LPX May 6, 2026

Louisiana-Pacific Q1 2026 Earnings Call - Siding Outpaces OSB Amidst Market Weakness and Oil Volatility

Summary

Louisiana-Pacific reported a sharp year-over-year decline in first-quarter EBITDA, driven by a $66 million hit from collapsing OSB prices and softer demand, though the siding business demonstrated remarkable resilience through pricing power and mix shifts. The company navigated winter storms and macroeconomic turbulence to deliver adjusted EPS of $0.38 and maintained its dividend, while signaling updated, tempered guidance for the remainder of 2026 as housing starts remain flat and consumer confidence erodes.

Management highlighted a strategic pivot toward high-margin ExpertFinish siding and deepening partnerships with the largest U.S. home builders, securing programs that represent a high-single-digit share of the exteriors market for top-tier contractors. Despite near-term headwinds from crude oil volatility and elevated channel inventories in the shed segment, LP is investing heavily in capacity expansion and leveraging its integrated product portfolio to capture share in a fragmented market, betting on long-term structural advantages over vinyl and commoditized alternatives.

Key Takeaways

  • EBITDA fell 80% year-over-year to $82 million, with OSB pricing down 28% from Q1 2025 accounting for a $66 million reduction in both net sales and EBITDA.
  • Siding EBITDA held relatively steady at a $5 million decline despite 10% lower net sales, driven by a 9% increase in selling prices and favorable mix toward higher-margin ExpertFinish products.
  • ExpertFinish now represents 12% of siding volume and 18% of siding revenue, with management citing strong growth runway and ongoing capacity expansions in Green Bay, Bath, and North Branch.
  • LP secured new enterprise partnerships with the nation’s largest home builders, expecting to supply approximately 100 million square feet of SmartSide to 15 of the top 25 U.S. builders in 2026.
  • The company updated full-year siding guidance, projecting revenue between $1.64 billion and $1.66 billion and EBITDA between $410 million and $425 million, reflecting anticipated volume declines and oil-related cost pressures.
  • OSB EBITDA is expected to remain under pressure, with Q2 guidance pointing to a $10 million loss as prices fall below breakeven, and management assumes flat pricing for the remainder of the year.
  • Crude oil volatility presents a manageable but growing cost headwind, with estimates of $6 million to $8 million in annual raw material cost increases for every $10 per barrel rise, though freight impacts remain modest.
  • Channel inventory in the shed segment, which was elevated due to pre-buying ahead of price hikes, has normalized, allowing sell-through rates to stabilize and volumes to improve sequentially through the year.
  • LP is investing $200 million in strategic growth capital expenditures, with roughly $130 million allocated to siding capacity expansion, primarily focused on ExpertFinish lines and potential conversions like Maniwaki.
  • Management emphasized a 'wait and see' approach to further price increases, prioritizing long-term customer relationships and market share gains over short-term margin optimization amid uncertain macroeconomic conditions.

Full Transcript

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners0: Day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Q1 2026 Louisiana-Pacific Corporation Earnings Conference Call. 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 LP Building Solutions to discuss our financial results for the first quarter of 2026 and our updated guidance for the second quarter and the remainder of the year. Hosting the call with me this morning are Jason Ringblom and Alan Haughie, who are LP’s Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, respectively. After prepared remarks, we will take a round of questions. During today’s call, we will be referencing a presentation that has been posted to LP’s IR website, which is investor.lpcorp.com. Our 8-K filing, earnings press release, and other materials are also available there. Finally, today’s discussion contains forward-looking statements and non-GAAP financial metrics, as described on slides 2 and 3 of the 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 by reference. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Jason.

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thanks, Aaron. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to LP’s earnings call for the first quarter of 2026. We appreciate you joining us. I’m proud to say that in the first quarter, LP navigated the challenges of a complex market exceptionally well. Against an increasingly volatile macro backdrop, and despite significant impact from winter storms and the conflict in Iran, we delivered on our guidance. Price realization, both in siding and OSB, exceeded our expectations, partially offsetting lower volumes and contributing to EBITDA performance above the high end of our guided range. I’ll discuss our results for the quarter at a high level before describing what we are seeing in the various markets that we serve. One highlight that we are incredibly proud of is our safety performance in the quarter.

LP team members in North America worked over 1.5 million hours with a world-class total incident rate of only 0.26. I also want to recognize our newest siding mill in Sagola, Michigan, for achieving two years without a recordable injury. Our goal will always be zero injuries, but I want to personally thank every LP team member who contributes to our award-winning safety culture. From a macroeconomic perspective, given the trajectory with which the housing market weakened over the course of 2025, we expected the first quarter would be a challenging comparable. Accordingly, as you can see on page 5 of the presentation, our net sales were down compared to the prior year quarter, driven largely by softer OSB demand and lower commodity prices, which fell below EBITDA break even for Q4 of last year and Q1 of this year.

