumes in our history in the quarter.
We also had our best quarter ever in South America with nearly $9 million in adjusted EBITDA despite a strengthening U.S. dollar.
As we've mentioned before, we continue to review options to add capacity in Chile to satisfy domestic and neighboring country demand. In the quarter, our Clarke County and Dawson Creek mills both began limited production.
Dawson was constrained by the actions I just mentioned of holding back on production capacity to meet demand. Clarke County was a tough start-up.
When a mill has been down for 5 years, and before that, it only ran for 4 months. We did have some unanticipated difficulties with maintenance and with our software.
We had planned to lose money in the second quarter in Clarke County, about $3 million. And in fact, that contributed about an $8 million loss in the quarter.
I'm confident that our A-grade production is coming back up and we will resolve these problems, but it did negatively impact our second quarter results. For the second half of the year and into next, I remain very optimistic.
The consensus U.S. housing start numbers for 2013 is about 980,000 and $1.25 million for next year.
The rolling 3-month average for single-family housing permits has risen every month since April of '2011, which is a good trend. The inventory of new homes for sale remains very low, at about 125,000, and existing homes for sale stand at $2.2 million, about a 4.5 months supply.
This has fostered price increases that average over 12% year-over-year. Household formations are starting to rebound, which creates demand for housing.
In 2012, there was a 980,000 increase in households compared to 634,000 the year before. In summary, I still believe there's demand for 1 million housing starts in 2013 and up to 1.25 million next year.
We have taken the actions necessary to support this level of activity. From the same time, we are aware of the potential headwinds related to mortgage rates, labor availability for builders, the ongoing political chaos in Washington and slower job growth than anticipated.
So as we demonstrated last quarter, we remain -- we will remain agile and committed to take any actions necessary to respond to changes in demand. With that, let me turn it back to Sallie for the question-and-answer portion.
Sallie B. Bailey
Great. Thank you, Curt.
Now, Allison, if we could, we'd like to go to queue for questions.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] And your first question comes from the line of Gail Glazerman of UBS.
Gail S. Glazerman - UBS Investment Bank, Research Division
I guess, starting with OSB pricing, would it be possible to give a sense of, I guess, maybe where you ended the quarter relative to what your quarter average was? Or just any vague sense of how much a lag there might have been in terms of realizing the market decline?
Curtis M. Stevens
Well, again, if you look at Random Lengths, Random Lengths started to go down at the end of -- or about the middle of April and proceeded down really every week through the end of the quarter and didn't really turn around until after the 4th of July holiday. So the Random Lengths price for the quarter was the lowest at the end of it and, again, didn't recover until the second or third week of July.
But we have seen an uptick in pricing since then, although, I think, last Friday's was relatively flat.
Gail S. Glazerman - UBS Investment Bank, Research Division
Okay. But I'm trying to understand your realization versus your average in the second quarter, then just how much catch-up there may be relative to what happened in the broader market and how much might have been mix and other things?
Curtis M. Stevens
Well, I -- to be honest with you, I don't have those numbers in front of me. We look at it on a quarterly basis.
So, I can't...
Sallie B. Bailey
Yes, I guess, the only thing we can add, Gail, is that we tend to have -- depending it on a 1 to 2 week lag, so that's why we do worse in rising markets and do better in falling markets.
Gail S. Glazerman - UBS Investment Bank, Research Division
If there's only 1 to 2 weeks, so that would imply that your price performance in the quarter was really driven more by mix than anything else?
Sallie B. Bailey
I think that's likely very true. I mean, we did -- our value-added product was better in the second quarter of 2013 with a greater percentage than it was in the second quarter of 2012.
Curtis M. Stevens
Gail, the other thing that happened this we did see a tightening of the flooring product, between commodity and flooring, where, in the first quarter, flooring was actually selling for a lower price than the commodity and that reversed itself. And we sell -- we have the #1 brand in flooring in TopNotch, so that helped us.
Gail S. Glazerman - UBS Investment Bank, Research Division
Okay. I mean, I guess just, Curt, going on to your broader comment.
I mean, as you look more into August, are you starting to see catch-up from this spring? Is there any sort of acceleration or is it more a steady state?
Curtis M. Stevens
Well, right now, in OSB, we're seeing more of a steady state.
Gail S. Glazerman - UBS Investment Bank, Research Division
Okay. And can you talk a little bit about your export trends?
I mean, I presume that's reflected in Chilean volume being down, but just to give a sense of the changes you did have in export?
