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Abstract Timberland ownership in the United States underwent a major transformation in the late 20th century, driven by changing tax policies, availability of timber raw materials, and generally accepted accounting principles. These shifts played an important role in the financialization of timberlands, reshaping how timberlands are owned and managed. Formerly dominant vertically integrated forest products companies (VIFPCs) not only owned the wood-processing mills but also the timberlands to feed these mills, establishing strong local ties through employment, infrastructure development, and community support. The large-scale divestment of forest products companies in the late 1980s through the early 2000s created opportunities for various actors to enter the timberland ownership landscape, and two organizational forms – Timberland Investment Management Organizations (TIMOs) and Real-Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) – emerged as the major new timberland owners. In the wake of this ownership transition, multiple popular and academic analyses expressed concerns about possible land fragmentation, biodiversity loss, removal of land from traditional forestry operations, loss of access to non-timber forest products, and repurposing of forestland for non-forest uses through real-estate development. However, after decades of ownership change, the national-level outcomes are still unclear. Through this systematic literature review, we examine causal relationships between the TIMO/REIT ownership transition and various social, economic, and ecological outcomes. Our findings suggest that management practices, such as harvest intensity, forest certification, and plantation of softwood species, remain largely consistent among VIFPCs and TIMOs/REITs in financialized landscapes. However, community resistance to TIMO/REIT management has occurred, particularly around restricted recreational access and the lack of transparency in land transactions. We conclude that the outcomes of financialized timberlands are deeply interconnected and cannot be adequately understood through dualistic frameworks of social versus economic or ecological versus market outcomes. Instead, they demand integrated analysis that considers the complex socio-environmental systems in which these ownership models operate.