OSB price softness accounted for a $66 million reduction in net sales and EBITDA. The pricing power of SmartSide helped offset lower sales volume, moderating revenue declines. LP delivered EBITDA in the quarter of $82 million, representing an $80 million decline year-over-year, primarily from $66 million in lower OSB prices, which I mentioned earlier. Siding EBITDA was only $5 million lower, despite 10% lower net sales, with the remaining roughly $9 million attributable to other factors, including South America and higher corporate unallocated expenses. For the quarter, LP delivered $0.38 in adjusted earnings per share and returned $21 million to shareholders via dividends. I’m pleased to share that we saw minimal impact from crude oil price volatility in the first quarter.

This reflects both near-term agility of our supply chain and operations teams, as well as the longer-term algorithmic structure of many of our strategic supply contracts. We did see modest increases in freight rates, which was not surprising given how quickly diesel prices respond to crude oil supply disruptions. Overall, however, other inflationary impacts were minimal in the quarter. Alan will share some sensitivity analyses later to help model the direct and indirect impacts of crude oil price volatility on our raw material costs in the second quarter and beyond. Next, I will go a layer deeper and spend a few minutes describing how the quarter unfolded across the 3 market segments that the siding business serves, each representing roughly 1/3 of siding volume. I will start with off-site construction, which includes both sheds and manufactured housing.

While currently largely consisting of shed volume, opportunities are plentiful to grow market share in manufactured housing as well. As discussed in our prior call, pre-buys in advance of our annual price increase resulted in elevated channel inventories. This was not exclusively a shed phenomenon, but the impact was disproportionately felt in this segment. In February, we anticipated that this would be a drag on first quarter volumes while expecting channel inventory to normalize in Q2. I’m pleased to say that this has played out more or less as we expected. While shed volumes were off significantly in the first quarter, sell-through rates held up quite well, and channel inventory is now back within seasonally normal ranges. Another third of LP’s siding volume goes into the repair and remodeling market, with pre-finished ExpertFinish being our fastest-growing product line within this segment.

In the first quarter, Expert Finish accounted for 12% of our siding volume and 18% of siding revenue. We believe that Expert Finish has a long runway for growth and continued share gains, and we are investing accordingly to support that demand. Our newest Expert Finish line in Green Bay, Wisconsin, which adds approximately 50 million sq ft or 25% to annual capacity, is now ramping up and making excellent progress. We also plan to add a further 20 million sq ft of capacity at our Bath, New York facility later this year. Finally, in late April, we acquired a piece of land in North Branch, Minnesota, where we intend to build additional Expert Finish capacity to support growing demand over time. The final third of LP Siding is used in new residential construction.

One of our most significant growth opportunities is with the national home builders, where we remain relatively under-penetrated. We believe we are uniquely well-positioned to build mutually beneficial partnerships with these home builders by leveraging SmartSide’s labor-saving value proposition together with our integrated portfolio of OSB and siding. So far in 2026, we have secured 2 new builder partnerships, and we continue to actively pursue additional opportunities. Just to give you a sense of scale for the business we recently secured with the nation’s largest home builders, as well as the magnitude of the opportunity ahead, I’ll share some specifics. We currently expect to supply about 100 million square feet of SmartSide in total to 15 of the top 25 U.S. home builders.

We estimate that this represents a high single-digit share of the total exteriors market for these builders and a similar high single-digit % of our overall SmartSide volume. We believe that the unique value proposition we can offer these home builders gives us significant opportunities for additional growth in the years to come. Before I turn the call over to Alan, I wanna recognize Dustan McCoy and Ozey K. Horton Jr., both whom retired last week from LP’s Board of Directors. On behalf of the entire LP team, I wanna thank Dustan and Ozey for their insights, their thoughtful counsel, and their contributions to LP’s culture and strategic transformation. Let me turn the call over to Alan for a more thorough review of LP’s financial results and our updated guidance.

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thank you, Jason. I’d also like to add my thanks and congratulations to the whole LP team for a very strong quarter for safety, and to Dustan McCoy and Ozey K. Horton Jr. for their service on LP’s board of directors. I know I have certainly benefited from their wisdom and guidance over the last 7 years. The first quarter performance for siding is shown on page 8 of the presentation. In line with expectations, unit volumes were down by 18% year-over-year. As discussed on the last earnings call, in addition to a slowing market, we exited the fourth quarter with increased channel inventory following the announcement of our January price increases. A disproportionate amount of that inventory was held by distributors serving our shared customers, where elevated inventory led to volume declines both sequentially and year-over-year.

Expert Finish, on the other hand, continues to be the best performing product category within siding, which in this market means volumes are flat. The 9% increase in selling prices partly mitigated the decline in volume, with primed prices increasing by 8% and Expert Finish prices increasing by 10%. Now, there are a few moving parts within all of this, so let me briefly unpack it. The largest single contributor to the reported 9% price increase is naturally our January the first list price increase, which averaged 4-5 points. The remainder, let’s call it 4.5 points, is roughly 2.5 points from favorable mix and around 2 points from rebate refinements.