Curtis M. Stevens
Well, when we treat export -- other than Chile, which obviously is very strategic to us to satisfy the demand in Chile. The other export volume, we use this kind of a relief valve where we see disconnect between demand and supply in the U.S.
And so we will take some offshore business both to Eastern Europe and also into Asia.
Gail S. Glazerman - UBS Investment Bank, Research Division
Okay. I mean, was that down year-on-year, quarter-on-quarter, or is it up?
Curtis M. Stevens
It was up sequentially from Q1, it was probably a little bit down from Q2 of last year.
Gail S. Glazerman - UBS Investment Bank, Research Division
Okay. And just one last question.
Sallie, in recent quarters, you've given us kind of an inventory change number, would it be possible to share that?
Sallie B. Bailey
Oh, sure. The inventory, let me myself get the number.
It's -- inventory for the quarter -- Becky [ph] is going to get it for me. The provided -- $20.5 million, and then year-to-date, we've used $28 million.
Gail S. Glazerman - UBS Investment Bank, Research Division
Okay. And you don't have that in the volume change basis?
Sallie B. Bailey
Oh, Gail, we'll have to get back to you on that.
Operator
And your next question comes from Mark Connelly of CLSA.
Mark W. Connelly - Credit Agricole Securities (USA) Inc., Research Division
Curt, Sallie, just 2 things. SmartSide looks like it's just continuing to do well as it has been and obviously, not as heavy, to the new home build markets are pretty attractive.
Is there a way for you to expand that geographically beyond where you're operating now or are there plans to try to do that? And the second question is input costs.
Can you tell us what you think you're going to see in the second half of the year?
Curtis M. Stevens
Well, first, your question on siding. We do actually produce the siding product in South America now in our Chilean facility.
So we've been supplying that to that Chilean market and the Brazilian market out of South America. In North America, we have a product called CanExel, which we sell predominantly in Canada, but we do a little bit of export of CanExel into Europe.
And then our SmartSide, which is really driving all the growth, we do sell a -- both a pre-finished in Canada out of our East River facility and we also provide some product in Canada. Beyond that, we've got a little bit of business with Lowe's in Australia.
They asked us to follow them with our siding line down there, so we do some business there. We've looked at the opportunity in China, but we think that's a little too early for us at this point.
Mark W. Connelly - Credit Agricole Securities (USA) Inc., Research Division
Curt, I meant to expand it more deeply across North America because it still feels like a relatively regional product. Just wondering if -- with your success with that product, whether there's a way to just grow the -- increase the growth rate faster?
Sallie B. Bailey
Well, that's what we're trying to do. We're actually in all different regions.
We have a dual distribution strategy that we've largely implemented, but we haven't completely implemented that yet. But we just changed -- we just added a major distributor in Texas, which we think will accelerate our growth down there.
So we do have a dual distribution strategy throughout the state of Texas. We are running significant marketing campaigns in the Northwest to turn the tide from some of our earlier issues there, and that's been successful.
And then the strength of this product has always been kind in the middle part of the country, and we continue to grow that. So we are going on all cylinders.
I think we've added -- we've agreed to add 4 people into the Siding sales group in the second half of the year, which for us, they only have 100 salesmen, that's a pretty big increase.
Mark W. Connelly - Credit Agricole Securities (USA) Inc., Research Division
All right, okay. And on the input cost for the second half?
Curtis M. Stevens
Input cost, we think we're going to be relatively flat, it will be up a little bit, but not a lot.
Operator
And your next question comes from Mark Wilde of Deutsche Bank.
Mark Wilde - Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division
Curt, you gave us some color on the different restarts, I wondered if you could just give us a bit more detail. How are you running up at Dawson Creek right now?
I think the initial plan there was to run one shift, are you running one shift fully right now?
Curtis M. Stevens
We are, and that's largely focused at our flooring product for the West Coast and TechShield. So we're trying to do the specialty products for the West Coast where we see that demand.
So we'll probably keep that one shift until we do see the demand come up.
Mark Wilde - Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division
Okay. And then down at Clarke County, what kind of rate is that running at right now?
Curtis M. Stevens
Really crummy. We're running that 4 shifts 24/7, but as I said, we're having a lot of preventive maintenance work going on and debugging of -- one of the big problems we found is that the software, and update on some of our equipment, not all of our equipment so we're spending a lot of resources just on the software controls down there.
We're not seeing any mechanical failures, it's more related to the software.
Mark Wilde - Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division
Okay. You mentioned that you had an $8 million loss in the second quarter.
