LPX November 5, 2025

Louisiana-Pacific Corporation Q3 2025 Earnings Call - ExpertFinish Drives Siding Growth Amid OSB Challenges and CEO Transition

Summary

Louisiana-Pacific Corporation’s Q3 2025 results reveal a mixed landscape. Siding volumes were flat, but revenue climbed 5%, powered by price increases and a strong product mix, notably a 17% volume surge in the premium ExpertFinish pre-finished siding line. Demand for ExpertFinish remains robust enough to require managed orders until new capacity arrives in early 2026. Conversely, OSB faces persistent weakness with prices hovering near variable costs, dragging total sales down 8% and EBITDA down significantly to $82 million. Operational efficiency in OSB improved to 80%, reflecting diligent capacity management amid challenging market conditions. LP announced CEO Brad Southern’s planned retirement in February with President Jason Ringblum poised to take the helm, signaling confidence in strategic continuity. Capital expenditure plans are being scaled back and shifted towards more capital-efficient options like converting the Maniwaki OSB mill to siding, delaying prior plans for the Holton facility, in response to softer housing starts forecasts. The company expects 2025 full-year EBITDA around $420 million, with Siding growth offsetting OSB softness, and projects a modest 3%-4% average price increase for siding in 2026, focusing on continuing share gains in repair and remodel markets and the evolving distribution landscape.

Key Takeaways

  • Siding sales revenue rose 5% year-over-year in Q3 2025, driven largely by price increases and a favorable product mix, despite flat volume.
  • ExpertFinish pre-finished siding volume surged 17% year-over-year, accounting for 10% of siding volume but 17% of revenue, underscoring its higher price point.
  • Strong demand for ExpertFinish forced Louisiana-Pacific to implement managed order files until additional capacity becomes available early next year.
  • OSB segment continued to face a weak pricing environment with prices near variable cost, depressing total sales by 8% and significantly reducing EBITDA to $82 million.
  • OSB operational efficiency (OEE) improved to 80%, up two points from the previous year, highlighting disciplined capacity management.
  • The company is considering converting its Maniwaki, Quebec OSB mill into siding production due to shifting capacity needs and to optimize capital efficiency, delaying prior plans for the Holton mill expansion.
  • CEO Brad Southern announced his retirement effective February; President Jason Ringblum is the next CEO, ensuring leadership continuity aligned with ongoing transformation strategy.
  • Full year 2025 EBITDA guidance increased by $20 million to approximately $420 million, reflecting better-than-expected siding performance despite OSB headwinds.
  • LP plans a 3% to 4% pricing increase in siding products for 2026, consistent with historical pricing pattern, to sustain growth and manage inventory ahead of price hike.
  • Siding market softness is primarily in new construction and southern U.S. markets, while repair/remodel and shed segments show resilience and growth opportunities, supported by targeted marketing and distribution strategies.

Full Transcript

Operator: Today, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the third quarter, 2025, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker’s presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star 11 on your telephone, and you will then hear an automated message advising that your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star 11 again. Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your first speaker today, Aaron Howald. Please go ahead.

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thank you, Operator, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us to discuss LP’s results for the third quarter of 2025, as well as our updated outlook for the full year. On the call this morning are Brad Southern, Alan Haughie, and Jason Ringblum, who are LP’s Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer, and President, respectively. As always, after prepared remarks, we will take a round of questions. During this morning’s call, we will refer to a presentation that has been posted to LP’s IR webpage, which is investor.lpcorp.com. Our 8-K filing, earnings press release, and other materials are also available there. Finally, I will caution you that today’s discussion contains forward-looking statements and non-GAAP financial metrics as described on slides two and three of LP’s earnings presentation. The appendix of the presentation also contains reconciliations that are further supplemented by this morning’s 8-K filing.

Rather than reading those materials, I will incorporate them herein by reference. With that, I will turn the call over to Brad.

Brad Southern, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thanks, Aaron. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us. As usual, I’ll discuss some highlights from the quarter before Alan shares more detail about our results and updated guidance. After that, Jason, Alan, and I will be happy to take your questions. As expected, Siding volume in the third quarter was flat. This result in a softening market, especially compared to the difficult comp from last year, reinforces our confidence in our ongoing share gains. 5% growth in Siding sales revenue, driven primarily by price and a strong mix, exceeded our expectations and guidance. While we anticipated the normalization of demand in the shared component of our Siding business. Our ExpertFinish pre-finished Siding product, primarily designed for R&R applications, saw sales volumes increase by 17% year over year.