The mix dynamics are the result of lower volume of shared products within the primed product category and relatively strong volumes for Expert Finish, including the two-toned natural subcategory, which we launched in the second quarter of 2025. What I referred to as rebate refinements include the final recognition of lower than expected rebate payments relating to the fourth quarter of last year, as well as modestly lower rebate accrual rates in 2026, and both factors are, of course, volume related. As we look toward the second quarter, we expect list price realization to remain steady, of course, while mix and rebate impacts will probably normalize somewhat. Price and volume combined for a revenue reduction of $42 million, but an EBITDA hit of only $8 million.

The $2 million reduction in selling and marketing costs is merely timing. While inflationary costs have been mild so far, I’ll discuss this subject further in a moment. The other bar includes the non-recurrence of the EBITDA benefit of last year’s OSB production at Siding Mills, more than offset by some inventory build in anticipation of maintenance outages later in the year. The resulting EBITDA margin of 28% for Siding was of course helped by the rebate and inventory dynamics I mentioned earlier, and would be closer to last year’s 26% without these factors. In the long run, the roughly 50% incremental EBITDA on volume, albeit on a decline this quarter, shows the significant leverage that this business will deliver as and when growth resumes. For OSB on page 9, price is once again the dominant element.

In 2025, OSB prices were at their highest in the first quarter, fell significantly in the second, and have been mired near EBITDA breakeven for the past several months. As a result, prices are 28% lower than the first quarter of last year, resulting in $66 million less revenue and EBITDA. Lower OSB volumes for both commodity and Structural Solutions reduced sales and EBITDA by a further $30 million and $10 million, respectively. Now, the operations team did an outstanding job of controlling what they can, operating efficiently, minimizing costs, and prioritizing safety. As a result, mill overhead and SG&A contributed $5 million in year-over-year savings, and the $3 million negative shown in the siding waterfall from lower OSB transfers is offset here with income.

All of this results in a $12 million EBITDA loss, better than our guidance amidst a very challenging demand and price environment. Cash flow on page 10 shows net operating cash outflow of $38 million compared to an inflow of $64 million last year, reflecting the $80 million reduction in total EBITDA and the somewhat larger than usual buildup of log inventory. Cash ended the quarter at $164 million. We have $900 million in liquidity, including our undrawn revolver. Before I conclude with our updated guidance, let me address the impact of crude oil prices on LP’s raw material and freight costs as shown on page 11.

Starting with freight, roughly speaking, we estimate that each $10 per barrel increase in crude oil corresponds to a $0.03 per mile increase in LP’s variable freight costs on a blended basis, assuming current rail-truck mix and refinery margins. LP experienced total freight usage of the order of 30 million miles in 2025. The full-year freight cost impact of each $10 per barrel increase in crude oil prices, all else equal, would be an annual impact of about $1 million. In OSB, freight is generally passed through while siding is priced on a delivered basis, so the EBITDA impact to LP would be mitigated by that dynamic. I should also add that LP’s siding is lighter and more durable than some competing alternatives, which allows us to ship by rail and transport much more volume on a truck than these competitors can.

For raw materials excluding logs, many of our inputs have crude oil as feedstock, including resins, primer, and paint. Of course, the delivered cost of these materials includes some freight. For raw materials across LP’s North American business, we estimate that the total annual cost impact of each $10 per barrel increase in crude oil is of the order of $1.5 million-$2 million per quarter, or $6 million-$8 million per year, all else equal. This would be split roughly 75/25 between siding and OSB, given siding’s more raw material-intensive recipe. LP can experience a slight cost impact for logs when higher diesel prices impact harvesting and delivery costs, but compared to the freight and raw material costs, the log cost impact is small enough to be immaterial for modeling purposes.

Now bear in mind that these are estimates of annual impacts. Many of our raw material supply contracts have trailing algorithmically adjusted prices with varying update cycles, the specific timing of these various impacts is more variable. We saw minimal impacts in the first quarter, if prices stay elevated, we will trend towards these annual run rates over the next 2 quarters or so. Our raw material cost estimates are incorporated in our updated guidance, as shown on slide 12. Unlike our approach to OSB guidance, we will explicitly avoid any attempts to predict future crude oil prices. Frankly, we’re less concerned about the cost impact of higher crude oil prices than we are about the broader macroeconomic and demand impacts and the general volatility driving them. You will recall that our full year guidance was predicated on housing starts being flat year-over-year.

Mathematically, flat starts would require a rebound in the second half. Now, we made no attempt to predict the timing or trajectory of that rebound, but expected that improving consumer confidence, moderating interest rates, and seasonal increases in OSB price and demand would be the bellwethers that would signal its approach. As you are all aware, especially following the conflict in Iran, not only are those market indicators not improving, but they continue to erode. Now, while our order files in siding give us a good bit of visibility into the second quarter, high input costs, falling consumer confidence, and increasing interest rates are magnifying uncertainty about demand in the back half of the year. As a result, we feel it’s prudent to temper our expectations for the second half.

