Good afternoon. My name is Emma, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Q1 2022 CSX Corporation Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, again, press the star one. Thank you. Matthew Korn, CSX, Head of Investor Relations, you may begin your conference.
Thank you, Emma. Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome. Joining me on today's call are Jim Foote, President and Chief Executive Officer, Kevin Boone, Executive Vice President, Sales and Marketing, Jamie Boychuk, Executive Vice President of Operations, and Sean Pelkey, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Now, in our presentation, you will find our forward-looking disclosure on slide two, followed by our non-GAAP disclosure on slide three. With that, it's my pleasure to introduce our President and Chief Executive Officer, Jim Foote.
Great. Thank you, Matthew, and thank you to everyone for again joining us on our call today. I'll begin by expressing my thanks to all of CSX employees who continue to put in tremendous efforts to serve our customers effectively and above all, safely. I'd also like to welcome today Steve Fortune, who's with us in the room here today in Jacksonville. Steve serves in a newly created role of Executive Vice President and Chief Digital and Technology Officer, and will focus on harnessing transformative technologies to further growth and enable continued efficiency across the business. His experience leading technology organizations at a global industrial company will be very helpful as we continue to transform CSX. Now moving to the quarter. We are pleased with our results this quarter, though we're not yet satisfied with our service performance.
The effects of COVID and severe weather across much of our network clearly led to a tough start to the year. As we moved into March, operating conditions began to gradually improve, and we do see indications that this momentum is continuing. For over a year, we have communicated to you that the key to rebuilding our service to pre-pandemic levels is to hire more trained and engine service employees. I am pleased to say that our efforts there are progressing well, and our active T&E count has moved steadily higher this year. The people and resources that we are putting in place today will allow us to provide reliable, efficient service to an expanding number of customers. The business environment remains very favorable for CSX, despite new uncertainties across global supply chains.
We are dedicated to do our part to help our customers here in North America meet increasing demand as business and consumers around the world look for reliable sources of the products that we transport. Meanwhile, domestic activity remains robust, and our business development and marketing groups are working hard to convert new opportunities. As higher energy prices and increasing scrutiny on greenhouse gas emissions highlight rail's efficiency advantages over trucks, we're in a great position. If we all do our jobs, hold to our principles, and deliver the service levels that we know we can achieve, this company has great potential for many years ahead. Lastly, I'd like to note that we are pleased that the Surface Transportation Board approved our acquisition of Pan Am Railways, which clears the way for the transaction to close this June.
All of us are excited about the opportunities that will come as we design new service solutions for shippers and receivers in New England. Now let's turn to slide four. Turning to the presentation, which highlights our key financial results, we moved nearly 1.5 million carloads in the first quarter and generated over $3.4 billion in revenue. Operating income increased by 16% to $1.28 billion. The operating ratio increased by 150 basis points to 62.4. Remember, this rate includes approximately 250 basis points of impact from Quality Carriers and the impact of higher fuel prices. And earnings per share increased 26% to $0.39 a share. I'll now turn it over to Kevin, Jamie, and Sean for details.
Thank you, Jim. Turning to slide five. First quarter revenue increased 21% year-over-year, with growth across all major lines of business. Merchandise revenue increased 6% on 2% lower volume as strong pricing gains and higher fuel surcharge revenue more than offset the volume decline. Current demand remains strong across most merchandise markets, with shippers prioritizing environmental benefits of rail and pursuing lower cost options to offset inflation.
The ongoing semiconductor shortage impacted automotive volumes through the quarter. However, we did see sequential improvement ex autos, as consumer demand remains strong with dealer inventory levels low. Our core chemicals franchise saw strong demand that more than offset continued challenges in energy-related chemical markets. As we continue to add resources across the network, we expect to capture additional opportunities. Intermodal revenue increased 13% on 1% lower volumes as truck conversions drove domestic growth, offsetting declines in the international market that continues to be impacted by supply-side constraints. Intermodal demand remains strong, but continues to be challenged by takeaway capacity and equipment shortages, including chassis. Coal revenue increased 39% on 10% lower volume. Export coal's revenue increase was driven by higher benchmark prices, partially offset by lower domestic and international thermal coal shipments.
First quarter coal volumes were impacted by several factors. Demand across all of our coal markets remains strong, and we expect as some of these headwinds subside and additional network capacity is added. Other revenue increased primarily due to higher intermodal storage and equipment usage, but was partially offset by lower payments from customers that did not meet volume commitments, which have been replaced by broader global supply chain uncertainty in the wake of the crisis in Ukraine. As Jim mentioned, we are committed to helping our customers in North America meet the increasing demand for their products from consumers around the world. We are working closely with our customers to understand the potential shifts in the global supply chain. In many of our markets, demand continues to outstrip supply as resources are added across the supply chain.
