Okay, great. So thank you to everyone for joining us for our next session to kick off the afternoon. We have Keith Creel with us, CEO, I'm sorry, Canadian Pacific CEO, Keith Creel, and Chris de Bruyn, who runs IR for CP. Thank you both for joining us. A lot of topical things to discuss. We've seen a number of your friends over the last couple of days, and so, you know, we'll have an interesting back and forth. I will tell you, Jim Vena wants to bet you $100 on the hockey game.
I've already given him an opportunity.
He's open to that.
I've got $100 on the U.S. ladies team. He hasn't taken it yet, so.
All right, well, we'll see how, we'll see how it shakes out, and we'll be watching closely. So before we get into the M&A discussion, which I know a lot of people are going to want to discuss, let's just talk about operations and how the quarter's progressing, where you're seeing opportunities. Quarter to date, RTM is roughly flat. Carloads are down a bit. You have a target out there for mid-single-digit RTM growth for 2026. With the understanding it's still early in the year, maybe you could talk about how you expect volumes to trend over the course of the year.
Okay, yeah. Well, number one, thanks for having us again. It's always a pleasure to come and talk about our story. It's, we're almost three years old. We're kind of getting beyond the infancy stage. We're toddlers, but, you know, we're still learning to walk, run, and the railroad is doing extremely well overall. We finished the fourth quarter with a lot of operating momentum. Certainly had some choppiness in revenue, but as we said, at the end of the fourth quarter, and when we talked about our results, that the momentum continued operationally. The railroad's running very fluidly. Operating metrics are best-ever levels for the first quarter of the year, which is typically our most challenging because of weather.
That said, from a business standpoint, you know, January, from a compare standpoint, we always said and knew and expected last year was strong. We had a mild winter last year. We had a lot of pull-forward demand from tariffs, from, you know, the tariff date that was coming in April. Everyone knew. From a compare standpoint, we knew that was going to be a pretty hard match. In spite of all that, with a record grain harvest, which is carrying over to this year, we were flattish, maybe slightly down, I think 1%-2% on the RTM basis. What we didn't have in January in volumes, we made up for in operational performance. Spend control, which we closed last year out, is maintaining its discipline.
I'm extremely proud of the operating team and the way they're efficiently and safely running the railway. That said, from a demand standpoint, the grain has really started to move. So the numbers you'll see once they get updated, we've actually got to positive RTMs. I think this morning I looked at it, we're just under 2% for the quarter. We expect to finish low single digit positive for the quarter, which is in line with our expectations, and we'll continue to gain momentum as we get into the second quarter. Compares from, you know, the pull forward will dissipate. You've got the automotive pause that was taken last year that will dissipate. So you get back to the fundamentals of, you know, the demand that we're seeing on grain. It's a record harvest, 85 million metric tons.
That's 20% more than last year, and we've never ran it more efficiently. We had a record January. We're going to have a record February, so we're well positioned there. The U.S. corn crop, as well, is extremely strong. You've got the soybean issue with China got resolved in the fourth quarter. We didn't really benefit from the renewed orders in the fourth quarter, but that's not true now. We're starting to obviously, obviously moving from a compare standpoint. We'll lap that. So we're set up well with grain. We're set up well with potash. International intermodal as well, that's unique for us and our Gemini alignment. That is going extremely well for us. In fact, I just saw our friends and partners in Hapag-Lloyd made an announcement this week, where they're acquiring another asset.
So if that gets approved, and we expect that it will, that's going to be supportive to our Gemini model and our future demand in Canada, as well as in Mexico. So again, extremely pleased there. Automotive is another space we've continued to outpace the industry in spite of a down market. We've had a record two years, and we expected the same thing again in 2026. So a good spot there. Americold, that's something we talked about before, just came online. Now that's starting to grow, and that's controlled reefers, and that's shipping product to and from Mexico, which we have a lot of experience in Canada doing that. We've created a supply chain that's unique to the industry, that's making the border transparent. That will continue to grow for us. Land bridge, that's another space. Every crisis creates an opportunity.
The tariff tribulations is really with the USMCA and the uncertainty with trade rebalancing between the United States, Canada, Mexico, has created a very motivated Canada and Mexico to diversify. You probably read Minister LeBlanc is in Mexico now. He's been there all week. He took one of the largest trade contingents to Mexico that's, they've seen in decades. There's over 300 companies that are represented there. We have our team on the ground with those people selling our network, again, creating a unique outcome for us. If you put all that together, you put some price control, which we've demonstrated. We're taking price above and beyond what we had expected in discipline operations.