Current lower levels of market activity, we anticipate siding volume declines year-over-year in the second quarter of about 10% with sequential improvements through year-end. Within this, ExpertFinish is expected to continue to outperform primed products as we gain share relative to competing pre-finished alternatives. We therefore expect full-year ExpertFinish volume growth in the mid-single-digit range. List prices should remain very steady, of course. The very strong price mix effect of the first quarter is expected to moderate as shed mix increases now that the channel inventory of shed products has normalized. As a result of these volume and price dynamics, we currently expect siding revenue in the second quarter between $435 million and $445 million and EBITDA between $115 million and $120 million.

For the full year, siding revenue and EBITDA are now expected to be between $1.64 billion-$1.66 billion, with EBITDA between $410 million-$425 million. For OSB, we’re applying our normal methodology, assuming prices remain flat from last Friday’s printed level. Unfortunately, Friday’s print included a significant drop in the Southeast and Southwest regions, bringing OSB prices back under EBITDA breakeven levels. As a result, we now expect OSB EBITDA in the second quarter to be a loss of about $10 million. Now, we don’t plan to merely plod doggedly ahead should these prices persist in an oversupplied market, but again, for modeling purposes, extrapolating current prices forward, the third and fourth quarters would deliver similar results as reflected in the revised full-year guidance.

Finally, while our modeling approach has generally been to assume that LP South America and unallocated corporate expenses net to zero, the economic situation in Chile is similarly depressed and uncertain at the moment, and the softer results in South America are reflected in the total adjusted EBITDA guidance. In conclusion, the housing market and general consumer sentiment aren’t showing the hopeful signs of recovery yet, and this is most acutely felt in OSB demand and prices. We remain confident in the SmartSide value proposition and in the long-run ability of our siding business to gain share in all the segments we serve. With that, we’ll be happy to take a round of questions.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners0: Thank you. At this time, we will conduct the question-and-answer session. As a reminder, to ask a question, you’ll need to press star 1 1 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star 1 1 again. In order to accommodate as many individuals as possible for questions, we will allow 1 question and 1 follow-up question to be permitted per caller. Please stand by while we prepare the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from the line of George Staphos with Bank of America Securities. Your line is live.

George Staphos, Analyst, Bank of America Securities: Thanks, operator. Hi, everyone. Good morning. Thanks for the details. I wanted to ask a point of clarification if, you know, maybe as a 2-parter for my first question. Alan, I just wanna make sure your guidance does not include any assumption on oil pricing per se, correct? If so, can you tell us what the change in oil was relative to your fourth quarter so that we could somewhat calibrate to your adjustment and guidance relative to the cost? The second part of that question is there a way to give us pro rata, you know, a change in oil, how much hits percentage-wise on cost of manufacturing and siding and how much hits on the freight side?

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Alan’s done most of the heavy lifting on this, so I’m gonna let Alan attempt to answer that question with a, with a level of detail that we’re willing to share.

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Well, of course.

Thanks for the question, George.

As always. In reverse order, the cost of manufacturing through the raw materials is a much larger impact than freight. You know, the full annualized impact of freight is relatively small, again, as Alan detailed.

Okay. Okay.

you know, we have more miles of transport for OSB just given the volume. You can basically anticipate most of the cost hitting on the raw material side and in the manufacturing side. Within that, about 75% of the impact to cost of manufacturing will land in siding just because of the more raw material-intensive recipes of siding relative to OSB. The last thing I’ll say is our guidance makes our best attempt to reflect our current understanding of what the actual annualized impact will be, meaning that we have baked in what we have seen near term in terms of those raw material inputs and also our understanding of the various dynamics of the contracts themselves, the supply contracts that is, with regard to their pricing algorithms and methodologies.

That’s about as specific as we’re going to get on that.

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah

rather than diving too deep into the nuts and bolts of those individual contracts. short answer, yes, the guidance for margins does reflect our current outlook of what we’re seeing in the market and what we anticipate seeing in the back half of the year. if prices go significantly higher or lower, you’ve got the sensitivities to give it some Kentucky windage.

George Staphos, Analyst, Bank of America Securities: Okay. The second question is on the 100 million square feet of siding across the 15 of the top 25 builders. Is that the 2026 actual volume that you expect, or is that a run rate? What was the base in 2025, if you could share that? Thank you very much.

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah, I’ll touch on that, George. The 100 million feet that we specified is in fact, you know, where we think we’ll land in 2026. Obviously, with the winds that we’ve communicated in recent calls, you know, the prior year volumes were lower. What I would say about the programs, we’re not gonna give specific names, but, you know, each one of these meets a material threshold for us and adds several thousand homes to our portfolio.

