All right. Morning, everyone. We're going to get going with our next session. We are now at the transport portion of the conference, starting with Union Pacific. Really happy to have Jim Vena, CEO, and Jennifer Hamann, CFO, back at our conference. Thank you guys for being here. Jim and Jennifer have a quick couple opening comments and some slides to show, and then we will get right into questions. I'll pass it off to you. Thank you, Jim.
Perfect.
Thank you, Jennifer.
Listen, I'm looking forward to the questions. Let me see if I can get this done in one minute. Okay. Real quick. Morning. We already ran into each other, Scott, so wonderful. Of course, Jennifer's here with me, and if we really run into trouble, Diana's here with us, okay? They always get me to tell you that we're going to make some forward-looking statements. If you need any more clarification of something that Jennifer has said wrong, then just make sure that you give us a call. Okay. If we go to slide three, and this is real important, about the base of where we are. You can see our strong execution continues to deliver industry leading across safety, service, and operational excellence. We enter 2026 in a real strong, and the first quarter is very similar to what we did in 2025.
Real happy. We led in the industry in return on invested capital, OR, and did the same thing in the first quarter. In fact, our nearest competitor is about 400 basis points behind us. That's a good place for us to be where we can provide service to our customers, provide our investors a view of what we can do and how we move ahead. We're real happy with that. We're delivering at a real high service level, in fact, to the point where Kenny and his team no longer have to worry about the first question being how our service is. They go out there and sell the business, and that's a good place to be as a company. A lot of hard work by a lot of people out in the field. Jennifer, over to you.
I had you closer to two minutes than one, by the way.
I apologize. I'm telling you, I'm getting slow.
I'll make up time here, Scott. Just a quick business update for you. Right now, quarter- to- date, our volumes are up about 1%, and that is certainly supported by the strong service product that Jim referred to. It also gives you a picture of the great diversity of the UP franchise when you look at how we're broken out in terms of how business is shaping up for us today. Right now, up 1%, as I mentioned, but that's with bulk flat, so that's a little bit different than the first quarter. You still have grain and grain products that are up, call it 10%, 11%, but our coal volumes are actually down year-over-year here in the first quarter, down about 14%. That's really driven by a couple things.
Certainly, we've lapped on a year-over-year basis the contract win that we had last year with LCRA. Then you see kind of the normal shoulder season, a little bit milder spring weather. You've had a few plant outages, the normal seasonal maintenance that's going on, and then lower natural gas prices impacting us on the coal side right now. We expect that to come back some as we get into the summer months, but that's the dynamic we have here in the second quarter. Industrial, really the heart and soul of the UP franchise, up 4%. That's great service. That's great business development. About 6% growth in industrial chemicals and plastics. Low natural gas prices, stronger export demand. You also have metals and minerals up about 5%. Strong construction business in the southern part of our network. Then on the premium side, down 1%.
That's a bit of a mixed bag. You've got international intermodal, which everyone knows the story there, the comparison year-over-year. We're actually hitting kind of the lull point of that comparison. We're going to start seeing it get a little bit tougher here as we build through June and July, and then we'll look a little bit softer through the rest of 2026 in terms of that comparison. You've got continued strength on the domestic side. As you heard Kenny talk about at our first quarter earnings, three consecutive quarters of record domestic growth, having another very strong domestic quarter here in the second quarter, and finished vehicles are up. A little bit of strength on the finished vehicles side as well. Last thing I'll just mention is fuel. Need to talk about fuel a little bit. It continues to have an impact.
You saw a strong rise in fuel prices going from March to April. April prices, we were paying around $4 a gallon. It's actually gone up some in May, closer to $4.25 a gallon. That is a little bit of a headwind for us that we're facing, certainly.
Perfect. Why don't we go to the next slide? You're a little slow this morning, Diana, okay? Didn't you guys love it? I was directing people, empty seats. There's a couple more over here if you guys want to sit down. Otherwise, you can stand up. Bottom line is, on the merger front, just a quick update is, we put the application in. It's going through the process. What did we do in the application? There's some key areas. What the STB asked us to do when we put the original application in, and they gave us the feedback and said that we needed to work out some. One was to take a look at how the traffic moved and competitive review, which we've done.