It puts a pretty unique outcome together where we're allowed, we're able to drive based on that single-digit RTM growth, double-digit earnings and operating margin improvement, and going straight to the bottom line, it's a pretty compelling, unique, value-creating opportunity in our industry, in spite of the macro. That's with the macro against us. That's not with the macro supporting us.
So that's, that's a great rundown, Keith. Just so I can delineate, because, and you kind of hit on it there at the end, but how should we think about how much, how much growth is coming from the macro versus how much of it is these idiosyncratic opportunities that you guys are driving and creating for yourselves?
you know, I'd, I would kind of say it this: if we're single digit RTM with the macro against us, when you normalize the macro, that gets us to that kind of CAGR that we talked about at our Investor Day. It's a high single-digit RTM growth, which is a stronger double-digit earnings growth.
Got it. That, that's exciting. I'm sure that's going to be, you know, uplifting to a lot of the folks in the room.
Well, we want it to come, so hurry up.
A little bit.
Prepared for it. We got the capacity and the people, and the locomotives and the talented team to be able to convert it.
One of the things that I want to understand: so we've seen a pattern of RTM growth leading carload growth. What kind of mix effect is that having? And just maybe explain what's driving that. Is it, you know, longer trains? Is it longer hauls?
Yeah. No, no, it's a great analogy. So the reality of it's, it's the vision being realized of this network. Extended length of haul, cars that are not being interchanged to railroads, perhaps, that in the past we didn't have a choice. We stopped at Kansas City. We either interchanged at Minneapolis-Saint Paul to some, Kansas City to some. Now we're getting extended length of haul, origin to destination. So the average length of haul is going up dramatically versus what it was pre-merger for both KCS as well as the legacy CP. So that's what you're seeing. And with the extended length of haul, that's going to have kind of a detrimental impact overall, if you look at just the raw cents per RTM number, because you're spreading it over a longer distance.
But the revenue per car obviously is going up. So in the end, it's the value of this network. You're seeing it in automotive, you're seeing it in plastics, you're seeing it in land bridge, you're seeing it in intermodal, you're seeing it in agricultural. So again, that will continue. But at the end of the day, when you have the capacity to handle it, and you do it in an efficient way and bring it to the bottom line, that's all positive for the investor, and it's positive for our outcome. So we're doing exactly what we said we'd do. So as long as you see the difference, understand, that's a good thing.
When you layer the macro back on top, and you start to see more of those carloads, not only do you have more carloads benefiting, you have more carloads benefiting from extended lengths of haul, which again, is very accretive to the bottom line.
Yes, absolutely. And you mentioned the network has been running very well recently. I think that's true actually for most of the North American rail network. And yet, if I look at yields, cents per RTM, has been kind of flattish. I understand there's obviously been the headwind from the Canadian fuel tax change, but talk about what the pricing opportunity looks like. Has anything been holding it back? Do you feel like you've been getting the pricing that you'd like to get, or is there still more room to come, especially if we get a little more of a supportive macro?
Yeah. So historically, we've said, you know, 3%-4% is kind of where the number is in good times, which we model our price on. But when we put our network together, we said we're going to price to the value of the network. So extended length of haul, if you've got customers assets, and they own over 50% of the cars, and you're turning those assets faster, they had to own fewer of them. You should be able to take additional price as long as you're reliable and consistent, and they can size their supply chains to that, and that's the value that we're extracting. So in our price, we've been north of 4% in spite of the macro, because of the value proposition. No other railroad has that value proposition.
We do, and we have, and we continue to price to that. So again, when you get back to a normal macro, you get some of this truck capacity that's, that's shrinking. You start to see the truck rates shore up. Some of the parts of the business that, in spite of the macro, have grown, which will grow more. The value proposition on intermodal, domestic intermodal, gets even more compelling. Our ability to take additional price becomes even more compelling. So some of those areas that I think have been diluted, or become more accretive as you get back to a normalized economy, which is going to benefit uniquely our network, especially with the product that we've got relative to domestic moves coming out of Chicago, going to Mexico. We've got another product that we're introducing called SMX. It's the Southeast Mexico Express.
Kind of go back to our Investor Day, I guess, two and half years ago. I think we announced the deal that day, a niche acquisition of a little piece of short line from Meridian, Mississippi, to Myrtlewood, Alabama. We're going to partner with the CSX. CSX takes it from Myrtlewood to Montgomery, and then that's kind of the highway to Atlanta, to the Southeast. That is coming to fruition. That railroad now will finish the end of this quarter. It's a Class I standard railroad. We're going to have most of it at 49 mi an hour. You've got transit times from Atlanta to Mexico. If you go to Monterrey, that's literally just over three days.