Now turning to slide six. I would like to provide more detail on CSX's business development last quarter. CSX has an experienced team of business development professionals to help existing and prospective customers identify, design, and build facilities across the network. Economic developers to encourage more business to locate on CSX and our short-line partners. These efforts continue to pay off. In 2021, over 90 new facilities and expansion projects were placed into service across over $3 billion of customer investment. Additionally, there are over 500 projects currently in an industrial pipeline, and we provide them with efficient and reliable rail service that will enable them to grow their business for years while creating significant long-term value for CSX shareholders.
The electric vehicle subsidiary of the large Asian conglomerate, Vingroup, electric vehicle assembly plant and battery manufacturing facility served exclusively by CSX. Proud to be part of North Carolina's first car plant and the largest economic. This announcement is an excellent example of the kind of customer solutions that the team can deliver as sales and marketing is working diligently to direct even more customers to CSX through our Select Site program. CSX Select Sites feature nearly 10,000 acres of premium certified rail-served sites to full-scale industrial development and expansion. We are working to add even more sites to this program in 2022. I will now pass it on to Jamie to discuss our operations.
Thanks, Kevin. The safety of our operations will always be our first priority. Our communities in which we live and operate drives us to make sure that we maintain the demanding standards. The results that you see on slide over the first quarter, we saw sequential and year-over-year improvements in the number of injuries train accidents, which brought their frequency rates to a near record low levels for the first quarter. We're happy to see this improvement. We continue to push forward with the initiatives that we described to you last quarter, actively coaching safety awareness among our employees, encouraging best practice sharing across teams, and expanding our application of technology. We put a very strong emphasis on our efforts with our new hires to ensure that they respect and demonstrate the principles that make CSX an industry safety leader. Moving on to staffing levels.
This is a critical point because our network's capacity and fluidity will improve when we have enough trained conductors and engineers. When we have these resources, it lifts our service performance and ensuring that we're ready to meet the substantial demand growth we anticipate in the years ahead. This positive train and engine employee early trends that reflect the training teams. We've made great progress here, and importantly, we're set up to build on the momentum we've created. First, you can see the strong ramp-up in the number of TE&E employees we have in our training program. We averaged over 500 daily employees in training over the first quarter, which is over 5 times where we were a year ago. We expect to keep our training classes full to make sure that our pipeline remains healthy.
Second, we've successfully increased our run rate of conductors who are completing their training and marking up into the active TE&E population. We now have roughly 100 employees marking up each month who are ready to haul freight, generate revenue, and we expect this pace to continue. In the last chart, you can see the payoff. We're turning the corner, and we're now adding to our active TE&E count month-over-month. We've said it again and again. Our aim is to grow this railroad. For that, we need to bring good people in, train them the right way, and deliver on service. It takes time, but this is exactly what we're doing. Now let's turn to slide seven, which gives us a picture on where our operations stand today. This quarter started off with several key challenges. The Omicron wave was hitting our employees.
We had the incident at our Curtis Bay facility, and the East Coast suffered under severe weather there in early February. For the full quarter, our key metrics of trip plan compliance, terminal dwell, and velocity were generally flat to slightly worse on a sequential basis. Those metrics are starting to move in the right direction. It's clearly too quick to call the bottom with certainty, but with the success of our hiring initiatives and a continued drive for discipline and consistency in the field, we see reasons to be optimistic. Consistent with the last quarter, we have made the tactical decision to keep additional locomotives active in the near term to help with network balance while we remain short of employees in certain regions.
As we successfully promote our new conductors, we'll be focused on improving our asset utilization and driving efficiency as the additional crew resources facilitate higher volumes and improve service and reliability. As always, the key will be strong execution, and I'm excited at the level of higher engagement and enthusiasm that our operating team is bringing to this challenge. I'm looking forward to showing what we can do over this next quarter, the rest of the year, and the years to come. I will now hand it over to Sean to review the financial results.
Thank you, Jamie, and good afternoon. Gains, with operating income up 6%. Interest expense and other income were a combined $11 million favorable, and the effective tax rate for the quarter was 23.9%. Earnings per share of $0.39 reflects growth in core earnings as well as the impact of our ongoing share repurchase program. Turning to the next slide, total costs increased $419 million or 24% in the quarter, but were in line with our expectations outside of the spike in fuel price. The acquisition of Quality Carriers represented approximately $215 million of expense. Higher fuel prices were also a significant factor, up about $110 million versus last year.
