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Timber Cruise Fraud

Posted By John Hilton @ Jul 30th 2009 9:38pm In: General

 

By Curtis Seltzer on July 21, 2009

Timberland sellers often provide buyers with an estimate of their property's timber volume and its value. I've seen these take many forms: an oral opinion usually preceded by the phrase "at least"; a hand-scribbled scrap of paper that said "oak, $200,000, pine, $50,000" etc.; a walk-through estimate done by a consulting forester the seller hired;  several hundred pages of consultant-gathered-and-analyzed data sliced and diced every which way; and aerial images that indicate volume and other specifics, among many others.

Bogus cruises: How they work, Part IMy experience over the years with seller timber estimates in all formats is that they always need to be verified, and, at worst, they are frauds. Of the seller-supplied estimates I've seen, I'd guess that at least half inflate the volume and/or value of the seller's timber beyond what timber buyers would pay for. Inflation has ranged from a modest amount to, literally, $100 million, on a tract whose timber was without any commercial value owing to regulatory constraints.

I have also seen buyers work the same game with sellers by handing the seller a cruise that underestimates the seller's timber resource and its current market value. Of the two, a bogus seller-supplied estimate is the far more common.

Different ways exist to estimate timber volume in the field, referred to as stumpage. A timber cruise can be done with various methods according to property specifics, but, generally speaking, the most common is a procedure that samples the property's timber characteristics in a systematic way and then projects tract-wide totals to indicate volumes by species and size. The dollar value of each category (of species and size) is calculated by multiplying the aggregated volume by the current market price for that type of stumpage. The forester gathers current market prices from area timber buyers. These prices are expressed in units, such as $/board foot, $/ton, $/cord, or $/cubic yard. The forester derives a single price multiplier from this research and applies it against the aggregated volume for each species to get a current market value.

While cruises use different formats, 50 acres of mainly hardwoods might be presented in a very simplified form like this:

Timber Cruise for Mr. Johnson's 50 acres

3 miles west of Tranquility in Peaceful County

July 21, 2009

Diameter classes, DBH (diameter at breast height, 4.5 feet above ground)

Doyle Scale   25 plots

45/50 acres cruised for merchantable volume

1000s bf

<12"     12-14     14-16     16-18     >18   Total      $per       Total value

Vol.    1000/bf

Red oak                5                                5             5                        10       300           $3,000

Sugar Maple      10                                             20           8        28       400             11,200

Chestnut oak       4                                                             10       10        75               750

Black birch        15                                              10                                    20               200

Pine                      15                               10          15          30       55        50               2,750

Misc. HW           10                                10                                     10        60               600

Veneer

Cherry                                                                           5         5     1,500             7,500

Pulpwood

HW  500 cords @ $7 cord                                                                                3,500

Pine  400 cords @ $6 cord                                                                              2,400

---                                                                                                   --                      ----

59 (premerch)                                                                             113 (merch)*        $31,900

*  Excludes 5,000 bf of veneer.

Volume summary:

Premerchantable volume, <12" D:   59,000 bf

Merchantable sawtimber, >12" D:  113,000 bf

HW veneer:                                                5,000 bf

Pulpwood, HW and Pine                        900 cords

Sawlog volume per tract acre  113/50 = 2,260 bf/acre

Sawlog volume per cruised acre  113/45 = 2,511 bf/acre

Veneer per tract acre   5,000/50 =  100 bf/acre

Merchantable timber value = $31,900

Merchantable timber value per tract acre    $31,900/50 =  $638/acre

Premerchantable value estimated at $20/1000 bf = $1,180

Premerchantable value per tract acre   $1,180/50  =  $23.60

This cruise confines itself principally to merchantable sawtimber volume, which is stumpage that, simply put, is timber for which timber buyers will pay a sawlog price.

Timber volume that has no commercial value is not considered merchantable, even though there may be "a ton" of it on the property. Non-merchantable timber might include volume in small-diameter trees, or tree tops above, say, a 10"-inch diameter in the stem (that is, logs with big ends smaller than 10") or trees that are located on inoperable acreage (which might be too steep or too wet to allow logging by local, conventional methods).

At 12" DBH in this market, timber buyers redefine trees for a different end product.

With stems smaller than 12" DBH, the uses are confined to relatively low-value end products such as ties, pulp, pellets or firewood. At 12" DBH and above, timber is reclassified as sawlog. Sawlog stumpage is much more valuable, because these larger logs can be milled efficiently into high-value end products, such as lumber and flooring. Veneer sawlogs are the most valued trees, and they fetch premium prices.

In this example, 12" DBH is the threshold between small-diameter timber used for low-value products and sawlogs. That threshold is referred to as the in-growth point. Above that point, the value of timber volume in all species increases substantially. I've seen in-growth thresholds as small as 10" and as large as 16"; it depends on local market conditions.

Some cruises will also estimate premerchantable volume (small-diameter trees) by species and diameter class so that projections can be made about when each premerch asset (say, red oak in the 8-10" cell) will achieve the threshold diameter of 12" and be reclassified as sawlog volume and fully valued at sawlog price. In this example, the forester put $20/1000 bf on the 59,000 bf of premerchantable volume. Premerchantable sawtimber represents future economic return much more than present value.

Each species grows at a different rate, and growth is also determined by the productivity of the site where the trees are growing. The timber-growing productivity of a particular spot is expressed as a site index-a number.  In simple formulation, the higher the site index, the faster trees will grow. The county's soil survey (available from the local office of the USDA's Natural Resources and Conservation Service) maps all the soils in a county and provides site indices for each soil type and location.

The next several columns will discuss ways that cruises can be manipulated to increase (or in the much rarer case, decrease) merchantable timber volume and its value.

Related articles:

  1. Bogus cruises: How they work, Part II
  2. Seller-supplied timber values: Trust (a little) and verify (a lot)
  3. Investing in timberland: Good move if it's priced right
  4. Is timberland overpriced? If so, what to do?
  5. Timberland is a valuable investment in a volatile time

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