Before we were using the sampling of waybills and sampling information, this time because we were able to receive all the information from the other railroads, we actually ran it as a complete using all waybill data. Really it didn't change very much. There was a little tweak on a few things, overall, the sampling did a pretty good job of setting it up. We answered that question. There was a question about the release in that 5.8 document, which talked about where, at what point we at Union Pacific had the right to walk away from the deal if it truly became non-additive to our business. That's what this is all about is, would it add to our business?
We didn't put the highest number in there, and we negotiated at the right place so that we could then start talking about options if we had to. We've put that out there. There was some smaller things like the TRRA, which is a not-for-profit switching railroad in St. Louis that a number of us own. With the merger, we would've ended up owning over 50%. It also has the liability and the problem that it has bridges that go across the Mississippi. They wanted us to answer a little clearer, and we were black and white about it. I thought we were black and white in the first but there was a lot of feedback from other railroads that said that we weren't black and white enough. This time we're pretty black and white.
We will make sure that we will not get to 50% ownership. Either turn back shares, or turn them into non-voting shares, whatever we need to do. You guys will find this real interesting, and it sort of tells you about our competition. Our competition are the people, other railroads that wrote in that they weren't comfortable with that. When we put it in, as soon as we received the feedback, we actually called a special meeting of the Board for the TRRA and asked all the railroads to come in so that we could talk about how we could dispose of our shares or the NS shares when we close on the deal. I hate to tell you, nobody showed up even though they were supposed to.
At the end of the day, we've answered it in the application, but it goes to show you what we're up against, trying to be reasonable to get to a place where the STB can actually look at the merger and look at the benefits. The benefits haven't changed, and in fact, we're much more confident with the benefits now. It is good for America. It is going to allow us to offer our customers a seamless movement over the railroad from one end of the country to the other. That is not a small thing. That enhances the capability of our customers to compete against the world and other countries and other companies. It also enhances their capability to be able to move things in a seamless, faster manner across the United States of America. For us, we see even better movement of products through.
We haven't backed off. We think it was real important for us to tell our unionized employees that they have a job for life. Of course, listen, anytime you're going through something like this, we expected it. Some unions were going to be positive about it. Our largest union, SMART-TD, actually came out real fast and said, "Let's make a deal that talks about maybe what the mechanism and how it works." The guarantee of a job was there already. In fact, the way it works at our railroad, the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen, who are part of the Teamsters, is one of the parties that has not come on board to support this. In actual fact, their employees are already protected. Because I'm a locomotive engineer, I'll tell you how it works.
If you're a locomotive engineer, you came from the conductor's ranks, meaning that you were covered by SMART-TD. If we had to sort of adjust headcount in any place with the BLET, they actually would flow back to be a conductor and would be covered under the SMART-TD. We don't really need a deal. The majority, over 80% of our employees are covered with deals that we have with the unions. The last thing is competition and how we can enhance it. There's no if, ands, or buts that we are going to have a better product against trucks in the long haul market. We also are going to have a better product in the shorter market that is underserved today.
We're very confident that we've shown, and even more confident than when we put the first application in, that we'll get this accepted, and we'll go to the next step, which is let's go make our case and analyze it and see what happens next. I think I tried to cover everything off, Scott, so we could talk about our first quarter and where we are, but it's all back to you.
All right. Fantastic. Thank you, Jim. Thank you, Jennifer. I'll start on some merger questions, then we'll get into the business. You gave us a bunch there, Jim. We'll get the decision from the Board next week if the application is complete. Just two questions. You've obviously talked about what enhancements you made to the application. Anything from some of the comments from the other rails since you submitted that give you any pause for concern? Then I'm sure you love hypotheticals, but hypothetically, if once again the merger is not complete, where do we go from there?