All other expenses increased approximately $95 million, driven by inflation as well as ongoing costs related to supply chain congestion. Labor and fringe expense increased $72 million or 12% in the quarter. We invested $10 million more to onboard new train and engine employees, and we expect similar training costs next quarter as we continue to convert our strong new hire pipeline. Quality Carriers drove about $35 million in additional labor expense. Incentive compensation increased $6 million, while inflation and other impacts drove just over $20 million of higher costs. Purchase services and other expense increased $203 million or 43% in the quarter. Quality Carriers represented approximately $140 million of PS&O expense. Costs incurred to maintain terminal and network fluidity added roughly $45 million of expense in the quarter, similar to last quarter's impact.
These costs are likely to persist into the second quarter, and we expect to see improvement in the back half of the year, corresponding to labor and supply chain normalization. Additionally, a legacy environmental reserve adjustment drove $17 million of higher expense in the quarter. Depreciation and amortization was up $15 million or 4% on a higher asset base that also includes the Quality impact. Finally, fuel expense increased $141 million or 74%, reflecting a steep increase in highway diesel fuel prices, as well as the addition of non-locomotive fuel used for trucking. The rapid rise in fuel prices created approximately $45 million of fuel lag in the quarter. And lastly, the company recognized $27 million of real estate gains in the quarter, including $20 million related to the Virginia transaction.
As a reminder, we expect to recognize a $120 million Virginia gain in the second quarter and receive the final $125 million cash payment in the fourth quarter. Now, turning to cash flow on slide 12. Free cash flow before dividends increased on higher earnings to $976 million. Our highest priority use of cash is investing for the long-term reliability and growth of our railroad. After fully funding these capital projects, first quarter shareholder returns exceeded $1.2 billion, including approximately $1 billion in buybacks and over $200 million in dividends. Looking forward, we will remain balanced and opportunistic in our buyback approach as we continue to return excess cash to our shareholders. Finally, we are excited to close the Pan Am deal on June 1.
Pan Am will contribute about 1 point of annualized revenue, primarily within merchandise. Due to transaction and integration costs, Pan Am will have a negligible impact on earnings this year, and the capital we expect to invest to upgrade the Pan Am network is already contemplated in our guidance. We look forward to working with Pan Am and its customers to drive continued growth through our integrated rail network. With that, let me turn it back to Jim for his closing remarks.
Okay, let's conclude with our outlook for the year as shown on slide 13. We continue to benefit from strong markets and ample customer demand, and we are adding the employees we need so that our network can capture more of the business opportunities that are right in front of us. At the same time, we are of course keeping a close eye on inflation, interest rates, and the Fed. With support from higher coal prices and a supportive market environment, we feel comfortable projecting double-digit growth for both revenue and operating income for the full year. In the near term, we expect to continue to benefit from elevated export coal prices and higher fuel surcharge revenues. Full year CapEx is planned at approximately $2 billion, which is also unchanged.
We have made progress since the beginning of the year, and we still have a lot of work to do. But we are committed to supporting our customers by providing them with reliable, efficient, cost-effective rail solutions for their changing years of profitable growth. Thanks, and I'll turn it back to Matthew.
Thank you, Jim. Now, in the interest of time, I'd ask that everyone please limit yourselves to just one question. With that, Emma, we will now be happy to take questions.
Thank you. At this time, I would like to remind everyone, in order to ask a question, press star and then the number one on your telephone keypad. Your first question today comes from the line of Jon Chappell with Evercore. Your line is now open.
Thank you. Good afternoon, everyone. Jamie, you spent a fair amount of time talking about the important labor aspects and your optimism about what that'll mean for service. Is it just a function of getting the people trained and in the right spots? Or are there any other challenges that you're seeing as it relates to service reliability? These are things that you can control yourselves or things outside of your control, like customers turning over equipment more quickly. How do you think that all of that translates into the important service metrics like velocity, dwell, and cars online in the next couple of quarters?
Well, good evening or good afternoon, Jon. For us, it's purely comes down to hiring numbers and getting more trainee folks where we need them. Kevin and I have been working really close with our customers to do everything we can to support those needs of our customers. Our customers are working with us in different areas with different solutions as we look at how we can turn cars quicker, you know, whether it comes down to block loading by destination and other items that we've been working on for years and continuing to work with our customers that way, so we don't have to handle cars as much.