If you go deeper into Mexico, down by Mexico City, SLP or Interpuerto, where we're taking the 180, 181 train, you're four days. Again, that is truck competitive, and it's reliable. You set your clock to it. We replicate the same success. You get back to an environment where it's more supportive and truck rates go up, that borderless stays seamless, you're going to see additional growth in that space.
Is there a good way to think about the level of available capacity on CPKC's network right now? Like, how much if we do see that more supportive macro, if we see tightening in the trucking market, how much room is there for additional volume?
You should think about it in a world where, you know, Again, if you go back to what we said in our merger application, we said that we're going to do a high single-digit RTM CAGR. Obviously, the macro has not given us that. But what the macro hasn't given us, at the same time, we've been investing capital. We've continued to build out the network. So for three years, we've built out a network to create the capacity to be able to run the railway in a PSR way, the way we do. So that's latent capacity that's built, that's in the ground. So from capacity, we got a bridge, a second bridge, going into and out of Mexico. We've got locomotives.
We're literally, this year, in our second year of purchasing a second tranche of 100 locomotives that are coming online in 2026. So from a capacity standpoint, we are primed for the rebound. But again, we're going to be disciplined. We're going to hire ahead of the curve, just in time, the way we need to hire, make sure we're trained properly. But when it comes to rolling stock, when it comes to locomotives, when it comes to terminal capacity, this railroad is in very, very good shape, and we're able to grow at low incremental margins with no issues and no challenges on a go-forward basis for several years to come.
How should we think about what the incremental margins look like on new capacity or on new volume, that kind of-
I think that 60%-70% number.
Still in that.
Same place.
Yeah.
That's it.
Okay. Let's see, what do I want to ask you about? One of the things that's interesting to me, there have been a lot of challenges that you guys have faced, a lot of uncertainties. The Canadian economy has had its share of challenges. You've seen a lot of, you know, labor issues in Canada. Certainly, I know as part of the integration, you had the IT issue with the crossover, and yet CP continues to lead the industry in growth. If we remove some of the overhangs and think about a more supportive macro, one of the things that's interesting to me is we've seen kind of multiple compression among the rails.
Yeah.
And yet, CP has that potential or that growth potential that I think most people would recognize as superior to, to most peers. I asked you about this on the earnings call, but let, let me, kind of circle back to it, 'cause, you know, I'm curious to hear, a little bit more of an, you know, hear you elaborate on this. What's your level of confidence in CP leading the industry, in growth over the next, say, five to 10 years? What are the sources of that growth? And contextualize some of the challenges that you've had or some of the headwinds that maybe haven't been quite in your control, but, but how big those have been or how much of a headwind those have represented.
Yeah. So when it comes to growth, we built this network to grow. And again, we're in the early stages of building this thing out. So, you know, a lot of these solutions that we put in the marketplace that have allowed us to drive our growth, unique to the industry, really driven by synergies. You know, we said when we started this thing that we initially said we saw CAD 1 billion worth of synergies, of revenue synergies, not EBITDA synergies. Now we're at CAD 1.5 billion, and literally, if you get to the end of this year, we exited CAD 1.2 billion. In spite of the macro, at the end of 2025, we're going to layer another CAD 200 million, in spite of the macro on in 2026. We're in a pretty good spot. But again, it's in infancy stages.
So as we build this network out, we'll continue to see that uniquely enable, and then you layer on top of what we didn't know, and you learn things as you do this thing. Like this whole opportunity between Mexico and Canada, last year, in 2024, it was 2% of our revenue. The crisis created a lot of attention and motivation around it, and it grew to 3%. So right now, order of magnitude, it's under, just under CAD 500 million of Canadian revenue, that's new to the network. And again, as we go forward through USMCA, it impacted us, obviously. The uncertainty has impacted us. The pause that happened with automotive has impacted us. The tariffs on steel have impacted us.
But as you normalize those things and we get through these negotiations, yes, you're going to see rebalancing, but you're also going to see an ability to be more predictive and to rate and size your supply chains and for investment to reoccur. Because quite frankly, that's chilled some of the investment. As much as, you know, President Trump's changes in motivations are bringing manufacturing back to the U.S., the need for Mexico and Canada and the U.S. to do business has never been greater. The labor pool in Mexico, the scarcity of labor in the United States, bringing the supply chains closer together, de-risking your supply chain from overseas, all those things, those fundamentals that were true then, once you get through all this uncertainty, this network is kind of the backbone that allows those things to occur.
