Posts Tagged ‘NS finances’

NS Reports 14% Operating Revenue Growth in 2022

January 26, 2023

Norfolk Southern on Wednesday reported that its railway operating revenue reached a record $12.7 billion in 2022, an increase of 14 percent, or $1.6 billion, compared with 2021.

The Atlanta-based company said these results were driven by an 18 percent increase in revenue per unit.

Railway operating expenses were $7.9 billion, an increase of 19 percent compared with the same period last year, driven by higher fuel prices, inflation, network congestion, and higher compensation and benefits.

Income from railway operations was $4.8 billion, up 8 percent, or $362 million year over year, an annual record. Diluted earnings per share were $13.88, up 15 percent, or $1.77, compared with 2021.

During the fourth quarter of 2022, railway operating revenue was $3.2 billion, a 13 percent increase, and railway operating income was $1.2 billion, a 5 percent increase compared with fourth-quarter 2021 financial results.

NS set fourth-quarter and annual records for railway operating revenue and income from railway operations.

Diluted earnings per share were $3.42, up 10 percent compared with the fourth quarter of 2021. Operating expenses in the quarter increased 19 percent to $2.1 billion compared with the same 2021 period due to higher fuel prices, increased claims costs and higher compensation and benefits, NS officials said.

However, during a conference call with investors NS executives said they expect a slowing economy and declining freight demand to produce flat revenue and earnings in 2023.

CEO Alan Shaw said service is the best it’s been in two years with NS having 7,500 active conductors and engineers, which is 100 below its goal for May. “We made great strides to close the year and are encouraged by our progress,” Shaw said.

Chief Marketing Officer Ed Elkins said during the conference call that he was optimistic NS would “claw back some volume.”

Still, he said there remains concern in the executive suite about slowing demand in intermodal and merchandise traffic.

NS executives said key operations metrics, including average train speed and terminal dwell time, continue to show improvement.

The Atlanta-based Class 1 carrier expects to continue hiring new operating workers and pledged to avoid furloughs of workers in order to make service more resilient.

NS plans to spend $2.1 billion on capital projects this year, including the modernization of 115 locomotives as part of its ongoing DC-to-AC traction conversion program.

NS Reports Records in 3rd Quarter Financial Report

October 27, 2022

Norfolk Southern said on Wednesday that it posted quarterly records for operating revenue, operating income, net income and diluted earnings per share during the third quarter of 2022.

Net income was up 27 percent to $958 million, or $4.10 diluted earnings per share, from $753 million, or $3.06 per diluted EPS in the third quarter of 2021.

Operating revenue was $3.3 billion, a quarterly record, which represented an increase of 17 percent.

NS said the revenue gain was driven by a 20 percent increase in revenue per unit due to higher fuel surcharges and pricing. Income from operations totaled a record $1.3 billion, up 12 percent.

Operating expenses in the quarter rose 21 percent to $2.1 billion due to higher fuel prices, increased labor costs and other elevated expenses resulting from inflation and slower network velocity, NS officials said in a news release.

Incremental labor costs of $117 million associated with the tentative major labor agreements including $88 million in expenses pertaining to prior periods.

The operating ratio of 62 percent was up 1.8 points over that of the third quarter of 2021.

However, a report on the website of Railway Age characterized the NS financial report as a mixed picture because earnings missed projections of Wall Street analysts.

“A large question will be NS’s ability to capture intermodal traffic that have been lost due to labor/network challenges,” Cowen and Company Managing Director Jason Seidl told Railway Age.

The report also showed that freight volume dropped 2 percent overall during the third quarter.

Merchandise freight was down 2 percent while intermodal volume dipped 5 percent. Coal was a bright spot increasing 14 percent.

NS Chief Marketing Officer Ed Elkins said intermodal volume declined because some shippers diverted loads to the highway in advance of a potential work stoppage in late September.

Some short-haul international intermodal traffic also went to trucks.

CEO Alan Shaw during an earnings call with investors expressed optimism that as NS improves its service it will see increases traffic.