Definitely, when we are looking at that pure number with respect to our trainees out there, we talked about having over 500 trainees out there right now. We've qualified up to 400 already this year, since the start of the year. We've come a long way in that area, and we continue to pull whatever levers we can with respect to the design. If there's cars we can move in different corridors that make more sense where our crew base has gotten healthier, we're doing that. But really, as we continue to push forward here, the common theme that we know will get our railroad back to where we need to is just continuing to train conductors.
Got it. Thanks, Jamie.
Your next question comes from the line of Brandon Oglenski with Barclays. Your line is now open.
Hey. Good afternoon, and thank you for taking my question. I guess, you know, if we go back to last quarter, you guys were, I think the only guidance you provided was like volume above GDP. But now it seems you have some confidence to guide to double-digit op income and revenue growth. Can you just talk to, you know, maybe the increased confidence as you've gone through the year here and what's driving that guidance now?
Yeah. Brandon, look, there's a lot of moving parts. Obviously we want to get confidence in, you know, the hiring trajectory, and Jamie spoke to that. We
We're seeing good momentum as we get into April, and we'll move through the rest of the quarter. Obviously some other factors have occurred. You've seen the export coal market remain really strong here and supportive, and we had assumed probably that market would tail off a little bit sooner than what is expected now. Also, fuel surcharge has been a bigger factor going forward as well as oil prices have obviously moved up dramatically here with the Ukraine crisis going on. A number of factors, we still see strong demand from all of our markets, and we have confidence that we're gonna begin to capture more and more of that as fluidity picks up through the network.
Thank you.
With Stephens. Your line is now open.
Thanks. I guess to start with the follow-up on that last question, does the guidance still assume that volumes outpace GDP this year? Then is there any color you can give on the OR excluding the Virginia real estate sale that's embedded in that assumption for double digit operating income growth?
Yeah, I'll cover the first one. Look, that's been our target. We wanna outgrow the economy. There's a lot of moving parts. As you know, the auto business, automotive business is gonna be a big factor as we get in the second half, and that business, production needs to recover there to really hit those GDP plus targets. So that's one market to look at. Coal, as well, we see strong demand there, but we'll be watching that going forward. Then the intermodal market, particularly on the domestic side, we're assuming chassis and other drayage capacity comes back into the market, and that will drive some incremental growth for us as well.
So there's a few moving parts, but that's always our target, and that's why we came out at the beginning of the year as we expect to exceed GDP volume growth, but realizing that there's a number of new moving parts.
And Justin, this is Sean. Just to add on, as we've always said, we expect to be very strong and very healthy, and that'll be supportive in terms of the OR for the year. But there are some things to keep in mind that will be offsets. Obviously, the Quality impact, which we'll have the full impact of it in the first half of the year, given that the acquisition occurred in Q3 of last year. Higher fuel prices are essentially neutral to op income, but they do have a negative impact on the operating ratio as well. And then, you know, obviously intermodal storage as things normalize, that will have an impact on the OR, particularly in the second half of the year, given that the storage revenues were quite elevated in the second half of last year.
Okay. I'll leave it there. I appreciate the time.
Your next question comes from the line of Chris Wetherbee with Citigroup. Your line is now open.
Hey, great. Thanks, and good afternoon. I guess I wanted to come back a little bit to the sort of bigger picture, you know, freight demand, comments that you made earlier in the call, Jim. Just maybe if you could talk a little bit about what you are seeing either on the consumer or the industrial side. We can kind of see what's happening on the commodity side, but maybe those two end markets. And then maybe just sort of, you know, weave that into the market share potential opportunity. Congestion has probably kept some business off the rail and on other modes of transportation. How does that factor in? So I guess generally speaking, do you see a slowdown in consumer-driven freight, and is there enough upside potential in industrial commodity to offset that?
Well, I think we've been going through since really the middle of 2018, the divergence between the consumer economy and the industrial economy, whether it was driven by going back to the tariff issues that began to create concern amongst the industrial producers. And at the same time, you had a consumer economy that was going gangbusters. And that kind of carried forward into the pandemic years. Let's call it, you know, the plague years, especially, and there are still lingering effects from that in the, you know, look at the automotive sector. The consumer economy went nuts. Now I think you're starting to see those two divergent economies come back more in line, and industrial demand is very good.
And you know, I think it's clear in our comments, we have not met the demand. As the railroad on the industrial side and the bulk side of the business, I think we've done an amazing job in handling the consumer side of the business. Going forward, we see a lot of opportunity, and there could be changes. Well, there are obviously gonna be changes in various supply chains, whether it's import export grain, whether it's continued demand for U.S. coal, steel, plastics, chemicals, you name it.
