2011
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Canadian National number 6060 and Canadian Pacific number 2860 on the shop track in
Jasper, Alberta - 1988 Phil Mason. |
14 June 2011
Canadian National Beating Canadian Pacific with Investors
Ottawa Ontario - Canada's two biggest railways are under pressure from government and customers to reduce delays, with investors
profiting from Canadian National Railway Co. (CNR)'s performance and losing on Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd. (CP)
Transport Minister Denis Lebel is promising legislation to give rail customers a faster way to settle disputes and the right to a service agreement. Sixty-two
percent of shippers said they lost money because of late trains in 2009, according to a March government report on the industry.
The rail companies say case-by-case service contracts with customers will ensure more timely delivery than regulation would. CN shares have given investors a
total return of 12.7 percent so far this year, while CP shares have lost 6.3 percent as earnings were hurt by delays linked to winter storms and flooding.
Canada's benchmark stock index has fallen 1.5 percent over the same period.
"There has been some tangible evidence of improvement with CN," said Stephen Boland, an equity analyst at Vancouver-based investment-management
company Odlum Brown Ltd., which oversees $7.5 billion. "CN did a very good job working through the challenging weather, whereas for CP there was a
significant impact on earnings." He rates CN shares a "buy" and doesn't rate CP.
CP's first-quarter earnings fell 65.6 percent from the year-ago period. The company cited "unusually severe winter weather, decreasing shipping volumes,
and increasing costs." Chief Operations Officer Ed Harris retired April 1 after less than a year. CN first-quarter earnings rose 12.5 percent.
Earnings Forecasts
CN's second-quarter earnings will probably grow 11.7 percent versus a CP gain of 0.3 percent, according to Bloomberg consensus estimates combining 26 responses.
Standard & Poor's cut its debt rating on CP to BBB- from BBB on 17 May 2011, citing "the company's slower pace of de-leveraging relative to our
previous expectations." S&P rates CN debt A-, three steps higher.
The world's 11th-biggest economy is the sole Group of Seven nation that's a major commodity exporter, those goods made up half of foreign shipments last year
and 16 percent of gross domestic product amid growing demand from emerging markets.
"The railroads needed someone to say to them that 70, 85, percent service isn't acceptable" said Chris McIver, vice president of sales at West Fraser
Timber Co., North America's largest maker of lumber for building construction. To improve service, "our preference is to do it between ourselves and the
railroads, and have government there as a bit of a watchdog."
Found Bottlenecks
Vancouver-based West Fraser ships about half of its production using CN Rail. McIver says it has also found bottlenecks with trucking companies and at ports
where lumber is reloaded into containers.
Shares of West Fraser have fallen 17.6 percent since a 3 May 2011 earnings report showing first-quarter profit of $0.30 per share, below analyst estimates of
$0.87 per share. Lumber shipments were 11 percent below production in the first quarter because of transport difficulties and weaker demand, President Henry
Ketcham said on a 4 May 2011 earnings call.
West Fraser said 30 percent of its spruce, pine, and fir exports went to Asia in the first quarter, up from 20 percent a year earlier and almost nothing five
years ago.
"We would do probably more business over there if we could make the logistics work," McIver said. "We have missed some opportunities and we are
all trying to miss as few as we can."
Declining Satisfaction
West Fraser isn't alone: 45 percent of rail customers surveyed in 2009 said their satisfaction had declined in the prior three years, according to the
government rail review. Grain shippers received 90 percent or more of the cars they requested only about half the time.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper's parliamentary majority following his 2 May 2011 re-election makes it easier to resist opposition demands for heavy regulation,
Royal Bank of Canada analyst Walter Spracklin said in a 10 Jun 2011 telephone interview from Toronto. He has an "outperform" rating on both CN and CP
shares.
Ralph Goodale, an opposition Liberal Party lawmaker from the wheat-growing province of Saskatchewan and a former agriculture minister, said legislation should
be passed this year to address "chronic complaints."
"There is no commercial discipline in the system that evens up the bargaining power," Goodale said in a 7 Jun 2011 interview in Ottawa. "The
shippers have a right to have contracts."
Hard Facts
"Burdensome regulation targeting railways alone is not the solution," CN Chief Executive Officer Claude Mongeau said in a 18 Mar 2011 statement. The
review panel "failed to act on the hard facts" showing good rail service. Mark Hallman, a spokesman for the Montreal-based railroad, said 2 Jun 2011
that executives weren't available to comment further.
"Many of the benefits already achieved have been masked by the unusually severe winter and spring operating conditions," CP Chief Executive Officer
Fred Green said at a 13 Jun 2011 investor presentation in New York. "We have to earn back the credibility that we've had for a long time and we will get
there." Green called the government review a "rather abysmal piece of work."
Bill Gates, the world's second-richest man according to Forbes magazine, is the biggest CN Rail shareholder through Cascade Investment LLC, regulatory filings
show. Michael Larson, chief investment officer of Cascade Investment in Kirkland, Washington, didn't return an e-mail message seeking comment.
On Top of This
"There could be legislation or regulation, but the rail companies in Canada are on top of this," said Michael Simpson, a portfolio manager at Sentry
Investments in Toronto, which manages about $7 billion, including CN shares. "They will reach out to their shippers. Railways generate a lot of free cash
flow and CN has a history of raising their dividends. As the economy expands they will expand."
He cited CN as being "proactive" in dealing with customer complaints, and said he holds more of its shares than CP, without giving details.
Railways were crucial to Canada's formation and settlement. The CP railway came from a pledge that Sir John A. MacDonald, Canada's first prime minister, made
to entice British Columbia to join the country. Canadian National, a state-run company the government created in 1919, was sold to investors in 1995 in what
was then the country's biggest initial share sale.
Canada is seeking more reliable cargo movement as the government negotiates trade agreements with India and the European Union. Harper said during the election
campaign he wants to sign trade agreements with India in 2013 and the EU next year, giving access to markets with 1.7 billion people.
Voluntary Agreements
CN and CP this year signed accords, voluntary service agreements, with the Montreal Port Authority, Port Metro Vancouver, grain handler Viterra Inc., Tembec
Inc., West Fraser, and Squamish Terminals Ltd.
Teck Resources Ltd. says a "landmark" 10-year agreement announced in October with Canadian Pacific will help it meet foreign demand. The railway will
buy new equipment to match expanded coal production, said Ron Vance, Teck's vice president of corporate development, on a 26 May 2011 investor call.
"An efficient rail network from mine site to port is absolutely essential" Vance said.
Greg Quinn.
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