The April launch of our Expert Finish Naturals Collection, which is a new line of nature-inspired two-tone colors, has contributed materially to a beneficial price-mix effect. Expert Finish accounted for 10% of overall Siding volume and 17% of overall Siding revenue in the quarter, showing once again the power of SmartSide innovation to drive price, volume growth, and share gains. Inventory levels and sell-through rates held steady through the quarter, consistent with servicing seasonally normal demand levels. The only exception is Expert Finish, which remains in such high demand that we have implemented a managed order file until new capacity comes online early next year. Total sales in the quarter were down 8% compared to prior year, and EBITDA of $82 million was also down significantly. The extended trough in OSB prices was the main drag on both metrics.

While we obviously cannot control OSB prices, we can manage the OSB business effectively, and our teams did that exceptionally well in the face of what remains a difficult market. The OSB business achieved 80% overall equipment effectiveness, or OEE, in the quarter, up two points from last year. Increasing OEE is never easy, and it can be particularly challenging when we are also managing our capacity with discipline to balance supply and demand. I want to congratulate and thank everyone on the OSB operations team who contributed to this impressive achievement. Our results are only possible because of our teams and the strong culture we have built. In the third quarter, LP was named one of the 50 best manufacturers in the United States by Industry Week, debuting on the list at number 24, and one of very few specially-built product manufacturers to be recognized.

We were also named by Newsweek as one of America’s most admired workplaces. Finally, as you saw, I informed LP’s board of directors of my intention to retire this coming February after more than 25 years of service. It has been the honor of my career to lead LP’s 4,300-person team. Ultimately, the job of a CEO is to build an engaged culture focused on safety, growth, innovation, and execution to deliver value long after he or she is gone. When we launched LP’s transformation strategy, I was daunted by the challenges we faced and the aggressive goals we’ve set for value creation. I am proud to say that we exceeded those goals. As LP’s team and strategy have evolved, the magnitude of the opportunity before us has only grown, and our confidence that we can continue to execute our strategy and achieve our ambitious goals has never been stronger.

Jason Ringblum and I have been friends and colleagues for over 20 years. He was instrumental in the development and execution of LP’s strategic transformation. He led LP’s OSB and EWP businesses for five years, and for the last three, led LP’s Siding business before being named President. This perspective makes him uniquely suited to serve as LP’s next CEO. I have total confidence that with Jason, LP’s future has never been brighter. I will turn the call over to Alan.

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thanks, Brad. Before discussing the results, I do want to take a moment to say that working for Brad has been a personal and professional highlight for me. While they may be tough shoes to fill, I can think of no one better suited for this task than Jason. With that, slide seven of the presentation shows Siding’s results for the quarter. As expected, the bulk of growth came from price. Average selling prices were up 5%, with prime products up 3% and ExpertFinish prices up 12%. There were two mixed phenomena helping this along. First, as Brad mentioned, shed segment volumes normalized after a very strong first half. As I am sure you will recall, strong shed volumes had been a drag on prices earlier in the year.

Part of the 5% year-over-year price performance this quarter is simply the lower mix of shed relative to primed and Expert Finish products. The other mix factor was within Expert Finish itself, where demand for LP’s two-tone Naturals and other higher-priced pre-finished products drove outsized year-over-year price gains. This mix shift is also evident in the year-over-year volume column, which shows relatively flat volumes in total, but within which primed volumes were down 1% and Expert Finish volumes were up 17%. Selling and marketing investments, raw material inflation, and other factors were fairly typical, but there are some moving pieces in the other column that they are mentioning. You may recall that the third quarter of last year saw an unusually high EBITDA margin, in part because of delays in maintenance projects and the resulting inventory build impact, which then reversed in the following quarter.

So much of what you see in the $20 million of other costs in this waterfall is the non-recurrence of those events from last year. Among them, inventory absorption is actually a double hit, i.e., we built inventory in the third quarter of last year, which boosted EBITDA, whereas this year we’ve reduced inventory, which temporarily hurts EBITDA. In the long run, it’s all just timing. Viewing the second half of the year in total simplifies the year-over-year comparisons considerably. The $2 million tariff impact is the retaliatory tariffs LP had been paying to import ExpertFinish into Canada. Those tariffs were rescinded in late August, so we are not currently incurring that expense. Also, as I’m sure you’re aware, the Section 232 tariff announcements did not impact LP’s OSB or Siding manufactured in Canada and imported into the U.S.