Why don't we start with the comments that have gone in? We answered the comments pretty straightforward. It truly is a game of lawyers now. Everybody's hired a whole bunch of lawyers and firms from across the country. A lot of them are here in New York, they go through, they tell you what they feel. Fundamentally, we answered the questions that the STB asked us to. On purpose, we didn't try to add another 1,000 items in there or more detail on some of the things. That's what people miss. If someone tells you that this is the area you need to look at, because we didn't accept it the first time for these three, plus the issue of a number of small little things, that's what we went and answered.
At the end of the day, we're absolutely sure that the STB should take that we've answered those questions. We've given them the answers that they wanted, we've provided in the application, and we expect it next week to be accepted. Will the STB come and ask us for more information? Absolutely. As we go through this process, I'm absolutely sure that the STB will say, "Union Pacific, can you do this? Can you take a look at this for us? Can you give us this flow?" To make sure that maybe they need to understand the piece of it. Remember, it's not the other railroads that are going to make the decision. They are our competitor. In most things in this world, a third party would not listen to a competitor.
I think a competitor is going to look internal to their view in what they want, not what's the benefit of what Union Pacific is doing. You can see that when I gave the example with the TRRA, that they wanted us to answer the question, when we called a special meeting of the board at the TRRA, Berkshire-owned Burlington Northern Santa Fe didn't show up. I could go on the rest of the railroads. You guys know who owns it. It's a not-for-profit railroad. The STB, they're smart, okay? From everything I've seen with Patrick and Michelle and Karen, and the new person that's close to joining, at the end of the day, they're going to look at the facts of what we're presenting, and we're pretty clear on what the facts are. That it's a gain.
I'm telling you, I would be really surprised, okay, that the STB would, at this point, when we've answered their questions. I don't know. It'd be like going up to a teacher that said, "You need to answer question one, two, and three for me." You go answer question one, two, and three, and then they come up with question number four. Nobody'd be happy. Your parents would go in and yell and scream at the teacher.
All right. You feel confident about the application being deemed complete. We were at our conference a year ago sort of dancing around the idea of M&A. We've been talking about this for a year. We haven't even gotten to the part of the process where we actually talk about the merits of the merger itself.
Right.
That starts, in theory, starting next week, and that, give or take, is a year, right. Maybe let's spend a minute or two there. At its simplest form, right, you need to demonstrate two things. That it's in the public interest, and that it enhances competition. I think everything you've talked about with trucks and everything, I think you've laid out, others can disagree, but I think you've laid out a case for why it's in the public interest. I think you've laid out a case for why it enhances competition with truck.
Right.
Where I think there's probably more debate is does this enhance rail-to-rail competition? I guess two questions. One, how does it enhance rail-to-rail competition? Two, do you have a sense from the board, are they looking at competition or are they looking at competition? Meaning, are they looking globally at competition, globally truck, or are they going to look at just intermodal rail- to- rail? What do they care more about?
Let's start at a high level.
Yeah.
Any agency in the United States of America, okay, federal or state, their primary goal should be how do you move business forward? How do you provide better service to people? How to move better competition? How to do things that are better? Nobody would ever get an agency to slice and just say, "Let's just look at it from one front." Okay? In this, they would be remiss if the only thing the STB looked at was rail only. Really, nobody wants trucks off of the highway? Really, nobody wants to compete against the soybean producers in Brazil? Really, nobody wants to make sure that the competition is out there to move products in a much more seamless, faster method? Nobody in the U.S. should worry that the Canadians, and good for them, okay? People will ask me, "Aren't you Canadian?" I lead a U.S. company.
It doesn't matter whether I lived in Canada. I hate to tell you, when you take the responsibility, and it's the stupidest question I ever get, "Aren't you Canadian?" It's like, don't you feel something?
Let me cross that off the list of questions real quick.
Don't you feel something about. No, we're in competition. The Canadian government is spending $5 billion to expand intermodal facilities, ports in Quebec and in the West Coast. Those products, the size of the expansion is not to move that product in Canada. It's to move it with jobs in Canada to come into the U.S. Should any agency look at the entire picture of what happens? Absolutely. Listen, some of the rules that were written go back to when the railroads were absolute. There was no interstate highway system. They go back so far that people talked about the power of the railroad. We are low double-digit movement of goods in the United States of America, even though every week at Union Pacific, we move 30 billion lbs. I tried to make that number big, so I multiplied it out, okay?