Do you have any sense of what we might expect out of there if current prices just remain flat in the third quarter?
Curtis M. Stevens
I would think we'd cut that by at least half.
Mark Wilde - Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division
Okay. All right.
And then just moving down to the Latin American business. You said you're still studying the third mill down in Chile, can you give us some sense of what the timing might be on a decision there?
Curtis M. Stevens
We actually had a review in our board meeting last Friday. Frederick [ph] and his team came up.
What they would like to do, of course, is get started immediately. I think, more practically, our board will review that in the either the February or the May meeting.
And if we can get started on that, we would have limited production at the end of 2015.
Mark Wilde - Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division
Okay. And what would that production -- how big a facility are you talking about?
I assume this is another relocation of an idled U.S. capacity down in Chile?
Curtis M. Stevens
It is. I think our current thinking is we do have assets of the same size as we have there now.
We also have bigger assets. I think the current plan would be to take one of the bigger assets down there and then idle, put it on the same side as the current mill, then idle the current mill, ramp-up the new one, and then probably use that for siding only at some point in the future.
Mark Wilde - Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division
Okay. And is it possible, in Latin America, to give us some sense of relative profitability between Brazil and Chile?
Because it sounds like Brazil has been running at probably -- it's a bigger facility, been running at a lower operating rate, so I assume that Chile is disproportionately profitable versus Brazil right now.
Curtis M. Stevens
That's true for 2 reasons. One, in Chile, most of it is going into the home construction.
And Brazil, we're still going into packaging and furniture and other applications. So we haven't made the full penetration to home construction.
So the margins are positive in both places, but they're much more profitable in Chile.
Mark Wilde - Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division
Okay. And then finally, could just talk about what it's going to take to get the Engineered Wood business to profitability?
I know you mentioned costs were up, but in the face of better volumes and better price, it was a little disappointing to see results actually down there.
Curtis M. Stevens
Yes, it was disappointing to us as well. But if you think about it -- and I've seen the releases from our competitors as well, then we also -- our pricing go up a little bit like 10%, which is actually [ph] was a pretty big increase, but the cost production is up 30% when you get OSB and lumber pricing where it was.
I think we're going to see improved -- well, I know we'll see improved results in Q3, because we've worked through some of the expensive inventories as pricing has come down in OSB, as well as in lumber. What we've said pretty consistently is that we need 1 million to 1.1 million starts so that it would start to show black ink and that's kind of where we are.
Now it was a tale of multiple products. We actually made money in our LVL business and we're pretty damn close at LSL business.
Well, we lost it all with I-Joist, which is very heavy on the raw materials that I just talked about.
Operator
Or next question comes from Chip Dillon of Vertical Research Partners.
Chip A. Dillon - Vertical Research Partners, LLC
I wanted to ask you first, just in terms of understanding the kind of how you all look at free cash flow, I know there are a lot of moving parts. But if we look at the net debt change, as you all measure it from the first and second quarter, your net -- or net cash, I should say, went up by $77 million.
And then you spent $67 million on the piece of -- on the other half of the mill. So if I add those 2 together, I get $144 million.
And of course, I know working capital, as you mentioned, was a big part of it, but am I missing something in that equation?
Sallie B. Bailey
Yes, Chip, I think the best thing to do really is to look at the 8-K supplements that we filed, look at the 10-Q, and look at the cash flow by the quarter. And we generated $147 million of cash in the quarter.
We spent $71 million between CapEx and the Peace Valley joint venture, so that gets to the primarily the improvement that we're talking about.
Chip A. Dillon - Vertical Research Partners, LLC
Okay. All right, I'll take another look at that, because that helps a lot.
And then in terms of the -- you mentioned the Clarke County mill, looks like it lost $8 million in this quarter. What was -- could to remind us what it was in the first quarter?
And you're sort of saying it might be cut in half like maybe $3 million, $4 million in the fourth -- I'm sorry, in the third, where do you sort of see that thing hitting profitability again and keeping price constant? And I mean, could be a $10 million or $15 million EBIT contributor next year?
Curtis M. Stevens
Absolutely. Yes, we would -- we fully expect that the total profitability next year.
What we've always said is ramping up these mills that -- they've been idle for a while, does take time. So we are behind our curve, probably by 2 months, 2 to 3 months, but we expect to be, given that lag, we expect to be where we said we would be next year.
Chip A. Dillon - Vertical Research Partners, LLC
Got you. And when you look at CapEx, I know you mentioned it's $85 million for this year.
I know it's early days, but can you give us kind of a range of where we could see it next year? And then how much incremental would there be because of Peace Valley?