Other than minor tariff impacts on some of our raw materials, LP is currently bearing minimal tariff costs. The OSB chart on slide eight tells a simple, if bleak, story of soft OSB prices and a challenging demand environment. OSB prices spent most of the quarter barely above variable cost, driven by sluggish demand, particularly in the Southeast. Price realization fared somewhat better than expected due to a combination of the lag in contractual prices and Structural Solutions mix. While the small non-price variance is masked rather well, the OSB operations team played the hand they were dealt exceptionally well. Overall efficiency hit 80%, up two points from last year, and aggressive cost control helped the OSB segment outperform our algorithmic guidance. Superficially, this waterfall suggests that price is the only thing that matters in OSB.

Perhaps a more accurate reading is that at prices this low, everything matters. I tip my hat to the OSB team for making the best of a very difficult market. Slide nine shows cash flow for the quarter, which, whilst straightforward, very much continues to reinforce the value of LP’s transformation. $82 million of EBITDA translated to $89 million of operating cash flow after minor puts and takes for working capital, taxes, and interest. We invested $84 million in CapEx to support growth of Expert Finish and Structural Solutions, as well as to ensure that our plants continue to operate safely and efficiently. After $19 million in dividends, we ended the quarter with $316 million in cash and over a billion dollars of liquidity, including our undrawn credit facility. This brings us to guidance on slide 10.

Regrettably, OSB prices have scarcely moved since the last call, so our fourth quarter OSB guidance has only slightly improved. The beneficial lag factors that helped the third quarter have dissipated, given how long prices have remained in the doldrums. All else equal, price realization in the fourth quarter will likely provide less of a tailwind than it did in the third. The resulting $45 million of EBITDA loss in the fourth quarter and break even for the year are, as always, algorithmic projections of current prices and utilization. For Siding, we reaffirm our full-year EBITDA guidance of $430 million. However, for the fourth quarter, the market has continued to weaken, so we anticipate slightly softer growth. We still expect a year-over-year revenue increase in the coming quarter, but of about 3%, and this mostly from price.

Much like the third quarter, we expect an outsized contribution from ExpertFinish to both volume and price. We are therefore guiding to fourth quarter revenue of about $370 million and to EBITDA of about $82 million. This slightly reduces our full-year revenue growth rate from 9% to 8% for revenue of roughly $1.68 billion, while increasing our full-year EBITDA margin guide to about 26%. Our South American business is also struggling with a sluggish economy, and its results are not fully offsetting our corporate overhead at the moment. Therefore, total company EBITDA for the fourth quarter and full year are both expected to be about $5 million lower than the sum of the Siding and OSB. Nonetheless, our expectation for full-year total company EBITDA has actually risen by $20 million from $405 million three months ago to $425 million today.

We’re also cutting our CapEx guidance, and there are two factors in play here. First, given the current emphasis on capacity management and cost discipline in OSB, we are deferring even more projects in OSB. In Siding, we’re balancing steadily improving OEE and initiatives to optimize LP’s entire manufacturing portfolio against a backdrop of persistent market softness. As a result, the sense of urgency that motivated Holton’s expansion as the fastest route to additional capacity is now somewhat diminished. This makes our OSB mill in Maniwaki, Quebec, a viable candidate for conversion to Siding, an option we are now exploring. Should we ultimately proceed down that path, it would most likely still provide additional Siding capacity in advance of market demand and would likely do so at a larger scale and with greater capital efficiency.

While we weigh these options, we have paused any further mill-specific spending while continuing the longer lead time mill-agnostic investments. And with that, we’ll be happy to take your questions.

Operator: Thank you. At this time, we will conduct the question-and-answer session. As a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press star 11 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star 11 again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from the line of George Staphos with Bank of America Securities. Go ahead. Your line is open.

Operator1: Thanks so much. Appreciate all the details, everyone. I know everyone will say it. Congratulations, Brad and Jason, on the news, and we wish you continued progress and success in the next chapters. I guess the first question I had, Alan, if you could just give us a bit more detail in terms of the potential shift from Holton to Maniwaki, what’s behind it, how will we ultimately see it manifest itself versus the other in terms of operations and performance? The second question I had, maybe more for Jason and Brad, there have obviously been some headlines in the last couple of days, in the last couple of weeks, about marketing battles, some of your peers extending relationships with some of the building products distributors to push product. That maybe is a more competitive backdrop. Would you agree with that? Does that.

Change the way you market, or does that actually help you because your peers might have some other things that they’re focused on relative to the Siding business? Thanks. I will turn it over there.

