Calgary Alberta - Shares in Canadian Pacific Railway and U.S. rail line Norfolk Southern were both sharply higher on Monday after a Bloomberg
report suggested the two companies were exploring a merger.
Citing unnamed sources close to the negotiations, the newswire reported Monday that CP, which is Canada's second-largest rail company, is trying to buy or
merge with U.S. rail line Norfolk Southern.
Canadian Pacific is worth about $29 billion on the TSX.
Norfolk Southern is worth US$26 billion on the NYSE.
Shares in Norfolk Southern were up 12 percent to just over $89 a share on Monday.
CP, meanwhile, was up about five percent to $182.
The move comes on the heels of an attempt by CP to buy U.S. rail line CSX last year as part of a goal of consolidating the sector by creating one rail company
that operates both in Canada and the U.S.
But talks between CP and Florida-based CSX came to nothing.
Currently, the North American rail network is a Byzantine combination of grids owned by the two Canadian companies, plus about a half-dozen U.S lines, each
with rival networks that interact at frequent bottlenecks, which breeds inefficiency.
Norfolk Southern owns 32,000 kilometres of rail lines across 22 U.S. states.
Primarily eastern-based and CSX's main rival on the eastern seaboard, it connects with the western network in Chicago, which is the central hub of North
America's rail network.
CP's lines, by contrast, crisscross Canada and extend into several U.S. midwestern states, including Chicago.
Norfolk, meanwhile, has little presence in the Western U.S.
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