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@Ed Kapuscinski , you have the gist of it given that hedge funds are calling the shots now. A magnitude worse than Harvard MBAs in the C-suite. Scary.
I agree.Curious that the hedge fund griped about safety. Real safety costs money that could otherwise be going back to Wall Street. But the hedge fund also wants trains run on time.https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.cnbc.com/amp/2023/02/26/union-pacific-says-it-expects-to-name-a-new-ceo-in-2023-after-hedge-fund-called-for-lance-fritz-to-be-replaced.htmlhttps://www.railwayage.com/freight/up-and-soroban-cn-deja-vu-all-over-again/
Yes, real safety costs money, but so does lack of it. And when there is a safety accident that is very observable i.e. East Palestine derailment, the cost of non compliance starts to exceed the cost of safety.
I've read Soroban wants Jim Vena to take his place, however I've also read he isn't universally liked either.
Under his leadership, since 2017, the Company has achieved a 52% increase in net income, a 27% increase in operating income and a 3.7 point increase in return on invested capital.
He's the one that fired all the roundhouse personnel and the carmen, shut down all the hump yards and put half the motive power in storage. If he comes back the U.P. will be sold for scrap in the next 10 years.Scott
Until recently my only exposure to UP was on vacations to California (2006), WA/OR/ID 2008, WY/UT/CO 2009, AR/NM 2010, and the thing that struck me was the trains were short and usually had four 4000+HP locomotives up front. Having watched CN go from 80 cars and thee GP40's to 150 cars and two GEVO's, I get that PSR leaves zero room for error or road failures, but four big units on a 70 to 80 car train seemed overkill to me... and these trains got two rear end helpers in Oregon's Blue Mountains, Cheyenne Hill, and the Tehachapi's. There seemed to be room for improvement, maybe go from four to three units or add cars to the trains.But the shareholder driven approach (hedge funds) does tend to leave a broken company in it's wake. They don't care where he company is in 10 years, and there's probably a good reason for that. Railroads becoming consistently profitable seems to have worked against the industry long term as the Bankers are running them now (remember when thought the bean counters were bad?). There's nothing wrong with going to a barber, but the hedge funds take the company to the butcher.
It's not unusual to see more units in a train than those that are being used for power. Often those are being repositioned to other locations on the railroad. A good example of this is bulk commodity trains (grain, soda ash, potash etc.) When they are traveling west they are loaded and can be 16k to 27k tons with three to six engines online (on the Portland Sub). Going east those same trains would be empty and while they would still have the same number of engines on them as when they were loaded, there is only one or two of them online. Additionally you may see trains that originate with more engines than they need or even DPUs that they don't need in anticipation of the need for the extra power over upcoming territory. We often have more units on a train than we need going from Portland to Hermiston because leaving Hermiston those trains are going to go over the Blue mountains which is heavy grade territory and need the extra power. However those extra engines were not online going Portland to Hermiston, but it prevents having to add extra power when the train crew changes at Hermiston.Scott