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thank you. George, thanks for the questions. We will address your two questions. Before we get to that, I’ve just realized that I did misspeak slightly in my prepared remarks a moment ago when I was describing the impact of LPSA on the full-year EBITDA guide. In the fourth quarter, the difference between LPSA and corporate unallocated expenses is indeed $5 million. For the full year, as you’ll note from the published materials that went out this morning, the difference isn’t $5 million, but it’s $10 million. Just to be clear, the full-year EBITDA is expected to be $420 million. Excuse me. About $10 million lower than the sum of Siding and OSB’s break-even, but still an increase on the previous guidance. Sorry, I’ve got a fog in my throat. Hold on.

I’m going to turn over the question on Maniwaki to my friend and colleague, Jason.

Jason Ringblum, President, Incoming CEO, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah, thanks for the question, George. I’ll touch a little bit on mill conversion options. I guess when you think about it holistically, the beauty of our position here at LP is that we have multiple options. I’ll go through those just quickly. We’ve mentioned them on previous calls, but we have the opportunity to expand existing Siding plants. Imagine a line parallel to an existing line at a current Siding plant. We also have the opportunity to convert additional OSB facilities and aspen wood baskets. Maniwaki, as Alan mentioned, is an option along with Peace Valley. There is also the potential for a greenfield that would leverage sites that we own today in Wawa, Ontario, or Cook, Minnesota. With that said, what I would say is the decision on the next mill will really come down to timing and capital efficiency, really coupled with.

The network optimization benefits that any given option has the potential to add. We are still assessing all of those options that I mentioned, but as Alan stated, Maniwaki has surfaced to the top here more recently, just given the OSB market. The second part of your question, just around the competitive dynamics, what I would say is, generally, we have not seen a whole lot of disruption within the channel. I mean, this is the time of year where new programs are being put in place, where we are navigating RFPs with different customers. Right now, we are focused on our strategy and really trying to minimize the noise and continue to focus on gaining share.

Operator1: Hey, Jason, just a quick one. I’ll turn it over. Aside from the fiber basket for Maniwaki, what else makes it potentially rise to the surface more quickly?

Jason Ringblum, President, Incoming CEO, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah. Man iwaki is a large OSB facility. It has the ability to produce 600-650 million feet of OSB, which translates to, call it, 400 million-ish of Siding. Just the scale and relative cost position of that facility, coupled with the network optimization opportunities that it presents, will all be factored into the analysis.

Operator1: Okay. I see. Let me turn it over. I’ll come back. Thank you.

Operator: Stand by for the next caller. The next call comes from the line of Susan Maklari with Goldman Sachs. Go ahead. Your line is open.

Susan Maklari, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Thank you. Good morning, everyone. Let me add my congrats to both Brad and Jason as well. Looking forward to working with you.

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thank you, Susan.

Susan Maklari, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: My first question is talking about the pricing environment in Siding. You’ve traditionally announced an increase late in or sometime in the fourth quarter for effective in early the following year. Just given the world that we’re in and the varying dynamics around housing and the consumer, how are you thinking about pricing as we look to 2026?

Jason Ringblum, President, Incoming CEO, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thanks for your question, Susan. I’ll take that one. As of, I guess, within the last seven to ten days, we did announce a price increase very consistent with what you’ve seen us do in prior years. Along with that, we are managing our order intake to really minimize any sort of inventory build in the channel in advance of our price increase. Really, those orders that are placed throughout December and in our January order file will come at the new price list. Nothing unusual here. What I would say is increases vary by product category and geography, but we are really targeting the net somewhere between 3%-4% in 2026.

Susan Maklari, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Okay. Thank you. Turning to OSB, when you think about the environment that the builders are facing and the commentary we are hearing, especially from the big publics around pulling back on starts to end this year and then even into early 2026, how are you thinking about balancing that capacity, the near-term pressures that are there relative to the longer-term outlook for housing, and just adjusting the cost structure on a relative basis given those factors?

Jason Ringblum, President, Incoming CEO, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah. Demand for OSB has certainly been soft for the better part of the year. As a result, our focus has really been on matching capacity to demand, no different than what we’ve done in prior years where we’ve experienced soft markets. What I would say today is our utilization rate for OSB is in the high 60%, which essentially matches our committed volumes for the business. What we felt is if we sell open market wood or bring cash wood to the market, largely, it ends up in lower prices. Right now, we’re focused on really managing costs and optimizing our network relative to the demand we see today.

Susan Maklari, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Okay. Thanks for the color. Good luck with the quarter.

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thank you. Thank you.

Operator: One moment for our next question. The next question comes from the line of Ketan Mamtora with BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Operator2: Good morning. Thank you. Brad, I wanted to extend my congratulations as well. I mean, it’s been a remarkable transformation. This is a much different company today than what it used to be even 10 or 15 years back. So congratulations.