To make it pounds. We move 30 billion, but we're still a fraction of what is moved by truck. I'm not trying to be political on that. It just makes sense. It would be remiss. Now on the rail-to-rail competition, what have you seen since we announced the merger? It's amazing all these things that were already in the chute. Right? Cooperation and everything else. It's amazing how many things were in the chute just waiting for us to announce the merger before they put trains on that would run from Mexico to the East or from the West Coast to the East Coast a little more seamless. What we're going to deliver that enhances. What's the word enhance mean? I know there's people in this room that have written, that I've read. They seem to not understand what the word enhanced is. Go in the dictionary.
Enhance is to make it better. What we're going to be able to offer is seamless at a less cost and less price for our customers. That enhances their capability to expand their markets. Why? You remove a touch point when we hand off the car to another railroad, and that expense of picking up the rail car, that's expensive. That goes away. We're able to offer it. The rates, you'll see it in our application. Single line rates are substantially less because of that. Our customers should be able to have better rates because we set our rates not by some dartboard in a room. We set it with what the market and what the capability of the market that we can move and understand the market we're moving that product. We're going to enhance in speed. That's better.
We're going to enhance in touch points. That's better. If you remove touch points, you actually become a safer railroad. The less you have to touch a rail car, switching it with a human and everything else. At Union Pacific, last year we were the safest railroad in regards to people coming to work and going home the same as they were before. Our accident ratio dropped substantially, and it's online. People want to go find it. FRA has it. We have it. Go ahead and take a look at that. One of the pieces we've done is invest in technology, but also it's removing touch points on cars. Anytime you can stop touching the car two or three times, the rail car, to get from Houston to Minneapolis, and you can do it seamlessly, better. That's what we're going to offer. What's enhanced, Scott?
I don't know about you guys. You guys must not think that being able to fly across the country, for people that don't know the railroad industry real well. Okay? For those of you that want to fly across the country, I guess you're okay with having only regional airlines, because it can't be an enhancement to be able to fly from New York to L.A. You'd love to stop in Chicago, get off, buy a new ticket, make sure your luggage makes the connection, make sure that if you change terminal, you're okay, of course, the other airline's going to wait for you when the first one was late.
I understand.
Mamma mia, what are we talking about? How much more enhancement can there be?
Well, CGP and Open Gateways.
Thank you.
Go ahead.
Well, no.
Certainly part of what you're saying, it sounds like, is this is in the public interest. Which should be the most important thing.
Enhanced.
It's both.
It's both. Okay.
Let's get serious here. Okay? We both serve customers in the Houston area.
Yeah.
Okay. If you want to move when the combined Norfolk Southern, we're going to give you a seamless move all the way to Philadelphia. The other guy has to hand it off. I don't know. Last time I looked, that's an enhancement from what we're doing today. They're going to need less rail cars, less inventory to move it. Scott, I guess you can see I'm a little [intense]. I find it funny that people can't figure out that that is an enhanced product. What are the competitors going to do? You're all businessmen in here. You're all smart. If you can't compete in service because you can't move it as fast, you can't compete, okay, in touch points, what's your only option? You have to compete on price now. You have to lower your price to be able to compete against the new Union Pacific.
That's what they're all worried about. Otherwise, they wouldn't be speaking up.
Your assuming application deemed complete.
Do you agree with me on that last point?
I understand exactly what you're trying to say.
Okay.
Do you have any sense, expert timeline from here? Not? Is this 12 months, 15 months? Any quick thought on that?
Well, the first timeline that we received from the STB would say that once they accept, it'll be close to a year.
Okay.
Okay. To get to that point. We knew it was going to take a long time, Scott.
Yes.
Of course, I went out there and pushed hard to say I'd like to have it for my birthday, which is on August 17th this year.
One of your birthdays.
You can dream, okay, for what you want, but when you don't control it's like when I put my taxes on that are about this thick with the IRS. Sometimes they surprise you.
