Calgary Alberta - Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd. (CP) is downplaying the potential negative impact on its operations from a trade war
between the United States and China.
China accounts for 12 percent of North American revenues, with direct business between the world's two largest economies coming in at less than five percent,
analysts were told during a conference call Thursday about its third-quarter results.
"We're just a business that's getting tossed around a bit with this China connection being overemphasized in the marketplace," said chief executive
Keith Creel.
Chief marketing officer John Brooks said trade tensions and the imposition of hefty import tariffs by both sides have prompted international customers to start
to pull forward some of their business.
The impact is mainly felt from some Vancouver imports and U.S. grain exports from the Midwest.
"But outside of that, we're pretty resilient in that space. And again, it's a total percentage, it's not giant numbers," Brooks said.
Creel said the Calgary-based company aims to ramp up crude shipments over the next few months to a run rate of about 100,000 carloads a year as it looks to
generate higher profits after posting record revenues and adjusted earnings in the third quarter.
CP Rail earned $622 million or $4.35 per diluted share for the quarter ended 30 Sep 2018 compared with $510 million or 3.50 per share for the same period a
year earlier.
Adjusted earnings rose to $589 million or a record $4.12 per diluted share, two cents better than it forecast earlier this month.
The earnings marked a 42 percent leap from $2.90 per share or $422 million a year earlier, beating the expectations of analysts polled by Thomson Reuters
Eikon.
The quarter showed the success of the railway's operating model, stated CEO Keith Creel.
"It was a record by almost every measure and sets us up well for the remainder of the year and beyond."
Third-quarter revenues grew 19 percent to $1.9 billion from $1.6 billion.
It was led by a 58 percent growth in currency-adjusted revenues for energy, chemicals, and plastics.
Creel stressed "crude was a large contributor to this growth," with more than 23,000 carloads moved in the quarter, but added that the category shot
up 23 percent even before factoring in crude.
Adjusted revenues also grew 24 percent higher in potash, 20 percent in automotive, 18 percent in intermodal, 12 percent in forest products, seven percent
grain, five percent metals, minerals, consumer, four percent coal, and two percent fertilizers and sulphur.
Brooks acknowledged that wet weather and an early winter in the Prairies could potentially hurt shipments.
But crops such as canola are "pretty resilient, as long as they'e not beaten down to the ground."
The company reported a record-low quarterly operating ratio, which measures its efficiency, of 58.3 percent, compared with 61 percent a year
earlier.
Creel said the railway foresees continued and sustainable growth across all lines of business.
"We have the foundational underpinnings, and the room to grow, in the weeks, months and years ahead," he said in a news release.
CP said it expects adjusted diluted earnings per share to grow more than 20 percent this year, up from an earlier guidance of low double-digit
growth.
Edward Jones analyst Dan Sherman recommended investors buy stock in the 137-year-old company, but cautioned that "trade disagreements with U.S. export
partners may also affect the volume of shipments."
Author unknown.