Don Kayne, Canfor president and chief executive officer
(Source: Canfor Corp.)
  • Canfor (TSX:CFP) announced that Don Kayne, president and chief executive officer, plans to retire at the end of the year
  • He has been with Canfor for 46 years and has held the position of president and chief executive officer since 2011
  • Canfor appointed its current senior vice president of global business development, Susan Yurkovich, as the next chief executive officer.
  • Canfor stock opened trading at C$14.67

Canfor (TSX:CFP) announced that Don Kayne, president and chief executive officer, plans to retire at the end of the year.

He has been with Canfor for 46 years and has held the position of president and chief executive officer since 2011. Under his leadership, the company has grown and transformed from its British Columbia roots into a global entity with operations in Alberta, the United States and Sweden.

In a media release on this transition, the company called Kayne a respected industry leader who has been a constant champion for the forest products sector, serving in a variety of industry roles including chair of the Forest Products Association of Canada, the B.C. Council of Forest Industries and the Bi-national Softwood Lumber Board.

He will continue in an advisory capacity with the company through 2025.

Susan Yurkovich, senior vice president, global business development. (Source: Canfor Corp.)

The company’s chairman, John Baird, also announced that Canfor had appointed its current senior vice president of global business development, Susan Yurkovich, as the next chief executive officer. She brings three decades of experience working in the natural resources sector to the role, 12 of those years with Canfor. She had served in executive roles in forestry and energy, including as president and CEO of the B.C. Council of Forest Industries and executive vice president at B.C. Hydro. Her appointment as CEO will take effect Jan. 1, 2025.

Canfor Corp. is an integrated forest products company involved in manufacturing high-value, low-carbon forest products. The company operates through two segments: lumber segment and pulp and paper segment. The company’s solid wood products include dimension lumber, specialty lumber and engineered wood products.

Canfor (TSX:CFP) stock opened trading at C$14.67 and has lost 18.49 per cent since the beginning of the year.

Join the discussion: Learn what other investors are saying about this stock on the Canfor Corp. Bullboard, and check out Stockhouse’s stock forums and message boards.

The material provided in this article is for information only and should not be treated as investment advice. For full disclaimer information, please click here.

(Top photo: Canfor Corp.)

More From The Market Online
The visiting team, composed of geologists and geochemists, was led by Professor Seo Jeong-hoon from the Department of Geology at Seoul National University.

Global geologists visit Almonty tungsten mine in South Korea

A team of geologists from around the world visited Almonty Industries’ (TSX:AII) Sangdong Tungsten mine in South Korea this week.
Cannabis Report image of farmed cannabis plants

The Market Online’s Weekly Cannabis Report – Sept. 6, 2024

Trulieve Cannabis and Tilray Brands top the list of the latest news in The Market Online's Weekly Cannabis Report.
Two pieces of a puzzle fitting together with image of two people shaking hands in background

Founders Metals plans to acquire 51% of Antino Gold Project

Founders Metals (TSXV:FDR) reveals it will exercise its right to acquire 51 per cent of the Antino Gold Project in southeastern Suriname.