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thank you, Kate.

Operator2: Jason, look forward to working with you. Maybe to start with, can you talk a little bit about, you mentioned shed volumes are normalizing in Q3. Can you talk about sort of what you saw there in Q3 and what’s contemplated by way of volumes as you think about Q4?

Jason Ringblum, President, Incoming CEO, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: I would say, Kate, and I’ll take that one. I mean, throughout Q3, our order intake and sell-through rates were pretty consistent. In fact, I would say they held up better than maybe we anticipated given the broader softening in the housing and repair remodel markets. I think that’s a testament really to our commercial team and our focus on innovating around the needs of our end-user customers, specifically ExpertFinish, smooth Siding, Naturals, as Brad mentioned, being great product additions that have helped offset the weakness in some of the market segments we play in. Specific to shed, what I would say is, yes, business has normalized in that segment, but we were up year over year. We are very pleased with the progress we continue to make in that particular segment, and we see that continuing going into Q4 as well.

Really, where the softness resides is more in the new construction segment, particularly in the southern markets. We see a little bit more resilience in repair remodel, especially in the northern markets where we have a more dominant share position.

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Jason, I’ll just add to that. Sorry, Kate. I’ll just add that historically, we’ve kind of seen a bit of seasonality in the shed business where our distributor partners and the shed builders tend to build some inventory in anticipation of spring and summer sales. That kind of backs off as we get through the summer. I think what we saw seasonally in shed is pretty consistent with the historic trends that have driven our order file in the past.

Operator2: Got it. No, that’s helpful. And then just one more question. It seems like you are also sort of, in the way you are selling sort of your Siding products and your OSB products, it seems like there is some transition happening where you’re trying to align both these products and sell it kind of more as a bundle. Can you talk to sort of what is driving that move and what kind of reception you’re getting with your customers?

Jason Ringblum, President, Incoming CEO, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah. I’ll take that one, Kate. I appreciate the question. Back in April, we announced the integration of our OSB and Siding businesses. The main reason for that was to better leverage our resources and better leverage the breadth of our product portfolio in the marketplace. You’re right. We are working on some bundling of programs to help us execute our segment strategies in all areas that we play in. I would say we’re still very much in the infancy stage of that process. We’ve made some good progress in the big builder segment, but it’s still an area we’re exploring largely.

Operator2: Got it. No, that’s helpful. I’ll jump back in the queue. Good luck.

Jason Ringblum, President, Incoming CEO, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thank you.

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. One moment for our next question. The next question comes from the line of Sean Steuart with TD Cowen. Go ahead. Your line is open.

Sean Steuart, Analyst, TD Cowen: Thanks. Good morning, everyone. I’ll extend my congratulations to both Brad and Jason as well. I want to follow up on the Maniwaki pivot. Can you give us a sense of the timeline to at least start this project and when you think it might be producing Siding product? Attached to that question, does the Section 232 determination, which exempts OSB and Siding from Canada, does that factor into the decision at all? I guess broader perspectives, the determination on Section 232 sort of left it open-ended that the administration can consider changes to the assessment as time unfolds. I guess the short question is, are you comfortable that this will be a permanent exemption for OSB and Siding from Canada? I’ll leave it there.

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah. Sean, this is Aaron. I’ll take the 232 component of that question. I don’t think anybody’s comfortable that policies are current in the current administration, but I will say that the decision to shift to Maniwaki, should we make it, will be a long-term decision based on our long-term expectations about the evolving OSB and Siding markets. The current situation for the 232 tariffs is that neither of those products is subject to a tariff importing it from Canada into the United States. Perhaps a less understood component of the 232 discussion is that the importation of some heavy equipment categories into the United States is less favorable than it is into Canada currently. For example, if we were to acquire a press or other.

Large equipment for a conversion of an OSB plant in Canada, we would be able to import that equipment at a lower cost into Canada than into the U.S. because of those tariffs.

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: I would like to stress, though, that that would be a potential benefit, but it’s not a reason.

Operator1: Right. Exactly.

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: For the.

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah. The 232 issue is not the decision maker. It is noise that currently is a net benefit. The long-term reasons for Maniwaki, should we make that decision, would be the fundamental market dynamics and the efficiencies that that mill would bring.