So it's been a headwind for us. I think it's created some uncertainty in the marketplace, and I, and I can go back to, you know, whether it was President AMLO before the administration change and kind of the risk that was introduced. We want to build passenger trains. Well, everybody got concerned. Are they going to affect CP's ability to grow, CPKC's ability to grow? Well, if you can engage and you work closely with the administration, we can uniquely complement each other. We can help them achieve their goals, and we can still protect our ability to grow. We're doing that. We navigated that. You get to the trade tribulations. How can this railroad grow in spite of all this uncertainties? Well, we've demonstrated that we can.
So again, you start to do those things, and you start to give investors confidence that this model works. This network is unique. Mergers or no mergers, we're a north-south network, uniquely creating three economies that depend upon each other today, and as you grow forward in trade, they're going to depend upon each other even more. So even when rebalancing occurs, this industrial logic makes sense. With this team, we're proving that when storms come, there's going to be choppy waters, and we're going to navigate them. We're not a team that's going to make excuses. It's our job to make solutions, and that's what we do. We take crises, and we turn them into opportunities. We've become market makers, and with our backbone and our network, we have the ability to do that.
Last year at this conference, we spoke about some of the opportunity to drive efficiency that could come about from deregulation.
Yes.
I think so far, some of the policies that we've seen have been more, more headwinds. I'm curious how you think about how much of that opportunity, that efficiency opportunity, has been realized from deregulation? How much is still on the come? What's your level of confidence that we could see some of that start to flow through in terms of the, the operating results?
Yeah, I think we've made some progress. It's taken a little bit more time than maybe any of us had wanted or anticipated, but we're starting to make the right moves. The autonomous track inspection that finally got passed through, we're able to start to look at how we justify and invest in expanding that technology across our networks. There's some unique things that we've done in Canada that we pioneered relative to cold wheel technology, train inspections, eliminating regulatory inspections, extending length of haul, that it's all about asset turns, improving safety, and improving efficiency. We've got an administration now that's entertaining those changes. We actually got a change through recently that we'll see really in this harvest benefit us, where we were having to stop trains and make wheel change outs at Laredo.
Now we're able to do that at IFG or having to do it in Kansas City. So if you look at the legacy network and all the trains that we send to Mexico, 50, we got one customer that sends over 50 trains a month. If you look at the whole book of business, it's almost 70 trains a month of ag product that are moving off the legacy KCS network going to Mexico. That's a lot of trade. That's a lot of cars. That's a lot of touches. If you can speed those assets up and do work on those cars, change those wheels out in a way that's more efficient than what's realized in the past, that's a big benefit. So again, we're kind of in the early stages of it.
There's other things that we'd like to do relative to inspections that are occurring in Laredo. We have to prove the concept. We got to get the empirical data to show that it's safer as well as more efficient. But we've got an FRA, and we've got an administration that's willing to listen. The last one wouldn't listen at all. So to me, that's monumental change in and of itself, and it gives us hope for the changes that are coming in the future. Once we give them the empirical data that says, not only does this make sense from a regulatory standpoint, it's the safest outcome that allows our U.S. rail network to be safer and to be more efficient and makes it more robust and strong.
What's the process for getting those changes in place? Is that you collect the data, you go to the FRA, say, hey, this is something we'd like to test out, or we, we've been exploring-
Yeah.
Can we get permission to do this or?
Yeah, that's, that's kind of it in a nutshell. You've got to put the case together. You've got to present the case to the FRA. They've got committees that look at, look at the safety aspect above all else, you know, and they issue. Typically, you start with a pilot. And once you prove the concept out, you can allow the pilot to grow. So it's, it's slow change, but it's change. And again, when there was no change, any change is encouraging, and this administration has allowed us to do that. It just doesn't happen overnight.
Wonderful. So you've reduced your CapEx target this year by 15%. We talked about the available capacity on the network. I think a lot of people like to hear that. Certainly, a lot of opportunity from kind of an incremental margin growth, the contribution that could make to operating income. How do you think about the sustainable level of free cash flow that could be generated by the business? And in terms of deploying that capital, I think it's noteworthy that you've pulled forward some of the buyback activity. So maybe you could discuss those two pieces, the free cash flow, the kind of CapEx thoughts around CapEx, and then thoughts around the buyback.