We see all of these, assuming that, you know, everything in the world stays relatively sane, where we are today. I think I wanna call this sanity a great environment for us to excel. The only reason we haven't achieved it in the last, you know, nine months ago, I said the numbers that we're talking about today in terms of where we would be with the hiring. That's where we thought we'd be nine months ago. The extremely tight labor market and the somewhat higher attrition rates that we went through have held us back. We figured it out. We've done everything we can possibly do to take advantage of the situation.
And I think the economy on both, especially so on the industrial side of the economy, where traditionally railroads have excelled, looks favorable, as we look forward.
Okay. That's helpful. Appreciate it. Thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Tom Wadewitz with UBS. Your line is now open.
Hi. Thanks. This is Mike Triano on for Tom. You've made really good progress on adding the T&E employees. Do you have an idea of which point this year you think you're gonna be all kind of trued up from a T&E crew perspective? Also, is there a way to quantify how much volume you're kind of fully trued up on crews?
Well, in terms of what we left behind, I'll use a term that Tom uses quite often, lots. And I'll leave it at that. In terms of where we're going to be, you know, from a timing standpoint of where we'll get. I'll say, you know what Jamie mentioned earlier, we're gonna continue to hire. We're gonna manage this employee pipeline differently than we have in the past. We're gonna make sure that, lessons learned here, we're gonna make sure that this doesn't happen to us again.
That's why we are doing everything we can from an employee relations standpoint to work closer with our employees, because they are critical and key to what we want to do here, and that is provide a reliable truck-like product with truck-like reliability to all of our customers, because that's the key to the future for the company's growth. Jamie, do you want to add any color about, you know, timing?
Our timing is, you know, we're really shooting in towards the third quarter as we push the number of employees we have training right now. If, you know, those qualify and we continue to do our hiring of 30-40 every single week, puts us in a good position at some point in the third quarter. It might be towards the tail end of the third quarter. And then to Jim's point, we're continuing to hire for attrition as attrition moves forward. We've seen attrition climb up, and we got to make sure that we stay ahead of that throughout this year and then into next year. And we've got many different programs that we wanna continue to train locomotive engineers and other pieces.
We feel pretty confident as long as the world doesn't throw us some type of a curve ball again. Q3 is gonna be a much better quarter for us.
Just, yeah, a little more color on that. You know, it is easy for us to manage down. We have an attrition rate of around 7%. We're not concerned with getting fat, because we can always manage down. What we have learned over the last year and a half is, it is extremely difficult. It is a completely different environment to try and add to the workforce. We just have to look at it a little differently. That doesn't mean we're gonna get fat and happy and have a bunch of employees that we don't need.
That means that we're gonna manage the workforce differently to make sure with the ebbs and flows of this business, which is always the case, that we do it in a more in a different manner, so we don't get caught short like we just did.
Thanks, Jim. Thanks, Jamie. I appreciate it.
Your next question comes from the line of Scott Group with Wolfe Research. Your line is now open.
Hey, thanks. Good afternoon. So I wanna maybe think about the back half of the year. It sounds like that's when you think you'll have the headcount where you want it to be and the network where you want it to be. Do you still think that you'll have volume growth in excess of headcount in the back half of the year? Maybe, Sean, how much are you spending in 1Q and 2Q on hiring and network inefficiencies that maybe potentially starts to go away in the back half of the year?
Yeah, Scott, to your first part of your question, I mean, remember, we're with all we're doing in hiring, the cumulative impact of that is a couple percent year-over-year in headcount by the time we get to the second half of the year. Yeah, you know, I think we ought to be able to grow in excess of that. We've got capacity, you know, on trains and in the network. We've got locomotives to move the freight, so we should be able to outpace it in terms of growth. Then in terms of your question on the cost side, you know, those training costs are up $10 million versus last year, so call it roughly $15 million a quarter that we're spending on training right now. I don't see that going away.
Like Jim just said, we're gonna continue to hire. That's probably pretty ratable across the balance of the year. The piece that is probably more variable is the $45 million or so that we mentioned in purchased services and others, most of which is really related to supply chain congestion, whether it be costs related to intermodal container yards and terminal labor, outsourced labor, or whether it be related to having more locomotives than we would otherwise need if the network were running faster. There's also an impact to rent. Think about it in terms of that roughly $45 million as the opportunity to kind of get back to where we were once we get this thing spinning.
Okay. If I can just sneak in one more quickly for Kevin. The coal RPU is this - a re we seeing the full benefit at this point of the net prices and everything, or is there one more potential leg up here?
No, I think this is largely it, some of our — on the met side, some of the contracts are capped, so they don't fully participate in these extreme prices. So this is probably a good run rate, assuming export prices stay at the current levels they are today.
