2011
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A Canadian National rail yard somewhere in Canada.
20 October 2011
It's a Full-On Railway Rebound
Toronto Ontario - Railway stocks have been making a mockery of some of the more tempered views from analysts in recent weeks. These
stocks have a strong correlation with economic activity, and so it might come as little surprise that fears of a U.S. recession had been hitting some names
particularly hard in recent months. Heading into the start of October, Canadian Pacific Railway was down 33 percent from its high earlier in the year, Canadian
National Railway was down 16 percent.
But what a difference a month makes. CN has now risen 13 percent from its low and CP, long seen by observers as CN's not-as-successful little brother, has
surged 25 percent.
And in the U.S., Union Pacific has risen about 22 percent, with its third quarter results on Thursday helping to support those gains: Earnings rose 19
percent over last year, to US$904-million or US$1.85 a share, beating estimates.
Whoa! This certainly contrasts with some of the gloomier reactions from analysts in recent weeks, where the number of "hold" recommendations on CP
and CN have been greater than the number of "buy" recommendations. In the case of CP, the average target price has come down to $64 from $75 at the
start of the year, a 15 percent cut.
Blame it on the economic outlook. Raymond James Limited analyst Steve Hansen put it this way in a note in early October: "While we continue to
believe the long-term outlook for Canadian railroads remains bright, recent downward revisions to global economic growth suggest the downside risk to the
sector has increased materially, mitigating much of the upside reward, in our view."
Meanwhile, Cameron Doerksen of National Bank Financial recently trimmed his target on CP to $58 from $61.50. And David Newman of Cormark Securities cut his
recommendation to "market perform" from "buy" and reduced his target to $58 from $72.
In his third-quarter report on Thursday, though, Union Pacific's chief executive suggested that while economic growth remains slow, he doesn't expect a
recession. CP and CN report their quarterly results on 25 Oct 2011.
David Berman.
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