Top NS executives said during the call that the railroad is exceeding its goals of hiring new conductors.

Average train speed rose 20 percent during the quarter, and rail cars also spent less time in classification yards.

Chief Operating Officer Cindy Sanborn was asked if NS would furlough train crews if traffic decline in coming months due to a softening economy.

“We have to make sure we manage through downturns in such a way that we are in a good place to handle the upturns,” Sanborn said. “That’s how we’re going to grow long-term.”

She said NS would first rely on attrition to reduce its operating crew head count if traffic declines.

NS Sets Quarterly Income Records

July 28, 2022

Norfolk Southern on Wednesday reported setting records in operating revenue and income from railway operations in the second quarter of this year.

The carrier said operating revenue was $3.3 billion, an increase of 16 percent compared with the same period in 2021. That was a quarterly record.

The increase from the same quarter of a year earlier was due to a 20 percent increase in revenue per unit.

Income from railway operations was $1.3 billion, up 9 percent compared with the second quarter of 2021. That was a record for a single quarter, NS officials said in a news release.

Net income for the quarter was $819 million, about the same as a year ago, and diluted earnings per share of $3.45 were a 5 percent increase.

Railway operating expenses rose 21 percent to $2 billion. NS attributed that to higher fuel prices, lower property sales and increased costs from inflation and service issues

The operating ratio in the second quarter was 60.9 percent compared to 58.3 percent a year ago.

In a statement, NS CEO Alan Shaw said the Atlanta-based carrier had seen improvements in service.

“In the second quarter we stabilized service levels, expanded our pipeline of conductor trainees, and launched the next evolution of our operating plan, TOP | SPG, with our signature no surprises approach,” Shaw said during an earnings call. “Service is not yet where we want it to be, but I am encouraged by our progress.”

Freight volume during the second quarter was down 3 percent. Merchandise traffic fell 1 percent, while intermodal and coal were each down 4 percent.

Compared to the first quarter of 2022, though, average train speed and terminal dwell times were worse

NS Chief Operating Officer Cindy Sanborn tried to put a positive spin on that by saying “we are really encouraged by the improvements we are seeing here in July.”

She said so far in July, train speeds are up 6 percent and dwell times are down 3 percent.

Officials said crew shortages limited the number of trains NS could operate and those that ran were longer, heavier and more fuel efficient.

Sanborn said NS has been able to add new conductors at a rate that exceeds the attrition of existing workers.

NS now has 7,190 qualified train and engine workers, an increase of 224 over the second quarter average. There were 988 conductors in training during the second quarter.

Management expects 12 percent or better revenue growth for the year and projects that the operating ratio will increase a half point to one point.

NS Set Quarterly Records in 1st Quarter

April 28, 2022

Norfolk Southern on Wednesday said that during the second quarter of 2022 it posted record railway operating revenue, income from railway operations, net income and diluted earnings per share.

First quarter operating revenue was $2.9 billion, up 10 percent compared with the first quarter of 2021. Helping to boost revenue was a 16 percent increase in revenue per unit, railroad officials said.

Railway operating expenses totaled $1.8 billion, up 13 percent, due to higher fuel, purchased services and equipment rent costs.

Income from railway operations of $1.1 billion, a first-quarter record, rose 7 percent. NS reported first quarter net income of $703 million, up from $673 million a year ago, and earnings per diluted share of $2.93 compared with $2.66.

The quarterly operating ratio was 62.8 percent compared to 61.5 percent a year ago.

“Our financial results in the first quarter were solid, despite current network challenges,” NS President Alan Shaw said in a statement.

“I am confident that our efforts to improve our service through accelerated hiring and refinements to our operating plan will provide a platform for long-term growth and efficiency for both our customers and shareholders.”

NS Sets 4th Quarter Record for Operations Income

January 27, 2022

Norfolk Southern said on Wednesday that during the fourth quarter of 2021 it earned net income of $760 million, an increase of 13 percent over the same period in 2020 when it earned $671 million.