Okay. Thank you, guys. Appreciate it.
Your next question comes from the line of Brian Ossenbeck with JP Morgan Chase. Your line is now open.
Hey, good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. Just come back to labor. And Jim, maybe if you can elaborate on how you expect to manage the workforce a bit differently. I know it's challenging, especially right now, to manage everything, all the different moving parts. You know, is this more technology? Are these different types of roles that you expect to put into place? You know, on that line, you got the $600 incentive, up to $600 incentive that you announced yesterday. Do you feel like you've done everything you can at this point, to really get the people, where you need and the amount that you need them in place?
Well, I think anybody that's followed the railroad business for a long time, like you have, and everybody else on the call, knows that the relationships between the railroads and the union workforce has not necessarily been one of mutual admiration. We need to fix that. We're working extremely hard. Throughout this process, I mean, you know, these guys were out there for two years in the middle of a pandemic, working every single day and night, in a chaotic and operating environment caused by surges in traffic and you name it, and at the same time, didn't get a raise. That's wrong in my opinion, and that's why we decided to do something about it unilaterally without asking for some kind of give back in the labor agreement.
We just thought it was the right thing to do, and so we made the offer, and it's a change. It's not technology. It's relationship building with your unionized workforce. We need to change that, and we're dedicated to changing that. It is an ongoing long-term process. But the CSX is committed to trying to do everything we can possibly do to change decades, if not centuries, of a somewhat dysfunctional relationship with our union workforce. That's the key. That's what this is all about.
All right. Thank you, Jim.
Your next question comes from the line of Ken Hoexter with Bank of America. Your line is now open.
Hey, great. Good afternoon. So you gave the double-digit operating income targets and the cost. I just want to understand what's built in for the timing of the fluidity return. Is that just simply the second half? And in the past, we've seen rails throw a lot of assets to get the fluidity moving. Is that something we need to do to get things moving aside from the employees? I guess to follow that, Jim, into next week's hearing as to what you're doing to fix the service, is the focus here key on employees or again, is there equipment need or anything to kind of throw at these backlogs to get the fluidity moving of the rail network. Thanks.
No, we are not short of locomotives. We are not short of any physical infrastructure in order to be able to perform. In fact, we continue to still have excess capacity across the railroad. There is one thing and one thing only that we are short of, that is hampering us from doing the job that we want to do, and to get back to service levels where we were in 2019 and to get even better from that point on, is we need more people in the engineer and conductor ranks. That's it. We don't need them anywhere else in the organization. We don't need more management people. We don't need a lot of you know, we don't need more people fixing the track and laying rail. They're doing a great job out there. We need more engineers and conductors.
That's it, and that's what we're dedicated to, and that is why we'll continue to focus on these numbers. It is a lengthy process from the time we finally get someone. It's an extremely lengthy process from the time we start looking for somebody that, in this day and age, might wanna be a railroad conductor, until the time they have gone through the classroom. First of all, the pre-employment screening, then by the time they go through the month or more of classroom instruction, and then six months on-the-job training. Then we have to make sure that at that point in time, they are equipped and ready to go out and work in a railroad operating environment and not get hurt and not hurt somebody else.
It's a long, long process, and that's why it has taken so long, as I said earlier, nine months longer because the front end of the process went away from us. The pipeline of no one to go to work. They wanted to stay home, or they wanted to do something else. And so we've had to revamp, work extremely hard, and now we are beginning to realize the benefits of all that hard work. And it's gonna be month after month, after month, after month, with these employees are then qualified to actually go out and start performing work. As the year goes on a month-to-month basis, we will see continued improvements in fluidity and in increases in the speed of the network. Now, when the network slows down, you need more people.
We need to get the railroad back staffed so that we can get the velocity and the dwell down to where it was. That will right size our workforce to what we need, and then we can then more effectively manage it with the view that Kevin and his team provide us about where the opportunity is. Listen, Kevin and his team are not shy about telling us on a regular basis where they see opportunity. It's out there, and we wanna get it and we wanna move it because that's what we do and make a lot of money doing it.
Just to clarify there, the timing for the fluidity return, is that by the third quarter, year-end?
Well, I would hope. Again, I hate to give the projections because I was already off by nine months on the last one. You'll see. Mr. Boychuk always gets nervous when I start making projections on when the railroad's gonna start running better. The railroad will start running better in this quarter, it will get better in the third quarter, and it will get better in the fourth quarter. The operating performance of the company, I hope, then will continue to get better and better and better and better all the time. You know, 2019 was not nirvana. 2019 is the base camp we wanna get back to where we were, which was record level of performance.