Yeah, Chris, I'll let you address,
Yeah. Thank you. So, you know, as Keith laid out, we've spent a lot on capital the last number of years, bringing the networks together. Spent a lot on, you know, twinning the bridge at Laredo, adding additional sidings, adding CTC through the network. So the network is in a great place from a capacity perspective. We're shifting our capital priorities a little bit more now towards the rolling stock. We purchased 100 new Tier 4 locomotives last year. We're purchasing another 100 this year, but we've really pre-invested in the network. We're in a position to bring capital down to more of that CAD 2.6 billion-CAD 2.7 billion level, and we think that's really sustainable for the next couple of years at least. So that's creating a pretty compelling free cash flow conversion story.
We don't believe in hoarding cash on the balance sheet. We do believe in returning it to shareholders. So we've actually upsized our buyback this year. We've announced a plan to buy back 5% of the stock. You can typically expect us to address the dividend annually as well. So the shareholder return strategy is something that I think is exciting for investors.
So you have the target out there for double-digit core adjusted EPS growth through 2028. Maybe speak to your level of confidence in that. What could cause you to, I mean, I guess, outperform whatever. You know, obviously, there's a lot of room between double digits, you know, anything between 10 and 99. But what kind of to come in on the stronger end of that, what would that look like, you know, to the extent we come in a little bit softer, you know, is that just a function of the macro not being quite as supportive? How do you think about the ability to hit that target?
Yeah, I, I think the simplest way to look at it is the macro. That's the difference. If we just get a normalized macro, you know, you get GDP sustainable, that's giving you, you know, 3%, 2%-3% a year with this network and this team, and what we can sell to connecting these three nations, later this year, then I think you get to a place where you're gonna get strong, strong double-digit growth.
Got it. Excellent.
Yeah, not 99, obviously, but-
Just shy of 99.
Yeah. Definitely in line with what we guided to when we came together two and a half years ago.
Wonderful. So why don't we shift focus and talk about rail M&A? I know that's.
Can't believe you took so long.
Yeah. Well, you know, got to talk about the core operations at some point. Talk about the upcoming STB fight, if you want to call it that, or the merger debate.
Yeah.
How is CP positioned? How are you thinking about preparing yourself and, and kind of the argument that you're gonna be laying out as, as this kind of is obviously gonna play out in a very public way over the course of the year?
Well, probably no surprise to you. We've, we've got a lot of experience dealing with the regulator, dealing with these specific leaders that are in the regulatory body. Got a lot of muscle memory, spent a lot of time reading, deciphering, and understanding what the regulations require. So that has consumed a meaningful amount of my time, I think rightfully so. And I believe that I don't say fight, a debate, a very spirited debate about what the facts are, the good facts and the bad facts, the positives, the negatives, and that's what these rules require. But as far as CPKC is standalone concerned, you know, at the end of the day, we're the least impacted, and don't take me in my word, take me at, at UP's initial filing.
You know, $100 million, if you look at it, of at-risk revenue. I say that if, and that's still an if, it's not a fait accompli, you know, I'm not drinking the merger Kool-Aid, that this thing's going to get approved. It may or it may not. I'm not going to be naive to say that it won't, but I'm not going to sit here and say I'm just going to assume that it will. Because the facts, I believe, especially in light of the last ruling, when their application was ruled incomplete, it says that, you know what? This isn't a layup. We're here, we're going to understand. We're going to assess the decision based on all the facts. All the facts need to be developed, heard, and understood.
So all that being said, if it gets approved, it says it will come with concessions to meet the standard of public interest, to meet the standard of enhanced competition. And if it comes with concessions, if you believe anything about us to be true, know that we've done our homework, and there's a whole lot more good that comes out of that than what's at risk from a revenue standpoint and from an opportunity standpoint. And now, that being said, I do not believe personally, and I'm speaking from 35 years of experience, and again, Jim and I, we see this differently. He's been railroading a long time. He's a good railroader. But I think perspective matters.
In those 35 years, my 35 years, I spent some time in Canada, obviously, the last two decades, but I spent a lot of time in the U.S., right in the middle of the industry consolidation that led to those rules. I lived through the UP-SP combination. I lived through BNSF as a young operating officer. In history, in all honesty, it was very painful. Those integrations were painful. The SP-UP deal melted the industry down 2x , and that's at the size they are today. So keep that in perspective. You go east, you look at the Conrail carve-up, the CSX and the NS transaction again, and a lot of the decision makers and people that were directly impacted, that are in key positions today, just like me, they lived through it. They're still working in this industry.
Lion's share of those people know how painful those integrations were. So if you get to a place where those rules were enacted to stop mergers before they were written and created, you could argue to encourage. There was way too much capacity. You had railroads that weren't making cost to capital. We had a need to get to healthy, financially sustainable rail networks, and that's what the previous merger rules allowed. And the barrier to achieving a yes vote was different, dramatically different. 2001, those rules were not only written to stop mergers, but to create an environment that the hurdle rate is huge relative to meeting that public interest test. So keeping all that into play, thinking about what's still yet to be navigated to achieve, that's why I say this is not a fait accompli.