Curtis M. Stevens
I don't -- we're going through our capital allocation right now, so I'm not sure I'm comfortable giving you a number for next year. On Peace Valley, we did have some extraordinary maintenance that we had this year that's included in that $25 million -- or at least our portion, included that $25 million number.
I don't think Peace Valley is going to be much different than any of our other mills. We don't see any major deferred maintenance that's there.
So I think it will just be kind of in the $2 million to $2.5 million per plant kind of number for maintenance capital.
Sallie B. Bailey
And, Chip, to give a little bit more color on the $85 million, $10 million of that relates to our systems upgrade project and $75 million relates to the base businesses.
Chip A. Dillon - Vertical Research Partners, LLC
Got you. Got you.
And then as you look at the -- what's interesting about the mills that were built or started, I guess, back in this last cycle, you've seen them kind of the last to start up, if you will, whether it's in the one in South Carolina or yours in Alabama. And I guess there's one up in Canada.
Do you think there's a lesson here in terms of maybe the scale of new capacity? Maybe we've hit a point of diminishing returns and 1 day, we will need more capacity, and do you think it will come in smaller chunks?
Or do you think that they'll still be of this size?
Curtis M. Stevens
That's a real good question. We have a mill in Hayward, Wisconsin in our Siding business, it has 2 lines.
And I really pretty like that configuration, because it gives me the flexibility to do siding on one of them, and do OSB on other, and revert back to siding when demand takes on -- takes off. So I think that's a pretty good current configuration.
That's exactly what we were talking about in Chile. Mark asked a question about the Chile plan.
We'll put a second plant on the same site, so we can use the same management team, but it will be physically separated. Rather than being an 800 million gorilla, it will be smaller than that.
The economics of these big plants is when they do go down, they go down and you lose all of it. Where if you have different configurations, I think you have more flexibility.
As far as how we're going to add capacity, we're going to take a page from the playbook of siding where we've added capacity in existing facilities to the extent we can by adding plants or adding peripheral additional equipment. We did that in Two Harbors, increased their capacity by 25%.
Our board just approved a project that Tomahawk to increase their capacity by 40%, and we have something in the drawing boards to increase Hayward by another 40%. So I think that's the way we're going to approach this.
Plus we do have -- we control a fair amount of idled equipment that we can redeploy like we have in South America. We'll look at that as an alternative.
Chip A. Dillon - Vertical Research Partners, LLC
Got you, very helpful. And real quickly, how many salespeople did you say you added in the Siding business?
Curtis M. Stevens
Well, we added 4 in the second half, we added 5 in the first half. So we've added, I think, 9% of our sales force, basically, between the first half and the second half of the year just in Siding.
Operator
Our next question comes from Mark Weintraub of Buckingham Research.
Mark A. Weintraub - The Buckingham Research Group Incorporated
First, just back on Clarke County for a minute. Could you remind us when that started up, the facility?
Curtis M. Stevens
It started up late April, early May.
Sallie B. Bailey
Yes.
Mark A. Weintraub - The Buckingham Research Group Incorporated
Okay. And so I guess, though, with the lower price -- the product that got sold was hit when the pricing had already rolled off some?
Curtis M. Stevens
Well, what we sell is -- you have to qualify the products and so you're selling less than A grade product, so you're selling it for dunnage and other -- so you're selling it for lower price because of that.
Mark A. Weintraub - The Buckingham Research Group Incorporated
Okay. And at this point, I mean, how far along are you in terms of having rectified the issues?
Curtis M. Stevens
Well, it's a day to day. We're ramping it up everyday.
And we have some really good days and once in a while we have a bad day. It's not unique to any other kind of a complicated start-up like this.
And I will say we warned everybody that these startups don't happen easily.
Mark A. Weintraub - The Buckingham Research Group Incorporated
Sure. And so where is your capacity at this point and your -- how much can you produce at this -- in, say, the second half of the year, recognizing that you're obviously run to demand?
But what type of rated capacity do you have at this point?
Curtis M. Stevens
I think we're right about $1 billion a quarter, maybe a little north.
Mark A. Weintraub - The Buckingham Research Group Incorporated
Now if I -- didn't you produce $1 billion in the second quarter?
Curtis M. Stevens
Yes, we did.
Mark A. Weintraub - The Buckingham Research Group Incorporated
Okay. And so I was just -- I think you had mentioned that you have taken some down time, and so just trying to understand those 2.
Curtis M. Stevens
What's your question, Mark, I'm sorry?