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Sean, the process, as you can tell, as we’ve gone and tried to be transparent on these calls and talk about the different options and some rise to the top and then some fade from the top. It is certainly dynamic. The evaluation that we do is financially driven, long-term financially driven, as Aaron said. There are components specifically to tariffs. When you look at wood cost, you look at particularly network optimization, Maniwaki is in a really interesting place for us when you align it with our existing infrastructure, including what we’re doing around ExpertFinish growth. As we continue to do the evaluation over the next several quarters, we’ll continue to evaluate all options in the face of a good, strong financial analysis. When we get ready to present to our board, that’s when the rubber hits the road around.

Crystallizing around one facility and being able to explain from a return standpoint why that one was chosen. More to come on that, but we did think it was worth mentioning Maniwaki as a prime candidate or perhaps the prime candidate right now, given that we have not talked about that much in the past.

Sean Steuart, Analyst, TD Cowen: Understood. Maybe just one follow-up there, Brad. Part of this reordering of the options is the extent to which OSB markets have unraveled here the last several months. I mean, you position this as it’s a long-term decision based on optimization of the fiber basket, the portfolio you have. Is there any read-through on, you view this OSB downturn as potentially extended beyond what we would normally see? You’re considering Maniwaki in that context as well? This could be a longer trough than we’re accustomed to seeing for OSB.

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: No, we were not intending to signal that at all. Certainly, the near-term outlook for OSB is pretty abysmal, but we believe in the business in the long term. Really, what put this one up was, as Jason mentioned or I mentioned in the prepared remarks, the timing. We were leaning on Holton because we felt that we could get there faster with a conversion. Really, it is the overall softening in the housing outlook overall gave us, say, another year of capacity in our existing network, which allowed us to take a step back and say, "If we’re not in as much of a hurry as we thought we were in six months ago, what are other options?" That is really when we started focusing in on Maniwaki. It was not OSB related that.

Operator: Stand by, please. I believe your mic just went out for a minute. Stand by. Sean, are you still able to hear me? Can you hear you?

Sean Steuart, Analyst, TD Cowen: I can hear you.

Operator: Can you hear them?

Sean Steuart, Analyst, TD Cowen: I cannot. No.

Operator: Okay. Great. I just wanted to double-check. I’m going to have them dial back in. If everyone could please stand by. Please stand by for a moment while we get everyone reconnected.

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Jill, can you hear us now?

Operator: Oh, yes, we can. Great. We can hear you. Sean, you’re still there?

Sean Steuart, Analyst, TD Cowen: I am. I’m all good, guys. You can go on to the next.

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Sean, did you hear it? I mean, that was such a great—it’s probably the best answer of my CEO career, and I got cut off in the middle of it.

Sean Steuart, Analyst, TD Cowen: You’re leaving on a high note. I think I got the gist of it. All good, guys.

Jason Ringblum, President, Incoming CEO, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thanks, Sean.

Operator: Thank you. Stand by for our next question, please. The next question comes from the line of Mark Weintraub with Seaport Research Partners. Please go ahead.

Mark Weintraub, Analyst, Seaport Research Partners: I don’t know, Brad. I don’t know who should ask any more questions after that. High note. But congrats to all, of course. Maybe just a little bit more on the thinking on the Maniwaki-Holton. I mean, your volumes this year aren’t that different from what you were expecting. I mean, it seems to suggest that you’re taking a little bit more of a cautious perspective on next year. Obviously, it’s pretty early. Maybe help us think that through a little bit. When you say several quarters, does that mean you’re kind of thinking it’s like you don’t need it for close to a year later than what you would have initially anticipated wanting the volume up?

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Mark, it’s really the key driver is we were forecasting internally improving housing starts at a pace higher than the current forecast is. When we were looking at, I don’t know, the industry adding 75,000-100,000 new starts each year, year over year, over year, that was what got us on a path of sooner rather than later on this conversion. As we’ve looked at the most recent starts forecast that we follow, it seems pretty flat or low single-digit growth year over year. That difference in the outlook for housing has given us some degrees of freedom on timing for it. I will say it’s been really nice to see Segola operating at the level that it’s operating at now, which has provided a good bit of near-term headroom on that.

I do feel like the—I mean, I know that the reason we were able to take a breath on expediting a mill conversion is Holton, as we just looked at the housing forecast that folks are putting out there. As we aligned with that, we felt like we had another year of time to make a conversion versus being very rushed. Rushed caused us to go to Holton because it would be the quickest, but it also—rush would have significantly increased the capital expense too. I think we are in a good place to where we still have got headroom that we need if housing was to get stronger than forecasted, which we certainly hope happens. We feel really good about having options other than Holton, which will be a little more capital-efficient for us.

