Calgary Alberta - The CEO of Canadian Pacific Kansas City Limited says he remains unperturbed by a
decree from Mexico's president that will force freight railways to allow passenger service on their
tracks.
"I have zero expectation and belief that Mexico's ambition and intent to integrate and initiate passenger rail
service in concert with freight rail service will impact our ability to hit our synergies, or any of the targets of our
multi-year guidance," Keith Creel told analysts on a conference call Tuesday.
Creel said he has met twice with President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, and reached a deal with the Mexican government
to carry out a study around passenger trains on a roughly 200 kilometre corridor running northwest from Mexico
City.
The scope of the study has expanded since his first meeting, he added, with completion expected in May.
"He committed to me that he's aligned exactly with what my expectations are. He does not want to jeopardize any of
that," Creel said, citing the government's efforts to bolster both passenger service and economic growth,
particularly via manufacturing jobs that hinge partly on rail transport.
Creel said the company can open its gates to passenger trains, "with the right infrastructure and right
investment," while maintaining sturdy freight service on its network, the only one to stretch from Canada through
the United States to Mexico.
Few passenger train systems in the world are profitable, and most rely heavily on government subsidies.
The decree contains no mention of whether the private companies would be offered financial support.
It proposes passenger rail service on a long leg of CPKC-run track between Laredo, Texas, and San Luis Potosi in
central Mexico, among other routes.
Almost no regular passenger service remains in Mexico following a 1995 reform that gave concessions to two private
railway companies, Mexico's Ferromex and a subsidiary of U.S.-based Kansas City Southern, which Canadian Pacific
acquired for US$31 billion in April.
In the 20 Nov 2023 decree, the president's office wrote that "preference will be given to public passenger rail
service, and freight rail transport will be respected, according to the terms of the corresponding
concession."
The stated priority raises the potential for delays.
When the government last provided passenger service through a state-owned company in the 1990s, trains seldom ran on
time.
In the nearer term, Creel said Tuesday he expects CPKC's adjusted earnings per share to grow by double digits this
year, following a bump in revenue last quarter, and despite lower container volumes and a weaker grain
harvest.
"Looking forward to 2024, we are confident that our unique synergy opportunities along with improving
macroeconomic conditions can overcome a weak Canadian grain crop and position us for another strong performance this
year," he said.
Smaller loads of wheat and other grains are expected to persist into the second half of 2024, the company
noted.
Containers remain another source of uncertainty, as consumers continue to reroute their spending toward services rather
than goods in a reversal of pandemic trends.
Pressure from inflation and rising interest rates threaten to work as additional drags on product
purchases.
CPKC said it saw lower domestic container volumes last quarter due to shrinking retail volumes, even as international
container shipments rebounded along with a ramp-up in activity at the Port of Vancouver after the 13 day strike by B.C.
dockworkers in July.
The decrease was partially offset by a rise in refined fuel products and automotive shipments, as COVID-19-induced
kinks in the manufacturing supply chain smoothed themselves out.
CPKC said it boosted its revenue four percent to $3.78 billion last quarter from combined Canadian Pacific and Kansas
City Southern revenues of $3.64 billion a year earlier.
Core adjusted combined income climbed three percent to $1.10 billion last quarter from $1.07 billion a year
earlier.
"This isn't easy," chief operating officer Mark Redd told analysts on a conference call, referring to the
blending of two distinct rail networks, the continent's first big rail merger in more than two decades.
But he also stressed the potential efficiency made possible by "synergies."
Fourth-quarter core adjusted combined diluted earnings rose to $1.18 per share from $1.14 per share the previous year,
CPKC said.
Net income fell 20 percent year-over-year to $1.02 billion last quarter from $1.27 billion, it said.
The figure does not take into account Kansas City Southern profits from last year.
CPKC forecast that core adjusted combined diluted earnings per share will grow in the double digits this year from
$3.84 per share in 2023.
The railroad operator plans to spend $2.75 billion on infrastructure upgrades and purchases throughout
2024.
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