Mark A. Weintraub - The Buckingham Research Group Incorporated
I'm just so...
Sallie B. Bailey
Well, I think the down time that we mentioned was the down time that we took in Brazil. And what Curt's talking about...
Curtis M. Stevens
We did take some in North America.
Sallie B. Bailey
I know we did. But a mean, but in North America, we did that by taking shifts down versus -- so...
Curtis M. Stevens
Right. Yes, we took some shifts out in 2 of our Canadian plants.
Mark A. Weintraub - The Buckingham Research Group Incorporated
Okay. And then lastly, I know -- production was up, I think, it was about 8%, shipments I think were only up 2%.
So superficially, it seems like you maybe built some inventory in the quarter, is that accurate? And was that -- and how do you...
Sallie B. Bailey
Yes.
Curtis M. Stevens
That's why we took a downtime, we saw our inventory coming up.
Sallie B. Bailey
And also, Curt talked about that some of our sales were -- we had some export sales this quarter. And so we talked about this a lot in one of our earlier calls about the FOB shipping versus destination and those export sales generally if they are on the water, they sometimes are in our inventory and that was true.
And so -- or they're at the port waiting to be shipped. And so that showed up in those numbers as well and some of the difference.
I just want to go back to the rated capacity. Our rated capacity is -- well, I mean, what's running is this 4.2.
Operator
Your next question comes from Steve Chercover of D.A. Davidson.
Steven Chercover - D.A. Davidson & Co., Research Division
So yes, I'm also interested in your theoretical capacity. Is all that you've got left to add would be Chambord and then 3 shifts at Dawson, is that how we should look at it?
Curtis M. Stevens
That's right.
Steven Chercover - D.A. Davidson & Co., Research Division
So that would be, what, another 400,000 -- 400 million square feet or so combined?
Curtis M. Stevens
Chambord is about a 500 million square-foot mill, so probably 500, and full shifts at Dawson would add another 300 or so on that one.
Steven Chercover - D.A. Davidson & Co., Research Division
Got it. And you mentioned taking, I guess, not a world class, although I think Chip's is on to something that world class might not be the best thing to have.
But I guess, what would have been a good scale facility back a generation ago down in Brazil or to Chile. So which one of those idled assets would that be like Silsbee or St.-Michel?
Curtis M. Stevens
Well, it's actually another asset that we bought in the market about 1 year ago.
Steven Chercover - D.A. Davidson & Co., Research Division
Can you identify that?
Curtis M. Stevens
It's the Lemoyne mill that Marco [ph] had.
Steven Chercover - D.A. Davidson & Co., Research Division
Okay. That's interesting.
All right, and so that would be...
Curtis M. Stevens
Caught you offguard, didn't I, Steve?
Steven Chercover - D.A. Davidson & Co., Research Division
Yes, I guess I forgot about that one. So that one would be dedicated to commodity OSB and then ultimately the small unit would be towards SmartSide?
Curtis M. Stevens
Yes, it's about 140 million square feet that's down there now that we would probably dedicate to SmartSide.
Steven Chercover - D.A. Davidson & Co., Research Division
And how's the early market acceptance of SmartSide down in South America?
Sallie B. Bailey
We don't have enough capacity. And in fact, we're struggling because Brazil going to launch SmartSide as well and we have not figured out on how to do that on a continuous press.
Operator
Your next question comes from Alex Ovshey of Goldman Sachs.
Alex Ovshey Ovshey - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division
With the Peace Valley acquisition now closed, can you talk about how we should think about that from a modeling point of view? Or are you expecting the inventory write-up to also impact part of the third quarter?
And then can you give us any color on how we should be thinking about the payout for that acquisition towards the Canfor?
Sallie B. Bailey
Sure. Alex, we should be through most of the write-up due to the acquisition in the second quarter.
There will be some minimal impact in the third quarter, so I think you should view that mill similar with how you would do the modeling for the other mills that we have. I mean, other than it's the largest mill now in our family of mills, I don't see that as being any different from the other information we've provided.
I mean, do you want to address that?
Curtis M. Stevens
Yes, on the earn out, you all will be happy and so will I if I pay the earn-out out. Basically what we've done is we set a base level of EBITDA and we share a portion of that for the next 3 years, that's the way that it works.
I'm not prepared to give you the number.
Alex Ovshey Ovshey - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division
Okay, Curt. And just one follow-up on that side, can you guys talk to what the impact was in the second quarter from the inventory writeup?