Diluted earnings per share were $3.12 compared with $2.64 in the fourth quarter of 2020.

The operating ratio, the percentage of revenue devoted to operating expenses, was a record 60.4 percent compared with 61.8 percent in the same quarter of 2020.

NS said its railway operating expenses during the quarter were $1.7 billion, an increase of 8 percent, or $134 million, compared with the 2020 period, due to higher fuel and purchased services expenses.

Railway operations income totaled a fourth-quarter record $1.1 billion, an increase of 15 percent or $145 million on a year-over- year comparison.

Traffic volume during the fourth quarter fell 4 percent compared to the same period in 2020. Merchandise volume was up 2 percent and coal volume rose 4 percent, but intermodal volume dropped 7 percent;

In a news release, NS said quarterly railway operating revenue in 2021 as a whole was $11.1 billion, an increase of 14 percent or $1.35 billion over 2020.

Railway operating expenses were $6.7 billion, a decline of 1 percent, or $92 million, compared with 2020.

“Last year’s results included a $385 million non-cash locomotive rationalization charge and a $99 million non-cash impairment charge related to an equity-method investment,” NS reported. “Excluding those charges, operating expenses were up 6 percent, or $392 million, compared with adjusted operating expenses in 2020, driven by higher fuel, purchased services and compensation and benefit expenses.”

Income from railway operations was a record $4.45 billion, up 48 percent or $1.45 billion.

“Excluding the effects of the locomotive rationalization and impairment charges in 2020, income from railway operations was up 28 percent, or $961 million, on a year-over-year adjusted basis,” NS said.

The 2021 operating ratio was a record 60.1 percent, an improvement of 920 basis points over 2020.

“Excluding the effects of the locomotive rationalization and impairment charges in 2020, the operating ratio improved 430 basis points over the adjusted results for 2020,” NS said.

For 2022, NS projects “upper single-digit year-over-year growth” in revenue, with merchandise and intermodal leading volume growth. Coal is expected to continue to decline.

The railroad is eyeing a decline of 50 to 100 basis point in its operating ratio,and plans capital expenditures of $1.8 billion to $1.9 billion.

For more information visit the NS investor relations page at http://www.nscorp.com/content/nscorp/en/investor-relations/presentations/fourth-quarter-2021-earnings.html

NS Net Income Up in 1st Quarter

April 29, 2021

Norfolk Southern said on Wednesday that its first quarter 2021 net income was $673 million, or $2.66 earnings per diluted share, compared with $381 million, or $1.47 per diluted share during the same period in 2020.

Railway operating revenue of $2.6 billion was up 1 percent, or $14 million, compared with last year.

In a news release, NS said this gain was driven primarily by a 3 percent increase in volume.

The quarter’s diluted earnings per share was a first quarter record. Likewise, NS set an operating ratio record during the first quarter of 61.5 percent.

A year ago, the operating ratio for the first quarter was an adjusted 63.7 percent. The operating ratio is the percentage of revenue devoted to paying expenses.

First quarter 2021 railway operating expenses were $1.6 billion, down 21 percent or $433 million, compared with the same period last year.

The first quarter 2020 results included a $385 million non-cash locomotive rationalization charge as a result of productivity gains achieved through implementing the precision scheduled railroading operating model.

Last year NS sold 703 locomotives “deemed excess and no longer needed for railroad operations,” and thereby recorded a $385 million loss “to adjust their carrying amount to their estimated fair value, which resulted in a $97 million tax benefit,” NS said in a news release.

Excluding the locomotive rationalization charge, operating expenses were down 3 percent, or $48 million, compared with adjusted operating expenses in 2020.

NS said it benefited from lower fuel, compensation and benefits, and materials expenses.

Income from railway operations reached a first-quarter record of $1 billion, an increase of 79 percent or $447 million compared to 2020.

Excluding the effect of the locomotive rationalization charge last year, income from railway operations was up 7 percent or $62 million.