That was not where we were satisfied being the way we wanted to run the company and run the railroad. We wanted to get even better from there. It's gonna be a gradual improvement as we go through the remainder of this year.
Jim, team, I appreciate the time. Thanks.
Your next question comes from the line of Walter Spracklin with RBC Capital Markets. Your line is now open.
Thanks very much, operator. Good afternoon, everyone. I just wanna ask a little bit on yields, and there's a lot of moving parts there with fuel surcharges and accessorial charges. Just curious how you would point investors to how your yield might develop over on a year-over-year basis going forward, particularly if we were to assume fuel prices remain constant. You know, are we going to see yields come down as some of these accessorial charges come off as fluidity improves? And therefore, should we be more looking at negative yield as opposed to our natural inclination in the rail sector to see pricing levels generally move higher?
Could we see some noise in the near term as a result of some of the rollover as your liquidity improves and some of those charges come off?
Hey, this is Kevin. You know, when you look at what's happening right now, certainly I think Sean spoke to it. We would expect some of the storage fees and those things to come down to more normalized level, but that's a good thing. That means the supply chain is becoming more fluid. That means we're moving more freight through the rail network. That's exactly what we want to happen. From that perspective, that's all good. When we looked at, you know, where we are today versus where we were last quarter when we had this call, inflation has gone up even more and we're having to have those conversations with our customer.
We reprice about 50%-60% of our business every year, and we're having those conversations because our customers are having those conversations with their customers. That's the environment. There's a bit of a lag when you think about pricing, and realization of that we're gonna have to realize through the year. We fully expect that, you know, those things will start to deliver as we move through the year.
That's a great call. I appreciate it. Thank you.
Yep.
Your next question comes from the line of Fadi Chamoun with BMO Capital Markets. Your line is now open.
Okay, thank you. Maybe questions to Kevin. I think you mentioned in your remark something about the supply chain changes that we're experiencing now and maybe trade flows. You mentioned that you see an opportunity for CSX's network and specifically at the port. I'm wondering if you can elaborate a little bit on that. And t he second kind of point attached to that is what would you like to accomplish with the Pan Am specifically in terms of commercial opportunities. In what areas of traffic you think you have commercial opportunities to go after as you close on that transaction?
Sure. In terms of trade flows, what I was referring to there is probably two issues. One, and I touched on the second slide that I covered, was we're seeing a lot more activity in terms of industrial reshoring, more appetite for companies to look at their supply chain. And quite frankly, supply chain resiliency is a competitive advantage now, and companies are reevaluating, "Do I want, you know, my production in Asia? Do I want it overseas or would it be more appropriate?" I'm hopeful, and we're seeing early signs that that's the case that they're making those decisions and spending capital behind it.
The second one, and this is extremely early and we're having a lot of conversations with customers, and Jim talked about this a little bit, is when you think about things like grain, which have largely, you know, huge amounts of supply have come out of the Ukraine and Russia into Europe, and other commodities and steel products and other things that have largely gone in the European market. Well, all of a sudden, it doesn't look like that's gonna happen. Some of those things that we had traditionally moved out of the West Coast to supply Asia, now maybe that's gonna come out of the East Coast and benefit the ports that we serve. Again, it's really early. We have to have conversations.
We have to make sure that the capabilities are there to be able to deliver those products when that demand happens. We're staying very, very close to the customer, understanding what could potentially move from the West Coast potentially into the East Coast and working with them and being really dynamic in terms of how we think about it. That's what I'm thinking about. You know, we're looking at everything that's going out of the ports today and how that could change, you know, over the next few months. It's not a next month phenomenon. It's probably six, nine, 12 months from now where you'll really start to see some impact if it happens.
Okay.
I think on the second.
Any high-
Yeah, on the Pan Am.
Yeah. Sorry?
You want me to cover the Pan Am now?
Yes, please.
Yeah. Then on the Pan Am, look, it's a very good consumer market. There's a lot of paper packaging customers that want more access to markets that we serve. The waste business in that market is going to continue to grow. We see great opportunities there. We think with a better rail service, that's gonna open up many more markets that quite frankly, just you know, from a transit time or reliability standpoint, just we weren't able to serve previously. We're really excited. We're gearing up now that the approval has gone through and gonna work closely to really capture those opportunities.
Okay, thanks. I appreciate it.
Your next question comes from the line of David Vernon with Bernstein. Your line is now open.