Mark Weintraub, Analyst, Seaport Research Partners: Super. Maybe could you expand a little bit on that in terms of capital efficiency, recognizing you’re still in the evaluation stage. Order of magnitude, how much capital might be required for a Maniwaki conversion? Also, does this mean that your CapEx spend in 2026 is actually going to be more reduced than maybe what some of us would have been thinking previously?

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Great questions, Mark, none of which we’re really in a position to answer with sufficient reliability or confidence yet. We’ll deliver more on this topic on our full-year earnings call in February.

Mark Weintraub, Analyst, Seaport Research Partners: Fair enough.

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Great questions. Sorry, we’re just not in a position to answer.

Mark Weintraub, Analyst, Seaport Research Partners: Understood. And then just last, if I could. So with the sheds business. Obviously, it had been quite weak last year, much stronger this year. Can you give us any sense as to where the sheds business—and I recognize even you guys don’t have perfect visibility on this—but your best estimate is where that business is now relative to kind of trend line? I mean, did we have some catch-up this year so that there’s downside risk to next year in a normal environment? Or is it more that it was just so bad last year, this really strong growth just got us back up to what you’d consider to be kind of a typical year?

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah, I’ll take that one. What I’d say is there was a fair amount of pull-forward demand in shed during COVID. Our business was very strong those years. To some extent, we supported that segment to a higher degree than others while we were on a managed order file. That pullback that we felt in late 2023, 2024, I think, was a result of that. We’ve seen the shed business return back to normal levels, if not maybe a hair better. A lot of the fabricators that we talk to are saying their business is up a couple of points relative to kind of a normal rate. We feel good about that business, and it’s been very consistent for us through the years. I feel good about opportunities we have to improve our share position there as well.

Mark Weintraub, Analyst, Seaport Research Partners: Thanks so much. Congrats both again.

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thank you.

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thanks, Mark.

Operator: One moment for our next question. The next question comes from the line of Kurt Yinger with DA Davidson. Go ahead. Your line’s open.

Kurt Yinger, Analyst, DA Davidson: Great. Thanks. Congrats, Jason and Brad. I just wanted to go back to some of the comments just around the fourth quarter Siding volumes. Can you just talk about, I mean, what you’re hearing from your customers in terms of maybe a little bit of demand degradation, and then how perhaps managing inventory levels and the price increase factored in, if at all?

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yes. Thanks, Kurt. I guess I said this earlier, but I mean, the process is very consistent with what we’ve done in prior years. We look at historical purchases, kind of where demand is trending, and then come up with allocations for our distributor partners. Then obviously work with them closely through that process. If they’re communicating that they’re going to short a customer on the other end, by no means will we hold them to that allocation specifically. It is pretty fluid in nature, with the end goal being not to increase channel inventories as we go into the new year and work through a price increase. So far, I think that’s been well received. There are customers that are certainly asking for more, but that’s something that we closely manage on a week-to-week basis.

Kurt Yinger, Analyst, DA Davidson: Okay. That’s helpful. Just looking forward to 2026 a little bit, I mean, what areas of the Siding portfolio do you maybe have the highest conviction or visibility to at this stage in terms of delivering kind of above-market growth and continuing the momentum? Separately, from a marketing or channel standpoint, kind of what are you most focused on there in terms of strengthening your position with different channel partners and whatnot? Thank you.

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: I’ll take that one as well. What I would say is we’ve got very focused segment strategies for new construction, repair, remodel, and then offsite, which includes shed and manufactured housing segment. Those are three segments that we will be relentlessly focused on, improving our share position in. We’re investing resources in all three pretty equally, maybe a little bit heavier in repair, remodel. We feel like there’s an opportunity to continue to take a half point to a point of share of the addressable market on an annual basis as we think about the future.

Operator: Okay. Stand by for our next question, please. The next question comes from the line of Adam Baumgarten with Vertical Research Partners. Please go ahead.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners: Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. Just on ExpertFinish, can you kind of update us on where margins are there, especially with the managed order file currently?

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Margins still have. They’re good, but they still have a long way to go under this kind of circumstances. Again, I still see both. Outsized—we’ve certainly had outsized price increases on ExpertFinish, and we’re making progress on the cost side. I think the future is bright for continued margin increase. They’re still lagging fundamentally our primed offering. There’s nothing but opportunity there.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners: Okay. Great. Thanks, guys.