“The reopening of the economy provides meaningful tailwinds for continued strength in both the consumer and manufacturing sectors, and our long history of delivering sustainable transportation solutions for customers will continue to drive long-term value for our shareholders, customers, and the communities we serve,” said NS CEO James Squires.

NS executives expect 9 percent year-over-year growth in revenue, with intermodal and merchandise as the leading drivers, and coal continuing a “secular decline.”

The company anticipates a “greater than 300 basis points improvement” for the operating ratio in 2021, vs. the 2020 adjusted operating ratio of 64.4 percent

Capital expenditures are expected to be $1.6 billion.

NS Net Income Up 1% in 4th Quarter

January 27, 2021

Norfolk Southern reported on Wednesday that during the fourth quarter of 2020 its net income increased 1 percent to $671 million or $2.64 diluted earnings per share.

That compares with $666 million or $2.55 per share in the same quarter in 2019.

Fourth quarter railway operating revenue fell 4 percent to $2.6 billion last quarter, driven by a 1 percent decline in volume, lower fuel surcharges and differing business mix, NS officials said in a news release.

The news release said operating expenses were $1.6 billion, down 8 percent. Lower fuel costs, compensation and benefits and purchased services were partially offset by lower gains on property sales.

Income from railway operations rose 2 percent to $1 billion and NS posted an operating ratio of 61.8 percent for the quarter.

That broke the previous OR record of 64.2 percent in the fourth quarter of 2019.

Fourth quarter volume declined 1 percent overall but intermodal volume was up 5 percent and merchandise declined 5 percent. Coal traffic dropped 25 percent

Driving domestic intermodal growth of 7 percent was a 30 percent increase in premium business that includes e-commerce shipments,

NS said it will spend $1.6 billion on capital expenditures this year.

In a statement, company executives said they expect intermodal and some merchandise volume growth this year as the economy recovers from the COVID-19 pandemic. NS expects revenue growth of about 9 percent.

NS Revenue, Profits Fell in 3rd Quarter

October 29, 2020

As expected Norfolk Southern reported this week that its revenue and profits sank during the third quarter due to traffic declines that the railroad tied to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Operating income fell 6 percent to $939 million while revenue dropped 12 percent to $2.5 billion.

Adjusted  earnings per share rose 1 percent to $2.51.

During the period NS posted an adjusted operating ratio of 62.5 percent.

During the quarter NS reduced expenses by 15 percent while its traffic volume fell by 7 percent.

Intermodal volume grew 1 percent during the quarter, but merchandise traffic and coal combined fell 11 percent.

Domestic intermodal was up 9 percent while international intermodal volume fell 11 percent.

Coal volume alone fell by 32 percent, which represented most of the volume declines said NS Chief Marketing Officer Alan Shaw.

NS CEO James Squires said the railroad plans to pick up the pace of precision scheduled railroading changes, including closing hump operations in Macon, Georgia, and revising its southern service plans.

“As we continue rolling out PSR, our team sees additional opportunity for efficiency and growth that will close the [operating ratio] gap with the rest of the industry,” Squires said during an investor’s conference call.

The carrier said it is aiming to reach an operating ratio of 60 percent in 2021.

Chief Operating Officer Cindy Sanborn said the change NS is making to its operating plans are more than tweaking.

She said there will be longer trains that will move faster. Train length was up 12 percent this quarter compared to 6,600 feet a year ago.

Increases in intermodal and merchandise traffic have been added to existing trains.

Crew starts in August and September did not increase even though traffic volume rose.

The NS workforce in the third quarter was 18 percent below what it was a year ago.

Shaw predicted a rebound in consumer-related traffic, including intermodal and automotive, but expects anything connected to energy to recover more slowly.

He said there is no hope for coal traffic to improve so long as natural gas prices remain low and utility stockpiles stay 45 percent higher than they were at this time last year.

Sanborn said NS still has the ability to increase train length because only 9 percent of merchandise trains at at the maximum of the horsepower of their locomotive consists.

Just 10 percent of NS intermodal trains are longer than 10,000 feet.