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: You know, in both cases, these programs that we talked about really provide us access to new markets where we’re under-penetrated, specifically in the Southeast and Southwest markets. And because of that, it’s allowing builders and contractors to really experience the benefits of using SmartSide, and in many cases, for the first time with respect to installers.

George Staphos, Analyst, Bank of America Securities: Jason, I get that. Is there any way to size, is that a third increase, a 25% increase, a 2% increase? Any, any granularity would be helpful, and thanks and good luck in the quarter.

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah, I would say it’s, you know, above 10%.

George Staphos, Analyst, Bank of America Securities: Okay. Thanks so much.

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thank you.

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

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners0: Thank you. Our next question comes from the mic of Michael Roxland of Truist Securities. Your line is live.

Michael Roxland, Analyst, Truist Securities: Thank you, Jason, Alan and Aaron for taking my questions. 1 quick one just on, I believe the gap between vinyl and engineered wood siding has narrowed. Vinyl, you know, seeing increases due to oil, I think there’s been a price increase announced for May, 3%-8% on most products. Where does the price spread currently stand between vinyl and engineered wood? And how does that compare to, let’s say, 3 or 6 months ago? Have you seen any switching to engineered wood or let’s say, even if not switching itself, were indications of interest to switch to engineered wood as a result of this narrowing spread?

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Mike, I’ll touch on that. I mean, as you noted, you know, we’re hearing from our customers that there are some manufacturers going up on the vinyl side. That just makes SmartSide, you know, more attractive with regard to that specific comparison. That’s something we’re keeping a close eye on. I do think most of that has taken place over the course of, you know, the last 30 days, essentially. We haven’t felt anything material in our order file as it relates to some of the changes in pricing dynamics in the market.

Michael Roxland, Analyst, Truist Securities: Got you. Any in terms of your customers themselves, nothing in the order file just yet, but indications that there could be some increasing orders or better demand should this spread continue to narrow?

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: I think, you know, anytime that spread narrows, it presents an opportunity and, you know, we’re positioned well to capitalize on that. We like the narrowing of that spread and, you know, we’ll take advantage of it where we can.

Michael Roxland, Analyst, Truist Securities: Just 1 quick follow-up, Jason. Where does that spread currently stand relative to 3 months ago, 6 months ago?

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: I mean, it’s tough to really put your finger on that. I mean, what we’re hearing is price increases in the neighborhood of, you know, 6%-12%, depending on, you know, who it is. I mean, the spread has narrowed by that much.

Michael Roxland, Analyst, Truist Securities: Got you. One last one, I’ll turn it over. Just any update just on the potential conversion at Maniwaki?

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah, I can touch on that, Mike. You know, as of today, we have roughly speaking, you know, about 400 million to 500 million feet of capacity to support our growth on the prime side. You know, we’ve explained our options for expansion on prior calls, I won’t get into that. What I will say is that the engineering work continues on a couple of different paths, including Maniwaki. Nothing new there to share, I would expect we’ll be in a position to share some more information in the coming quarters.

Michael Roxland, Analyst, Truist Securities: Thank you.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners0: One moment for our next question. Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Anika Delachia from Barclays. Your line is live.

Anika Delachia, Analyst, Barclays: Good morning. You have Anika Delachia on for Matt today. Thank you for taking my questions. First off, I guess just staying on capacity. I guess even as volumes come in softer than expected, our understanding is that the Green Bay line would still support margin expansion given its higher efficiency. Do you guys have a sense of the magnitude of the potential margin benefit if this were the case? How is that contemplated in the guidance? Thanks.

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thanks, Anika. Good question. It is contemplated, but the margin benefit really accrues to us more when the facility is fully ramped up. Early in its ramp up, which is where we are now, that effect is less pronounced, both by virtue of lower efficiency in the early days of operations and smaller amount of volume as it goes through. I think very roughly speaking, if you think about the margin improvement for Expert Finish as being on a similar trajectory that it was last year, I think that puts you in the right ballpark. As we get more volume through that facility, we’ll really be able to, you know, to see the effect of that efficiency and get more specific about its actual effect in subsequent quarters.

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: We’ll certainly bleat about it as and when it happens.

Anika Delachia, Analyst, Barclays: Okay, great. That’s really helpful. I guess second, so back to the new construction opportunity, when we think about the siding volume of the 15 of the top 25 builders, where can this high single-digit number get to as we think of maybe a more normalized starts environment? Just as you think more broadly longer term, for your new construction strategy, how are you growing in that channel? Is it more thinking about growing wallet share? Is it building up the number of builder partnerships? Thanks.

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Appreciate the question. What I would say is, you know, in the new construction segment, specifically with the top 25 builders, you know, we still have a relatively small share position, you know, in the high single digits, as we noted earlier. There’s a ton of opportunity there. You know, at the end of the day, we’re trying to be very, you know, disciplined or strategic in terms of where we leverage these enterprise programs, it’s really about getting access to, you know, markets where we’re historically under-penetrated, building a stocking dealer base around those programs, and then, obviously building our business around some of those wins. It’s, you know, something we’re excited about and really leveraging as we go forward.