You've offered competitive gateway pricing, guaranteed union jobs, but some would say you didn't offer specific concessions around reciprocal switching, terminal access. Whatever that may be.
Whoa.
Oh, uh-oh. Sorry.
We have been very clear on reciprocal switching.
Okay.
I can't believe that the people don't get this.
Okay.
We said we are all for reciprocal switching. If we don't deliver for our customers, they should have an option. Somebody who doesn't have an option, that today is a single origin person somewhere on our network, that we would be more than willing to open it up. All I ask is that everybody does that, it's not just Union Pacific. Why? If you have the highest level of service in the industry, you're the fastest, real good safety metrics, right, and the lowest OR that allows you to make sure that you price in a smart way, I hate to tell you, I think we win. Absolutely, I've given that.
Do you think?
The only problem I've had is, I'm willing to sign it. If you have the rest of the CEOs in there, get them to sign a piece of paper, I'll sign at the bottom. Open reciprocal switching for anybody, okay? As long as it's the same, and the rules have got to be-
He's right outside.
Well, there's a whole bunch more than one person from Canada.
No, no, but do you sense this?
Okay. You have to do it so that it's not so complicated that the lawyers have to deal with it. I like the system that they have in Canada. It works, it's set what the rates are, everybody knows it, and let's go. Let's go compete.
Do you sense there's any potential for that with any of the other rails?
I don't have the right to do that.
Okay.
Yeah, that's what the board has proposed.
Got you.
We filed comments in support of what the board proposed.
Yeah. We're good with that.
Jennifer, just a couple numbers questions on the application, if I can.
Let's go back to the concessions, because I sort of jumped on one.
Okay.
You're trying to move on to another question, Scott. Okay, bottom line on concessions, this is an end-to-end merger. This is not a duplication. If it was a duplication, of course, we'd have to give access to a whole bunch of different properties and everything else. We do understand that we're going to have three lines between St. Louis and Kansas City, and we're going to have to do something there. We'll work through the process, and we're talking to a number of people to be able to get that done. Those things are complicated. It takes a while to get them done. The rest of it, yes, how do you handle the Belt Railroad? Pretty easy. We're 16% owners, and we don't really care. It's a not-for-profit railroad.
We don't use it a lot, and we want to use it less because we want to handle it ourselves. All those little things where we touch. What is it that we want to give up? There's only five customers, and maybe somebody will find a sixth or a seventh somewhere. Any customer, but we're talking about a real low number out of the thousands of customers we have that are going to go from two to one. We said anybody that goes from two to one customer location, not even just customer, that we'll open it up for another railroad to get in. Plus Committed Gateway, plus we said that we are going to keep every gateway open. What else am I supposed to give? Listen, if I was one of the other railroads, I'd love to get access to Denver.
I'm willing to trade that for access to Toronto anytime they want. I'm not going to give it away.
I understand.
We'll walk away. Scott, let's get serious here. This deal has to be better for the company, for Union Pacific. It has to be able to grow the business. It has to be better for our investors. If it isn't, we're pretty good as a standalone company. I'm not worried about walking away from it. Okay?
Quickly, if you can, how do you think about what that comment you just made, relative, to the $750 million and the 5.8?
Well, we have to start somewhere. When you're starting the process, you think about how the negotiation went. Okay? You're moving through. Anybody who's done an $85 billion deal, I've never done it before, so it's a big deal. I think it was the biggest deal last year in the U.S. Okay? You identify a whole bunch of things pretty quick because you want to get to the point, because otherwise the rumors start going out, and you get a whole bunch of noise. When we originally looked at it, we said, worst case scenario, what's it look like? Some people internally at UP said it could be that much. Some of it was loss in business, right? It was going to be some business that moved over to CSX that it was originally at Norfolk Southern.
When we actually went through it, when we put the application in the first time, we just couldn't come up to that number anymore. That's why we said the concession number is way lower. Is it zero? No, it's not. It's not $750 million.
