Vancouver Sun

CN Rail shipments up, but efficiency takes a hit

- FREDERIC TOMESCO

Canadian National Railway Co. is running into challenges in maintainin­g its status as North America’s most efficient railroad.

A key measure of efficiency dropped in the first quarter even as the Montreal-based company forecast higher volumes for the coming year.

The results spotlighte­d the task facing Canadian National, the most efficient North American railroad last year, as it strives to keep costs down while tapping into a much-anticipate­d rebound in volume.

The company boosted its 2017 profit target, citing better demand for commoditie­s such as grain and coal. First-quarter earnings met analyst expectatio­ns.

“People just expected a much better number,” said Dan Sherman, an analyst at Edward Jones. “The market was hoping they’d get a little bit more. Fuel costs were up a lot and that masked everything else that went well.”

The operating ratio, in which a lower number is better, worsened to 59.4 per cent from 58.9 per cent, the Montreal-based company said Monday in a statement. Fuel expenses jumped 46 per cent as equipment rents climbed 6.3 per cent, leading to an 8.9 per cent advance in operating expenses.

Canadian National said adjusted earnings this year will rise at least 7.8 per cent to $4.95 to $5.10 a share. The carrier, like Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd., is benefiting from last year’s bumper crop in Western Canada.

Canadian National now expects to devote $2.6 billion to capital expenditur­es this year, $100 million more than previously planned.

The extra investment will go toward the purchase of 22 highhorsep­ower locomotive­s “and other projects to support growth,” the railroad said.

The company has begun hiring to replace departed employees, and additional train starts may be needed to handle rising volumes, executives said Monday on a conference call with analysts.

New contracts with customers such as Taiwan’s Yang Ming Marine Transport, Canadian Tire Corp. and Lowes Cos.’s Rona unit will generate more than $100 million a year in additional revenue, chief commercial officer JeanJacque­s Ruest said.

 ??  ?? CN Rail’s lower efficiency results highlight its challenge to keep costs down while it forecasted higher volumes and boosted its profit target this year.
CN Rail’s lower efficiency results highlight its challenge to keep costs down while it forecasted higher volumes and boosted its profit target this year.

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