Rail company to primarily let go of real estate
Canadian National Railway Co. is considering selling additional real estate to free up cash that can be plowed back into its network.
Properties in Montreal and Calgary are among the assets that Canadian National could divest in the coming months, interim Chief Executive Officer Jean-Jacques Ruest said earlier this week.
The company has already sold about $150 million of “non-core” assets this month, Chief Financial Officer Ghislain Houle added.
Canada’s largest railroad raised its 2018 capital expenditure budget 6.3% on April 24 to a record $3.4 billion in a bid to eliminate bottlenecks and accommodate rising demand for freight after service issues angered customers such as grain farmers. Investments will be concentrated on the western section of the company’s network – from the British Columbia ports of Prince Rupert and Vancouver to Chicago – where growth is strongest, Ruest said.
Canadian National is looking to sell “primarily real estate,” Ruest told Bloomberg.
“They’re good real estate assets but they don’t generate revenue carloads, they don’t move freight. So we take that money, cash it out, and deploy it out west where we can move more trains.”
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Ruest declined to specify which assets the company would consider selling, or say how much they could fetch.
The additional spending prompted Canadian National to lower its full-year profit target earlier this week. Adjusted earnings this year will be $5.10 to $5.25 a share, the company said in a statement, 15 cents lower at both ends than the previous projection.