In terms of the growth opportunity, I mean, at high single digits, you know, the opportunity is very significant for us and, you know, that’ll be the focus going forward.

Anika Delachia, Analyst, Barclays: Okay, great. Thanks. I’ll pass it on.

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thank you.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners0: One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Ketan Mamtora of BMO Capital Markets.

Ketan Mamtora, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets: Good morning, and thanks for taking my question. Maybe just coming back to the full year siding guidance. You know, it’s just backing into the numbers. It feels like, you know, the guide is $32 million below kind of what y’all had talked about as we look at the midpoint of guidance. But Q1 was kind of a solid beat, about $18 million higher. It almost feels like a $50 million swing for the remaining three quarters. Can you sort of highlight maybe two or three key points that would help us sort of think about the key pieces here?

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Sure. Ketan, the drop in guidance, The line cut out a bit. Were you referring to the EBITDA impacts?

Ketan Mamtora, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets: I was, sorry. Yeah, I was referring to the EBITDA.

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah, you’re right. It’s about a $50 million drop from the midpoint. High level, you’ve got to assume that the majority of this reduction is volume related, let’s call it $70 million worth of volume, which comes through at a 50% variable margin. That accounts for about $35 million. To sort of triangulate into one of the other questions, there’s then about $15 million, roughly, or $15-$20, of impacts from oil in the back half of the year. Concentrated more in the second half than it is in the second quarter. That $50 million is roughly $35 million from volume, $15 million from oil-based costs.

Ketan Mamtora, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets: I see. Perfect. No, this is, this is very helpful. Jason, you talked about, you know, expanding the dealer network. There’s a recent partnership as well with Sherwood Lumber here out on the East Coast. Can you talk about sort of how you are thinking about your existing distribution partnerships? Obviously, I’m not asking you to name them, but just in terms of how you are thinking about them, of these relationships and where do you think you’ve got opportunity to sort of penetrate more? Thank you.

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Appreciate the question, Ketan. You know, as I think about our distribution network, I think I’ve mentioned on prior calls that, you know, we have really good access to market through our traditional two-step distributors. Those folks, you know, typically in most markets, we have two distributors, in some there might be some overlap where we have three. Those two-steppers, you know, provide supply to many of the pro dealers and one-steppers.

That is where our access to market, I would say could be improved in some regions and really is the focal point of our enterprise program strategy to really build out that pull-through demand in those markets where we’re under-penetrated, so we can build our stocking dealer network with those pro dealers, one-steppers, et cetera, to grow our business with contractors and builders beyond those programs.

Ketan Mamtora, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets: Understood. Very helpful. I’ll turn it over. Good luck.

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thank you.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners0: One moment for our next question. Thank you. Your question comes from Steven Ramsey from Thompson Research. Your line is open.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners2: Hi. Good morning. Wanted to think about the cross-selling to builders. Clearly, it seems like success winning share with builders. I’m curious if you could parse out how much of that is success cross-selling OSB and siding, or is this pure siding wins?

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah. Thanks for the question, Steven. What I would say is, it’s both. You know, I think at the end of the day, you know, I do believe that the integration of our two businesses that occurred, you know, roughly a year ago here at LP is allowing us to be, I would say, more creative, more flexible, more responsive when it comes to addressing the needs of our customers. These programs, you know, aren’t cookie cutter in nature. They’re really tailored in a way to meet the needs of each respective customer. You know, again, we’re in the early stages, but we have, you know, I believe one of the most robust portfolios of products or solutions in the industry.

You know, we’re in a unique position to leverage that to drive value for all of those targets in the marketplace.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners2: Okay, that’s great. Looking at siding, it seems like the implied-Second half margin a bit lower than the first half. Can you parse out how much of that is more BuilderSeries from these builder wins or higher ExpertFinish volume, which I know is a mixed negative for margin, even though it’s on an upward trajectory on itself. Maybe you could talk through the second half dynamics of siding margin.

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah. Steven, I’d say both of those factors are relatively small compared to the overall volume decline and the raw material price increases that Alan mentioned earlier.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners2: Okay. Thank you.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners0: Thank you. Our next question will come from Sean Steuart from TD Cowen. Your line is open.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners1: Thanks. Good morning, everyone. A couple questions. The $200 million earmarked for strategic growth CapEx that was consistent quarter-over-quarter, can you remind us how much of that is ExpertFinish growth, and how much, if any, would be earmarked for Maniwaki work as you or presuming you advance that project, is any of that total earmarked for that project?