The benefits outweigh the unintended consequences, and I can make the case on market power. You're talking about, you know, unlike us, and some people would say, "Keith, you're a hypocrite. You're a product of consolidation." Say, "I'm not a hypocrite. I understand the facts." What we did complemented and created competition without tilting the scales of market power to the disadvantage of any particular customer. There's not one single customer that lost an option with us. It truly was end to end. There wasn't any overlap that you've got to explain. There wasn't any need to go out and introduce some kind of pricing mechanism that protects competition for a prescribed shelf life. So again, uniquely different transaction for us, and what was true about us is not true about this combination.
You're talking about something that creates, if it's approved, a Goliath that is going to have exponential market power. And I think once you reveal all the facts and look at some of those modelings that are going to have to come out with a renewed application, and as we go out and stress test what they say to be true, you're going to see some would argue, monopolies in some key segment lanes. That's going to concern the regulator. You get to a place where historically, and again, I'm not talking bad about Jim, just historically, UP, I don't think it's a surprise if you get in our industry, you talk to a customer, you talk to another railroader, they've never been a railroad that's been bashful about using their size. They've, they have imposed their will in a lot of ways.
It's almost woven into their DNA. Jim's aspirations aren't making that any less true, and their size would not make them any less likely to do that. This regulatory body knows that. There's been multiple cases that are very public about disputes where previous concessions from previous consolidations they participated in haven't been honored, and they have had to go to the STB to get them to rule. We have one ourselves. And/or if you go back two years ago, think about all the embargoes where I would argue, and I think the regulator wouldn't disagree with me, they weren't used, they were abused to regulate traffic on the UP Railroad. So you can't get rid of those bad facts.
Jim wasn't there in those moments, but still, he takes and represents everything that UP represents, and in the risk factor, that's huge. Then the other piece is the operational piece. Jim's a good railroader, good operating guy. I like to think I'm a pretty competent operating guy, too. But you create something that big that potentially, if you don't integrate it right, and even if you do, when Mother Nature rings the bell like she does, like she did in 2014, I talked about this in Chicago. The railroads were melted down. The airline industry was melted down. When it's 40 below zero for an extended period of time, and you're in the middle of Chicago, and the snow falls, you have a problem.
And when you've got a user of those shared assets in the BRC, in the harbor, you know, that spaghetti bowl of interconnectivity, where 25% of every shipment in America has to go through in Chicago, and you have someone that controls almost half of that, they fail. They will uniquely be, if it's approved, the single largest user of the Belt Railroad. They're gonna take some cars out, but they're still the giant. If they stub their toe, I don't care how good Jim is or how good I might be, if I were running that network, I'm not bigger than God and bigger than Mother Nature, it's gonna bring this nation to its knees. So to create something like that, I'm not saying it won't get approved, but I'm saying it's ill-advised, and it will only happen when all those issues are carefully weighed out.
Those regulations, if you really read them, it's not just public interest, it's not just enhanced competition, it's also protect the operational viability of our U.S. rail network overall, because it's an interconnected system, and they were written with that service assurance portion of that to recognize and respect those risks that are inherent when you put networks together, especially a network that would be that big. So to me, to diminish or minimize the operational complexity, it's not as simple as just, you know what? If we start to have problems, we'll take a pause. Once that baby's born, it, it's, it's gonna have to be managed and dealt with, and, and if they get it wrong, it's not just isolated to their network.
It's so big, it affects the entire nation, and I guarantee that's not gonna fall on deaf ears when it comes to the regulatory body.
You're the only rail executive in the last 25 years to oversee a large rail merger. Maybe you could talk about the operational complexity, the points of failure or the risks of failure?
Yeah
That you see. Just, like, help us understand that, because right now, exactly, it's one thing to have the idea, to talk about the opportunity that it creates. When you actually have to go out and, and integrate it, it's gonna be very difficult to undo if, if there are challenges. Help us understand what those challenges look like and how it might be different or more complex than what CPKC did.
Yeah, I think the scale is the X factor, that's uniquely different than what we did. Again, Chicago is a great example. The bigger it gets, the more complicated it gets, and the more the pain if you get it wrong. Our network, we had the two smallest rail networks coming together that, again, they butted hand in glove. We share the same terminal. We have for eight decades. Our switchmen switched on the same lead, so literally, we had new systems that created complexity, which history will show we didn't completely navigate that as well as we should have navigated that. But outside of that, the complexity pales in comparison to what we're talking about with what UP is proposing and NS is proposing. But pivot to the complexity of the systems themselves.
