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The World’s Best Investment…
on Sale

b
y Dr. Steve Sjuggerud
October 18, 2006

The price of timberland in Florida rose by 80% in the last year, according to the latest Florida Land Value Survey…

Meanwhile, the share prices of companies with exposure to Florida timberland have fallen dramatically.

Is there an opportunity here? Let’s take a look…

Since mid-2005, companies with significant timber holdings have performed relatively poorly. Shares of Rayonier, for example, have inched up from $36 in mid-2005 to $39 today.

Timberland in Northeast Florida is worth $3,864 per acre, according to the University of Florida’s Food and Resource Economics Department, which issues the annual land-value survey. This number seems very high to me… but survey respondents included independent appraisers, farm lenders, real-estate brokers, county property appraisers. If anybody knows the price of timberland, they do.

Rayonier owns 1.6 million acres of timberland in the southeastern U.S. That’s conservatively worth $6 billion. Rayonier also owns roughly 400,000 acres in the Pacific Northwest, which at $2,000 an acre would be worth $800 million.

In the U.S. alone, that’s $6.8 billion worth of timberland. That ignores another half million acres in Australia and New Zealand. And it ignores Rayonier’s real-estate sales division and its “performance fibers” division, both of which generate just about as much operating income for Rayonier as timber sales.

Yet the stock market value of Rayonier is only about $3 billion.

RAYONIER’S TIMBERLANDS – LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION


*One tree represents 7,500 of Rayonier’s acres.

The stock market is valuing Rayonier at roughly $2,000 per U.S. acre, assuming all its other operations (Australia/New Zealand, real estate, and paper mills) are worthless.

There’s a reason Wall Street is valuing timberland companies, such as Rayonier, so cheaply… Here’s the logic: Housing starts are falling… lumber prices are correlated to housing starts… timber prices are correlated to lumber prices… and timberland prices are correlated to timber prices. Therefore, if housing tanks, timberland tanks. It makes some sense.

But is this stuff already priced into the market? At current prices, you earn a 5% dividend in Rayonier. And you own a fine asset that grows exponentially every year.

Rayonier, with a great portfolio of properties close to the beach in the southeastern U.S., is attractive. It gets much better...

There are ways to buy timberland through the stock market for less than $1,000 an acre (assuming all the other business operations are worthless).

Related Articles

The #1 Investment of the Iron Chancellor

Why the #1 Investment of the Last 45 Years is Still a Buy

How to Buy Your Own Timberlands

It’s crazy to me that it’s cheaper to buy timberland “the easy way” (by buying stocks with large timberland holdings) than it is to buy timberland the hard way… by buying it outright yourself.

Wall Street doesn’t like timberland right now. Because of this, you’re able to buy timberland through the stock market at much cheaper prices than you could on your own.

This is an opportunity to consider. For contrarian investors, timberland stocks, such as Rayonier, are worth checking out…

Good investing,

Steve

Editor's note: Steve Sjuggerud is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments.

Sign up today to read more investment ideas from Steve Sjuggerud.

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THE END OF AN ERA IS ABOUT THREE MONTHS AWAY…

After 15 years of flying high, Bill Miller and team are going down in flames.

The only mutual fund manager to beat the return of the S&P 500 every year for the past 15 years, Miller is one of the sacred cows of the mutual fund industry… this year, however, he’s been turned into hamburger.

Due to huge, misplaced bets on homebuilders, Yahoo!, Amazon, and Sprint Nextel, Bill’s famous streak looks to be over. His Value Trust is down 1.6% this year, versus a 9% gain for the benchmark S&P 500.

The financial press is feasting on Bill’s bad year. Barron’s even devoted a 1,000-word essay on Bill’s struggles and the streak’s imminent death.

The DailyWealth take: The death of the streak is good for old Bill… As he’s pointed out in the past, the famous streak wouldn’t exist if the calendar year started in any other month except January. Let’s all get off Bill’s back and let him get back to just being a really good stock picker.

Negative returns in 2006… Bill’s streak comes to an end

-Brian Hunt


“With private pilots, we give them responsibility for their own safety. That makes sense - airline operations are different simply because other people are putting their lives in their trust.

Serious pilots know you have to fly regularly to stay sharp, and weekend fliers should train with flight instructors more regularly than the once every two years that the Federal Aviation Administration requires.

Most fly with great caution: in 2004, there were 1.2 fatal accidents for every 100,000 hours of flying.

Over the years, there have been numerous examples of newly minted pilots crashing near their own homes. Why? They get a license, get in a plane and start flying circles over the homestead to let everyone know of their accomplishment. Then while focusing too much on the house, they lose control of their plane and crash.”

-Scott McCartney,
Wall Street Journal

“The price of gasoline has fallen to its lowest level of the year.

The federal Energy Information Administration said Monday that motorists paid an average of $2.226 a gallon for regular gas last week, down 3.5 cents from the previous week.

Gasoline can be found for less than $2 a gallon in many parts of the country. Tom Kloza, an analyst at the Oil Price Information Service in Wall, N.J., said Missouri is on course to become the first state with average prices below $2.

But in a sign of how widely prices can vary, the average cost of gasoline in Hawaii is still more than $3 a gallon, Kloza said.”

-USA Today

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