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah. There’s close to $100 million in here for ExpertFinish expansion. Not all of it, the new mill. Some of it New York, the continuation, the completion of the New York facility, New York upgrade. About $100 million there. There is $20 million-$30 million on the next major siding mill. Call it $130 million of siding capacity expansion. Three-quarters of it is ExpertFinish.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners1: Okay. Thanks for that. Then, Alan, you touched on the log inventory build in Q1, which I guess is Canada and the Northern U.S. That seemed to be a bit larger than normal. Can you go into some of the factors there and how we should think about the unwind through the remainder of the year?

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah. The unwind will be just the normal course of consumption. We did do some forward logging as oil prices rose. I’m very pleased with the efforts of the team there to get ahead of some of the freight costs, ’cause obviously once we get the spring breakup, there’s very little we can do. We got a little bit ahead of that. The majority of the remainder is very much in anticipation of siding maintenance projects that will mean that we need to get a little bit ahead on finished goods as well. It’s actually a good piece of cost mitigation that really triggered it.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners1: Okay. Okay, that’s all I have for now. Thanks very much.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners0: Thank you. Our next question will come from Kurt Yinger from D.A. Davidson. Your line is open.

Kurt Yinger, Analyst, D.A. Davidson: Great. Thanks, good morning, everyone. Just wanted to sort of unpack the full year siding sales outlook. I mean, by my math, kind of high single-digit decline in volume. I think maybe 2 points of that would have been the destock in Q1. I guess, how does kind of that underlying mid-single-digit volume decline compare to what you’re expecting from the overall market? I guess what should we infer from that in terms of market share expectations?

Alan Haughie, Chief Financial Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: It’s an interesting one. We think we’re gonna perform relatively well as in growth in both off-site and Expert Finish. This is fundamentally gaining market share. The rest of the market, the rest of the product lines, everything else that’s not off-site and Expert Finish is gonna be down, you know, high teens. That’s where you see the greatest impact of the, let’s call it the market reaction or reaction to the underlying weak market. Assume off-site and Expert Finish are going to have modest growth and a high teens decline in everything else. That’s kind of the shape that we see emerging.

Kurt Yinger, Analyst, D.A. Davidson: Got it. I guess on ExpertFinish, the flattest volumes in Q1 and the mid-single digit outlook for the year, is that a function at all of just kind of the capacity constraints that you’ve seen? How do we unpack that deceleration versus what we saw last year?

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah, Kurt, I’ll take that one. We are still dealing with a little bit of the ExpertFinish allocation hangover, if you wanna call it that. We came off allocation, what was it, in February-ish, something like that. Now that we have visibility into channel inventories, we have noticed that, you know, they’re a little bit higher than where we would like them to be, which isn’t uncommon when you come off of a managed order file. We do believe the first half’s gonna be maybe a little bit weaker than the second half, just due to our channel partners bleeding down inventories to more normal levels.

Kurt Yinger, Analyst, D.A. Davidson: Okay. Perfect. Appreciate the color. Thank you.

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thanks, Kurt.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners0: Thank you. Our next question will come from Mark Weintraub from Seaport Research Partners. Your line is open.

Mark Weintraub, Analyst, Seaport Research Partners: Thank you. Just wanted to follow up on the last question. Alan, you mentioned, you know.

Primed for some of the other businesses, some growth, but that’s down in the mid-to-high teens in some of the other businesses. Is that because customers, in part are moving from the businesses where you see yourself being down high to mid-teens into the areas where you are flat or growing, or are there two different dynamics going on here?

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: You know, Mark, I’ll take that one. You know, I think the biggest dynamic we’re dealing right now, well, we’re mostly through it, was just related to the shed segment and how much inventory carried over into the new year. You know, I would say we’re 85% of the way through that. There’s still a little bit of excess inventory there. You know, we have really good visibility into our order file into Q2, but beyond that, there’s just a tremendous amount of uncertainty looking out into the back half of the year. You know, we feel good about what we’re doing in the new construction segment, feel like we can outpace housing starts in that segment.

In repair remodel, we touched on ExpertFinish being up mid-single digits and, you know, that will be reflective of, we think, a better performance than the R&R segment as a whole.

Mark Weintraub, Analyst, Seaport Research Partners: Okay. It sounds like it’s really sheds is where the source of the relative performance is gonna be, you think, soft this year, versus your historical algorithms against overall market growth. Is that fair?

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah, yeah, I agree with that. I mean, we pay close attention to sell-through rates in that segment, so we get data from our distributors and, you know, we’re pleased to see that it’s held up, you know, quite well. It is really just an inventory dynamic that is playing out in 26.

Mark Weintraub, Analyst, Seaport Research Partners: Okay, great. one last real quick one kind of related to all this too. Maniwaki, can you remind us, is that particularly well-positioned if, you know, the growth in prime continues to be a main focus, or not necessarily?

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah. Maniwaki is certainly an option for us. You know, if we went that direction, it would be, you know, the largest OSB plant that we’ve converted to siding. It would end up being our largest prime siding facility. Again, we’re still in the process of assessing all of our options and are pursuing, you know, parallel paths in some cases.