Hey, good afternoon, guys. I have a question for you on the appetite to grow sort of the intermodal business generally. I mean, I think trimming some of the intermodal network as part of PSR was the first step, and we obviously have been dealing with some of these service issues. I'm curious to get your help on reconciling, you know, kind of where market rates are, how attractive at the margin that growth could be, and what do you make of the third party industry sort of adding something like 50,000 boxes to the fleet this year, and Hunt's coming out with an even bigger net number for the next couple of years.
I mean, is this a market that you guys really wanna lever into, or are you gonna remain a little bit more balanced between intermodal and merchandise growth? I'm just trying to square the circle with what we're seeing in the container order book for the domestic players and your appetite to actually accommodate some of that growth.
Well, I think we're leading the industry in intermodal growth. So it's not, you know, in terms of volume, I think if not this year, next year for sure, in terms of volume, intermodal is gonna be our biggest piece of business. That being said, we spent a lot of time and effort in 2017 and 2018 in re-engineering the way the intermodal network operated for a reason, so that we could have a good return on that business when we began to focus more intently on working in the key lanes where it makes sense for us to grow.
We're beginning to, I think, have a better understanding of leveraging the East Coast ports, which have gone through a dramatic transformation in terms of growth versus the West Coast. We have the much greater opportunity to expand that how we can participate in the Mexican intermodal market, which to date we do basically nothing in. So whether it's international or domestic, the more players put asset towards the intermodal market, the more these markets further develop, we see great potential for us to continue to grow our intermodal franchise. That's not to say that we are in any way, shape, or form favoring that over the merchandise business. The merchandise business is a core part of our franchise. We intend to grow both of these businesses.
We see both of them as equal opportunity. You know, any business has a divergent book of business. We don't, you know, we look at them both as exciting areas of opportunity.
Maybe just a quick follow-up. As you think about the UMAX fleet, do you look into add boxes to that, or are you gonna let the third party sort of private fleet handle the investment in the actual boxes?
Again, that's a different book of business. Personally, I'm more in favor of us being more involved on an asset ownership basis because we see great opportunity there for potential. Whether it's UMAX or whether it's everyplace else, I don't like the model where I do 95% of the work and get 75% of the money. To the extent that we can turn some of this business around and make it more favorable to our bottom line, I can guarantee you that any kind of an investment in asset in that area would have a great return.
Thanks very much.
Your next question comes from the line of Cherilyn Radbourne with TD Securities. Your line is now open.
Thanks very much. Good afternoon. In terms of the outlook for coal, you have touched on RPU already, but I wonder if you could comment on what you think the prospect is for increased coal volume this year. Within that, could you touch on whether it's primarily export coal that has influenced your outlook or both domestic and export?
Yeah. I think when you look at some of the discrete items that I pointed out in the first quarter, we think some of those obviously are gonna go away as we get through the year. Jamie talked a lot about the additional resources we're adding, and I think there are opportunities as the mines reinvest, and they're making a lot of money right now, and that allows them to reinvest in probably some deferred capital that they've had over the years. You would see some probably better production coming out of those as well. All else equal, if the market stays strong, we would anticipate some volume upside through the year.
Is it primarily export coal that's influenced your outlook or is that?
No, no. I didn't address that. When you look at our your Southern utilities and even our Northern utilities right now, they're at low levels. There's an inventory replenishment that needs to happen that we're working diligently on and working closely with them and with the mines to make sure that happens into the summer peak season. Then on the, you know, export side, met has been obviously very robust in terms of the demand. You're now seeing some probably some thermal opportunities with supply not there coming out of Russia. We'll see how that materializes. Right now it's not a lack of demand, it's a supply-constrained market.
We've seen the coal producers probably favor that export met business rather than, you know, the thermal business. In Curtis Bay, you'll see that. Jamie just reminded me that will come on in the third quarter, and that will offer some additional opportunity as that comes back on to full capacity.
Thank you for the time.
Your last question today comes from the line of Jordan Alliger with Goldman Sachs. Your line is now open.
Curious on the auto sector, if you could give a little color around that, what you're hearing from the OEMs, maybe how the parts business is doing, and any update on the chip situation? Thanks.
Yeah. We certainly saw some improvement into March, and that's continued into April. When you start shipping cars without chips, I guess that helps. Some of that inventory that was sitting on the ground waiting for the chip to come in, they just decided to go ahead and ship it. Maybe you don't have a seat warmer right now, but you'll get it in maybe in six months from now. We've seen a lot more, you know, finished good inventory on the ground, and we're ramping up to deliver those products to the market. That's. We'll see, you know, what some of the impacts in China with some of the disruption they're having over there with the variant running through there and Shanghai shutting down in some other areas.
It's a watch item, but we're seeing some favorability at least in the near term.
Thank you.
There are no further questions at this time. This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.