You know, when Jim's talked about Net Control and their cut over at UP, and again, I applaud them. They've done a great job in cutting over their own system. But cutting over your own system, replacing your own system with your system you design, versus marrying another company and trying to integrate and cut over a system you uniquely do not know, there's complexities that are involved that, with the best of planning, it's impossible to get it all right, and that's what caught us, in all honesty. You know, a lot of our systems, we don't talk about the ones, w e cut over SAP, we cut over mechanical systems, we cut over locomotive systems. 85% of what we cut over when we cut over a day in, this past year, went perfectly.
The operating system, though, that one piece, because of the things we didn't really know about the MCS system, which KCS had, the things that were going on in the background, that a lot of the historical nods that created the workarounds in that system no longer work for the company. Those complexities, and he's a smart guy, but I would warn him, don't underestimate the complexity of the operational system cut over. Net Control may be doing great on UP, but you're not, you're not just cutting Net Control over, you're replacing a system that's been completely unique and different, that you'll learn a lot about as you prepare. But can you fully prepare for that cut over? I would suggest no. So again, don't over prepare, Jim.
Work hard, but it's a monumental task that's not to be taken lightly, and that is, to me, where the most exposure is represented from systems cut over. It's that operational system cut over from the NS to the UP system.
I would imagine there might be questions in the audience. If anyone does have one, feel free to raise their hand. But let me ask, you know, you had mentioned concessions. I'm curious, what type of concessions would CP be looking for, to the extent you could give us some color on that?
Well, when they finally get their application submitted, we've got our list that's pretty robust. You'll get a lot more color on this, but at a high level, think about the markets where we overlap. Think about St. Louis, think about even Kansas City, and we're talking about access, whether it's through reciprocal switches or, in some cases, perhaps direct access, where we have the infrastructure via to support direct access. You think about Houston. Houston is the area today that we don't have an ability to connect northbound into or out of with the Belt Railroad in Houston.
If we can solve for that, if we can solve for more access in that whole Houston market and some of that, Chemical Alley, I think that's an area of opportunity for us, and we'll make a case, I think, a very compelling case, that if the STB is going to approve this transaction, part of what we ask for will help them solve for enhancing competition in those areas. So those would be key areas that I'd look at. The other area to look at is protecting our competitive niche and access across that Meridian Speedway. That's an area that we're going to have elbows up to protect our ability to compete and realize this new partnership with the CSX.
I can imagine that other parties will probably look at that agreement standalone as it is in that world, in a pro forma world, if it gets approved, and look at some of those exclusivity arrangements that back in 2006 were agreed to, and the STB had no qualms with, now might be viewed as anti-competitive. When you only have, you know, one option is eliminated relative to one of those railroads that may want to compete in the southeast markets.
Hi. Yeah, thanks so much for taking the question. Two, two parts, if I may. Just wanted to see where you think you stand in terms of inning for your MMX 180, 181, and your Americold in terms of volume to reach kind of a steady state, normalized growth. Which inning are we in?
Yeah, I would say on MMX 180, 181, I'd say we might be in the fifth inning. Yeah, it's, it's still... We haven't had a very supportive truck market, so as the rates go up, you're going to see more demand come to the network. Americold is still new. We ramped up pretty quickly, started in August, 200 loads a week. By the middle of this year, I think we're going to be at 600. And what, again, you don't know what you don't know. So this whole product was built on cold storage. The cross-dock facility that Americold has built in our terminal at IFG is state-of-the-art. There's a ton of capacity in. So you've got cold storage growth that's going to occur uniquely enabled. Now, you start to learn about what else is out in the marketplace.
Well, think about dog food. You know how much dog food that's being produced in America that's being trucked to Mexico? It's a lot. There's thousands of loads of dog food. Didn't think anything about it. Now, you've got to work with the regulator. You've got to get the right infrastructure, set up with the Mexican government to be able to make that border transparent. Well, we've proven what can be done working with the regulatory body on the U.S. side, as well as on the Mexico side, to enable these proteins to go south. Same story, whether it's dog food, whether it's cotton, whether it's textiles. There's a lot of empty air that goes south in intermodal containers, or that's going in trucks south into Mexico that's right for us to be able to convert.