Okay. Jennifer, quickly if we can, the revenue synergies from the EBITDA synergies from revenue originally was $2 billion, now it's $1.8 billion. We went from 900 union jobs to 1,200, but the cost synergies stayed at $1 billion. Just quick thoughts on those two things.
Yeah. On the revenue piece, it's mix of business. Once we had the full waybill file and were able to do the very complete analysis, which is unique, no other railroad's done that in a merger application. There was no sampling. It's a complete analysis of all the waybill files for the railroads. We saw that more of the business was going to be coming off the truck, more of it was going to be intermodal, and that's just a mix shift in terms of the revenue EBITDA. That's pretty easy to understand. With that growth in traffic, you need a few more train and engine people to do that, so that's the difference in people.
The reason the synergies on the cost side didn't change is although you see a little growth on the labor cost, as we've continued to look at this, we continue to get more bullish about what the opportunities are. There was more opportunities on the transportation side in terms of how we were going to flow traffic and run the network that we saw additional savings. Those two just happened to net each other out to be still in that billion-dollar range.
Just also quickly, Jennifer, from your update on Q2, just how is mix trending? Your comments about fuel being a little bit higher, any sort of near-term thoughts about how to think about operating ratio in that light?
Well, on that last part, fuel does pressure the operating ratio. We're certainly seeing that with fuel. Like I said, we're paying about $4.20 a gallon here. We do have a little bit of a lag in our surcharge mechanisms. That will flow through, just the way the math works, it pressures the margins. On the mix piece, coal being down in the quarter, more growth on the domestic side, more short-haul rock business, that's going to probably pressure mix a little bit. Still feel positive overall.
Helps on the EPS side, hurts a little bit on the margin side, right?
Yep.
I know we're going over. Jim, one just last question I just wanted to ask you. You made a comment, when Kenny meets with customers, he doesn't have to talk about service anymore. Service has been really good. Right? Volumes have been good. Right? Productivity trends have been really good. To me, the one missing piece from the story has been price. That it's been fine, but it doesn't feel like maybe what it used to be, right?
Right.
When do you think we get back there? Can we get back there? When do you think we get back there?
If you take a look at the mix of traffic that we have, some of it is by tariff, some of it is by contract, some of it is multi-year contracts. There's been an impact. We have some contracts that are tied to what the costs are with some domestic trucking and everything else. All those things make it a lot harder. I like where we are, though. You need to have the railroad on the fundamental right place so that you don't go in and have to worry about trying to explain why your service isn't delivering what you sold the customer. I think I see positivity. The best thing that can happen is the economy in the U.S. continues to grow, continues to be able to have more capability.
The worst thing that could happen is if we see a downturn, and that's not what we're seeing. For all the products that we move, and you name it, we touch it. Okay. Whether it's auto parts and autos, even autos have bumped up a little bit for us. You can see that in the car loads. You can see the domestic business running. The consumer is still out there selling. That will help us on price in how we move ahead, because I'm with you. We have a lot of discussions and a lot of deep dives with Kenny and the marketing team to say, "Let's get serious." We don't think we're in the right place with price against what the level of service and what the customers have gained. What have they gained with Union Pacific?
If you can increase your car velocity by 15% or where we were. In 2019 when I showed up, we were in the 100 numbers, and now we're in the 200 numbers. You just were able to tell every customer that they have to have less rail cars because we're going to get them from origin to destination quicker. We've removed touch points. We're safer. All those things add up to go. For us, it's pretty simple is Scott and I agree with you. We need to do a better job, and Kenny needs to do a better job to do that. Let me finish off with this real quick point. Where is Union Pacific today? Union Pacific has 25% less trains operating with more business than we had in 2019. We did not rip up track. We did not rip up capacity.
In fact, we spent billions of dollars in our terminals to make them more efficient so that they could handle rail cars in a quicker manner, and that's why you see the dwell being where it is at Union Pacific. We're armed for any growth that comes to us. There's some pockets where, of course, we're going to invest to make it even more efficient, and we have that capability. I'm pretty excited. Am I a little bit over on the next speaker?
You're a little over, so you're off the hook on the aren't you?