NS in September closed its hump at Enola Yard near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

The closing of the hump in Macon next week will mark the sixth hump that NS has idled since 2019.

 “A lot of these hump conversions that you’ve seen  . . . actually improves car speed,” Sanborn said. “And at a system level what we want to do is avoid touches all together if at all possible. If we can speed the cars up, that’s good for us in terms of asset intensity and it’s also good for our customers. It provides them a more timely service product.”

As part of its redesign of southern operations, NS also plans to close several local yards around Atlanta.

As other railroads practicing PSR have done, NS is pre-blocking more traffic at origin and focusing on block-swapping en route.

NS will still have jump yards in Elkhart, Indiana; Conway (Pittsburgh), Pennsylvania; Birmingham, Alabama; and Chattanooga, Tennessee.

NS to Take Third Quarter Impairment Charge

October 10, 2020

Norfolk Southern told federal financial regulators this week that it expects to take a $99 million impairment charge in the third quarter, which is expected to lower operating expenses.

In a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the Class 1 railroad said it expects to report third quarter operating revenue of $2.5 billion, operating expenses of $1.666 billion and an unadjusted operating ratio of 66.5 percent

Excluding the non-cash impairment charge, for the third quarter, NS expects its adjusted railway operating expenses to be $1.567 billion and its adjusted operating ratio to be 62.5 percent.

NS will release its third-quarter financial results on Oct. 28.

NS Operating Revenue down 29% in 2nd Quarter

July 30, 2020

Second quarter operating revenue at Norfolk Southern plunged a whopping 29 percent to $2.1 billion.

In announcing its quarterly financial results, the carrier said the steep dive was driven by a 26 percent decline in total freight volume compared with the second quarter of 2019.

It was the largest second quarter 2020 drop among Class 1 railroads.

NS posted net income of $392 million, down 46 percent, and diluted earnings per share of $1.53, down 43 percent compared with the same period a year ago.

Railroad officials cited the COVID-19 pandemic’s impact on freight volume as a major factor in the dismal quarter performance.

Operating expenses during the quarter were $1.5 billion, down 21 percent from a year ago due to lower fuel, compensation, benefits and purchased services expenses.

In a statement, NS CEO James Squires said the railroad will continue to further trim its infrastructure, including reducing the number of hump yards that it operates and operating longer trains.

Income from railway operations was $610 million, down 43 percent. The railroad’s operating ratio for the quarter was 70.7 percent compared to 63.6 percent a year ago.

During an earnings call on Wednesday morning, Squires declined to predict how the railroad might fare from a financial perspective for the remainder of the year because it remains to be seen how durable the economic recovery will be.

However, he and other NS executives expressed guarded optimism, saying the carrier has seen a strong rebound in intermodal and automotive traffic.

One commodity NS does not expect to bounce back is coal, which sank by 57 percent during the second quarter.

NS Chief Marketing Officer Alan Shaw said coal will continue to be depressed due to competition from low-cost natural gas and weakness in export metallurgical coal markets.

During the second quarter, merchandise traffic dipped 29 percent while intermodal traffic was down 16 percent.

Shaw said the growth of consumer demand and tightening truck capacity could bode well for intermodal volume growth.

The resumption of auto manufacturing and rising manufacturing output have boosted merchandise volume.

“The consumer segments are doing really well,” Shaw said noting that intermodal and automotive volume in July have outpaced those of June.

Average train weight was up 6 percent due to NS moving more tonnage on fewer and longer trains.

Train starts were down 28 percent and Chief Operating Officer Michael Wheeler said many of the train suspensions are likely to be permanent even as traffic volume recovers.

Wheeler said train starts are down 20 percent thus far in July as NS has amalgamated various types of traffic into its merchandise trains.

Wheeler said NS still is able to add volume to existing trains without having to add train starts.

The second quarter saw the closing of hump operations in Linwood, North Carolina, and Bellevue, Ohio, and NS expects to close additional terminals.

Closing Linwood and Bellevue is expected to save the railroad $20 million to $30 million a year.