Mark Weintraub, Analyst, Seaport Research Partners: Great. Thank you.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners0: Thank you. Our next question comes from Susan Maklari from Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners3: Thank you. Good morning, everyone. My first question is on the siding side of the business. Can you talk a bit about how you’re thinking of price elasticity and how within that growth that you’re expecting of mid-single digits in ExpertFinish, how much of that is the underlying strength of the consumer relative to your share gains and some of those new products that you’re introducing that also seem to be gaining momentum?

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thanks for the question, Susan Maklari. Yeah, I’ll talk a little bit about price elasticity. I mean, if you look back at our history, and we typically go up or have a price increase one time annually. There may be a few times in our history, COVID being one, where we had a second price increase. You know, we really monitor, you know, both raw materials along with the broader competitive dynamics in our space to determine, you know, where we need to position pricing. You know, as it pertains to the current environment, I would say, you know, we’re taking a wait and see approach, kind of no different than we did with our approach to tariffs last year.

We don’t wanna make a knee-jerk decision, due to what, you know, could be short-term circumstances that we’re dealing with right now just in terms of raw material pricing. You know, our focus is gonna be on playing the long game and being as consistent and predictable as possible for our customers amidst, you know, all the factors impacting our pricing decisions for siding. We’re pleased with what we’ve realized in terms of the annual price increase that, you know, Alan spoke to earlier and, you know, right now we’re just holding steady.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners3: Okay, that’s helpful. Maybe shifting gears to OSB. Can you talk about your plans for production there? Do you still expect that the industry will see capacity come online this year, or has the housing backdrop perhaps changed those plans? Could we see something shift in terms of OSB supply as we move through the balance of 2026?

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Susan, I would say your guess is as good as mine is in terms of new capacity coming online. I mean, I can speak to obviously one of our competitors taking out a plant or plants coming offline kinda as we speak right now in Western Canada. You know, as it relates to OSB here at LP, I would just say our strategy really hasn’t changed. You know, as we noted in our opening comments, we’re proud of the way our team’s navigating the current OSB environment. Just focused on operating with discipline and agility and I think over time, we’ve proven our ability to manage or control costs and continue to improve OEE or efficiency on in the business.

It’s a cyclical business, but I’m confident that we’ll be ready to take advantage of the next upward cycle whenever demand improves.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners3: Okay. Thank you for the color. Good luck with the quarter.

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thanks, Susan.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners0: Thank you. Our next question will come from Adam Baumgarten from Vertical Research Partners. Your line is open.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners: Hey, everyone. Good morning. Can we get some color on how siding sell-through trended throughout 1Q and into 2Q so far? Any major change in trend?

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Yeah. I’ll touch on that, Adam. Appreciate the question. you know, we get data from our distributors on sell-through rates. We talked a lot about the inventory build from Q4 to Q1 and that, you know, Q1 was gonna look a little bit weaker just due to the amount of inventory that we felt was held up at the 2-step level. That ended up being largely true and most of that inventory, as I mentioned earlier, has been depleted. Sell-through rates have more or less mirrored what we saw this time last year, just down slightly as it relates to the underlying market conditions in the new residential construction segment.

You know, no concerning trends at this point, as it relates to sell-through rates. You know, seeing the normal seasonal uptick in those rates and, you know, hopeful that’ll continue.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners: Okay. Great. Thanks. Then just, when we were chatting at the International Builders’ Show, I think there was some commentary around being pleasantly surprised about the interest, about LP SmartSide ExpertFinish from some of the builders. Did that play any role in one of those new partnerships that you guys mentioned?

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Adam, what I would say is it’s, you know, playing more of a role than ever, but it’s still a relatively small percentage of the business that’s ending up going or bundled in these programs. It is, you know, it’s a macro trend there that’s in our favor. Labor’s tight, and it’s expensive. Builders are focused on, you know, job cycles, job site cycle times and, you know, I think all of that, you know, plays into our favor as it relates to ExpertFinish and the new ExpertFinish Naturals Collection. We do believe that will be a trend that continues, and it’s, you know, obviously why we’re investing, you know, more in Green Bay, Bath, and North Branch, Minnesota, going forward.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners: Got it. Thanks. Best of luck.

Jason Ringblom, Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thanks, Adam.

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Thanks, Adam.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners0: Thank you. I am showing no further questions from our phone lines. I’d now like to turn the conference back over to Aaron Howald for any closing remarks.

Aaron Howald, Investor Relations, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation: Okay. Thanks, everyone. With no further questions, we’ll bring the call to a close there. As usual, be available for follow-ups. Stay safe. We’ll look forward to connecting again in the next quarter. Thank you.

Adam Baumgarten, Analyst, Vertical Research Partners0: Thank you for your participation in today’s conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect. Everyone, have a wonderful day.