And that facility in Kansas City will be a key piece of being able to do that. So again, there's a lot of innings of growth and opportunity still to be realized, working with Americold and working on 180, 181. Same story with Schneider. You know, Schneider is a great partner. We've just tapped the reliability spectrum when it comes to moving auto parts. You know, we're talking about auto parts that are moving truck that will shut assembly line down. We've created truck-like reliability. We've gone through storms. We're proving the concept of the product. So as the parts contracts come up for renewal, to be able to go in and say, "this is not what we do, this is what we've done," and you're partnering with a, a partner like Schneider that has the reliability to match up what you're saying with the bookends.
Again, it's a compelling value creation opportunity for 180, 181. The train now, let's say 6,000, 7,000 feet, you know, I've got a 10,000-ft train I want to fill up. It's going to be compelling economics when we do it. It's a compelling service offering, and we'll continue to grow into.
Wonderful. Thank you. The second part is, can you comment on UP's committed gateway pricing and also their water share opportunities along the Mississippi?
Yeah, the water share piece, you know, that's been an aspirational project for a lot of railroads, and some of the industrial logic, I would say, makes sense. I just think that, their growth targets are very aspirational. To me, to achieve them, you're assuming that a trucking industry is just going to roll over. They're not. I think we've, we've learned that that's a different beast to compete against. So they're going to be competing against the truck, a very robust interstate system. Capital is going to have to be spent not just by UP, but also by the IMCs. That's still to be proven. So, you know, will they or won't they realize those aspirational numbers? I say that they're aspirational. I'd say it's gonna be a long, long, long, long putt.
Not an easy putt, as maybe has been suggested. What was the other question?
Committed gateway pricing.
I think that's, I think it's much to do about nothing, in all honesty. I, you know, it's. Again, it's a concept that I think is trying to prove the test of public interest and benefit, enhance competition, but if it's true, then why is it temporary? If it's necessary in the first place, then to make enhanced competition, then why does it have a shelf life? Why does it exclude the Canadian railroads? Just because we're headquartered in Canada doesn't mean that we don't have a significant piece of our business in the United States. We originate loads that are west of the Mississippi in our U.S. network, and they terminate east of the Mississippi. Mr. Vena knows that, UP knows that, and the regulator knows that.
So to suggest that, that we shouldn't be included, if it's really necessary, I think, again, just speaks to how unnecessary and how unimpactful that it truly is. So in the end, I don't think it's, I don't think it's going to come close to meeting the standard the STB will require.
So, Keith, we're almost at time, but I want to ask one more question. You've talked about the STB shouldn't be looking at the UP-NS proposal in a vacuum. You've talked about the follow-on consequences that might ensue, how it might put pressure on other railroads, that it could trigger a further wave of consolidation. Do you expect that? I guess, say more on that. What are the pressures that it would put on other railroads? What do you think they might be forced to do? Do you expect further consolidation if UP-NS goes through?
Yeah.
Specifically, you know, I'm curious, like, does it serve the public interest? I know creating this Goliath of UP-NS is one thing, if all the other railroads stay the same, but if we see further consolidation, does that change the dynamics of that? Does it serve the public interest if we just have two big North American railroads?
Yeah, I would say this, if the UP-NS deal gets approved, I think additional consolidation is inevitable to protect the public interest, in all honesty. Scale and size matters when it comes to competition. Market power matters when it comes to competition. Any one railroad drawing all the capital and all the investment, when you've got an entire U.S. rail network to maintain, from a health and a capacity standpoint, matters. So again, I think it will definitely create an environment where it will be necessary for additional consolidation. Now, I'm not speaking out of both sides of my mouth. I do not believe we need consolidation. I do not want consolidation. But if it happens, then I think you're going to have additional consolidation that is necessary and that is inevitable. And how it all shakes out, I'm not certain.
You know, you can make a case, a lot of industrial cases for a lot of different scenarios, and I'll just say this: whatever happens, if it's approved, this railroad's in a good position. We've got, I believe, and I'm, yes, I'm biased, I think the strongest team in the business, and I think we have the strongest network, most relevant network in the business, that uniquely and only and forever will be the only one that connects all three nations. And we are, we're North/South. I said this years ago when I put this thing together. We put this together. We can uniquely compete and partner with any railroad. And what's true when there's six of us is true if there's only three of us or two of us.
We've got a pretty compelling network that can complement and enhance competition, and that does not represent the scale and quantum of complexity that a UP-NS combination does. So we're going to be in a good position regardless.
Well, it's certainly going to be an interesting year ahead of us, and we'll see how it all plays out.
Yes.
It sounds like you guys are doing all the right things.
No dull moments at the year.
Yeah, indeed. Absolutely.
Thank you.
Keith, Chris, thank you.
Thank you.