Sallie B. Bailey
Well, fundamentally, it would have been as if we had owned them, it's as if they did a joint venture the entire time. So what really happened is some of that write up in the inventory showed up in the gain on the sale of that we recorded.
Alex Ovshey Ovshey - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division
Okay, got it.
Alex Ovshey Ovshey - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division
And -- sorry, go ahead.
Sallie B. Bailey
No. Sorry, go ahead.
Alex Ovshey Ovshey - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division
Okay. As you're restarting all the idled mills that have been out for the last couple of years, can you just talk about where you see LP on the cost curve relative to the competition?
And also talk to which mills do you see the flex mills in the context of choppiness and then demand, which mills would be the ones potentially the ones where there would be downtime taken first?
Curtis M. Stevens
Well, as far as the cost curve, we see [indiscernible] studies and the [indiscernible] studies, and by region, we're pretty close to being on top of each other. The decision I want to take out is generally a freight decision more than it is a cost of production, because it's getting into the market.
So our Canadian mills have taken a disproportionate amount of the downtime and I would think that would continue, because Maniwaki is a long ways away and Dawson Creek's a ways away, so -- and Swan Valley. So I would expect that if we flex, they're going to be flexing the Canadian mills.
Now the currency, U.S. dollar getting stronger, helps us a little bit that decision but when it was over parity, pretty easy decision on where to take out capacity.
Alex Ovshey Ovshey - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division
Makes sense, Curt. And just last question for me, with the cash flow -- with the cash position building on the balance sheet, can you talk about appetite for our potential special dividend similar to what your neighbor to the north has talked to where variable a dividend is paid out and reflective of the cash flow generation of the company during the course of the year?
Sallie B. Bailey
Yes. Oh, go.
Curtis M. Stevens
Well, historically, our board has not supported any special dividend and they based that decision on data. But if you look at special dividend, it reduces your stock price by 105%.
It doesn't sound like a very good use of money for shareholders. So that's not something we're too excited about.
Now we had a regular dividend in the past and we've also done share repurchases in the past. But regular -- our special dividend would likely be at the bottom of our list.
Operator
Our next question comes from Paul Quinn of RBC Capital Markets.
Paul C. Quinn - RBC Capital Markets, LLC, Research Division
Chris and Sallie, just a couple of questions. What's the order file?
Could you sort of give us an idea of where you're at now versus sort of what you saw in Q2 and Q1?
Curtis M. Stevens
I think that the order file was longest in Q1, shortest in Q2, and we're probably somewhere in between in Q3. How's that?
Paul C. Quinn - RBC Capital Markets, LLC, Research Division
Not as detailed as I expected.
Sallie B. Bailey
I think it's probably exactly as detailed as you expected, but maybe not as detailed as you would have liked.
George L. Staphos - BofA Merrill Lynch, Research Division
That's true as well. Just drilling down in EWP.
The higher costs in the quarter from OSB, I guess, on the I-Joist, how much inventory you have in that segment? And I mean, because what we saw in OSB pricing was down, so I'm just trying to reconcile that with the comment on higher costs.
Curtis M. Stevens
Generally, they would have between in transit, because most of that -- or most of the web stock is coming out of Canada, so you've got 3 to 4 weeks in transit and then you're probably sitting on another 3 to 4 weeks, so you're probably on an 8-week kind of level where you're committed to pricing.
Paul C. Quinn - RBC Capital Markets, LLC, Research Division
Okay, that's helpful. And then just lastly, just on qualification for Clarke County, how long does it take when she startup to qualify that board?
Curtis M. Stevens
The board got qualified very quickly. It got qualified within 5 days.
But then you have to make sure that every board that's coming off the line, so there's extra level of quality scrutiny on that. And if there's any question about being an A grade or not, we downgrade it, because we don't want to take any reputational risk.
Paul C. Quinn - RBC Capital Markets, LLC, Research Division
Okay. So, for example, in June, can you give us a rough idea as to what would be qualified board and what would be selling for less than A quality?
Curtis M. Stevens
Probably in the 25% to 30% were downgraded in June. I don't have it right in front of me, but that's kind of what I would have expected.
And now think you're probably in the less than 15% kind of number.
Sallie B. Bailey
Thank you, everyone. Allison, I think that's all the time we have for questions.
So if you could please provide the replay number. I would like to thank everybody for participating in our call and Mike and Becky are available, as always, to answer any follow-up questions you may have.
Thank you, and we hope that all of you have a good day.
Operator
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes your conference call for today's call.
You may now disconnect. Thank you very much and good day.