Operator: Thank you. Our last call comes from the line of Stephen Ramsey. Stephen’s with Thomson Research Group. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Operator0: Hi. This is Katherine Thompson and for Stephen today. Thank you for including me in the Q&A today. Answered many, many good questions, but wanted to follow up just on a few on ExpertFinish. And have been taking some share gains. But I suppose for the quarter and as you think about the year, can you parse out the drivers between channel versus winning shelf space and end market demand? And then against the second part of this is against a pretty challenging R&R market. How sustainable do you feel these market share gains are on a go-forward basis?

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: I’ll take that one, Katherine. We are very pleased with the growth that we’ve seen in ExpertFinish after getting into the pre-finished business. I think it was back in 2020. We are on a managed order file right now, but we have incremental capacity coming online at the end of Q1, early Q2 next year in the neighborhood of 50-70 million sq ft. We believe that we’ve got a very strong value prop with our ExpertFinish line. I’ve only added to that with the Naturals Collection that was launched in April, and that repair, remodel contractors really enjoy using that product. We think the demand is sticky. Obviously, you need to get the contractor to get placement in the channel with our dealer partners.

That is really our focus going forward, getting downstream as much as possible to pull that demand through for our dealer partners.

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Katherine, I’ll just add to Jason’s answer that. Keep in mind that our market share in that segment is tiny relative to the opportunity. As our product gets accepted, as Jason mentioned, as contractors get to use, and as you mentioned, as we secure shelf space with the one-step distribution network, there’s just a ton of upside in our ability to continue to grow that ExpertFinish line and have a much higher market share of a large repair and remodel market.

Operator0: Yeah. Do you need to step up marketing expenses next year to keep being that share gainer, or are there other ways beyond to increase stickiness?

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Marketing is a big component. It’s in-home selling to consumers primarily. As a, if you parse our sales and marketing budget, particularly the marketing budget, it is skewed toward support of the repair and remodel segment more than any other segment by a pretty large margin. I think what you’ll see next year in our budgeting will be consistent or, with our guidance, will be consistent with the kind of spend we’ve had historically, especially if you look at % of revenue or anything like that.

Operator0: Since you brought up distribution and given the ongoing changes in the distribution landscape in the U.S., are you seeing any type of behavior changes for you as a supplier to the distribution market given some of the fundamental changes in distribution?

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah. I would say right now we’re very pleased with the partners we have from a two-step distribution perspective and that those relationships are on very solid footing. We look forward to continuing to work with our partners, but no real significant disruption, no.

Operator0: Okay. Great. Thanks so much and best of luck and congratulations.

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thank you, Katherine.

Operator: One moment, please. One additional question comes from the line of Michael Roxland with Truist Securities. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah. Thanks, Brad, Alan, and Jason for taking my questions. I’ll just echo what everybody else has said. Brad, congrats on your upcoming retirement, well-deserved. Jason, congrats on the new role. A lot of my questions have been addressed, but I just wanted to ask if you could give some more color around volume growth by end market in terms of single-family R&R and sheds and manufactured housing in 3Q. How should we think about siding volume growth as we look into 2026? I know it was asked recently, but just trying to get a sense of whether you think volumes will be flat, slightly up next year versus low single digits. Thanks.

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: I’ll touch on the first part of the question. Just looking at Q3 versus prior year by segment. As I mentioned earlier, even though shed volume came off slightly versus Q2, it was up year-over-year more than the other two segments. Repair, remodel was second strongest, as evidenced by our performance in our ExpertFinish business or line. Single-family, I think it was a mixed bag. We had decent volume in some of our core markets, but in the southern markets that are dominated a little bit more by the big builder and are stressed by some affordability challenges and just consumer confidence in general, that was our weakest segment in the quarter.

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: I’m going to address the second question briefly. I think it’s too early for us to make a sort of convincing call on 2026. As you know, we have pretty good visibility within a quarter. When we get to February, what we see within the first quarter behavior will, of course, color our view of 2026, at which point we’ll provide some full year guidance. Understood. One quick follow-up. If you see housing rebound more quickly next year than you’re now expecting, what levers do you have available to meet that increased Siding demand now that you’re pushing out some of your capital projects? Plenty of capacity. We can add shifts in existing facilities. We will have no problem responding to almost any imaginable demand scenario over the next couple of years in either of our businesses or South America. Got it, guys. Thank you.

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Okay. Thank you.

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: You’re welcome.

Operator: Thank you. This does conclude the question and answer session. I would now like to turn the call back to Aaron for closing remarks.

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Okay. Thank you, everybody, for joining the call. We’ll look forward to continuing the conversation and follow-up calls later today and conferences throughout the quarter. Thank you very much.

Operator: Thank you for your participation in today’s conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect.