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Canadian National R.R.CNR.TOHOLDJul 29, 2016Stock price when the opinion was issued
As of Jun 19, 2026. Market Open.
The rails trade in tandem. With CP buying Kansas City, CP now competes head-to-head with CNR which used to have more of a north-south network. He isn't jumping into these stocks, because of a possible recession later this year. If you're a long, long-term holder, holding rails isn't bad, but he wouldn't but them now.
Canadian railroads have 15% compound returns going back 30 years. CP has done way better than CNR. Wishes he owned CP, and you probably should own both. Will see buybacks, dividend increases, growth at GDP+. Always cutting costs. Will see double-digit returns for a very long time. Nothing can displace railroads. Drones just can't move the heavy stuff.
Bullish because we'll see more onshoring. Hard to tell if we're going into recession or accelerating. Should see restocking of inventory.
We like CNR, and the company operates in a duopoly market with CP. Although the rail industry may not grow too fast from here, the industry has tremendous staying power, and we expect CNR could continue to grow its dividends for decades.
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Canada is in a recession that impact the rails who move goods. Volumes are way down and so are revenues. Bulk commodities like grain are still doing well, and this remains a core holding of his. Industrials do suffer in a wider slowdown, but less so in Canada because we have fewer industrials than in the US. And rails are less cyclical. CN outperforms the TSX usually when markets are weak. They reiterate guidance, and he expects a dividend hike. Management is in good hands.
Effectively has a similar network to CP's, through strategic contracts with other rail lines. Dividend has grown more significantly than CP's. Prefers CNR because it owns prime real estate around the choke point, Chicago, allowing it to get across the city faster than anyone.
A bellwether for the economy, so price has suffered, but this is an opportunity to buy.
It's in the public interest to get this pipeline going, as it will be great for Canadian energy producers as a whole. Won't have a negative impact on the rails. Rail is not the most efficient for shipping oil, it's the overflow option. He's positive on CNR and CP, more so on CP.
Great acquisition of Kansas City by CP was a game changer. CNR is the gold standard in North America. US is not in a recession yet, but if it does happen, all the rails will get cheaper. Don't settle for just a 1% differential from the historical average, when you might be able to get it 20% cheaper.
PE ratios are too close to call. Yield on CNR is about 2%, versus 1% for CP. No one's going to buy it for income. Looking at the FMV, the stock prices are so close for each, you really can't judge.
Big difference is the book value. CP looks so cheap on price to book because of accounting decisions on its Kansas City purchase. So he can't tell if that's real or not. When he looks at CNR's SVA chart, it has an easy downside in weak markets to about $116. That's not trivial.
Dead heat on a merry-go-round. Neither is reasonably attractive right now.
Trading at fair value, but doesn’t expect a lot of upside in the near term. He really likes that even though they have had declining revenues by about 11%, they are the leaders in their industry, the most cost-effective player and have been able to raise prices. In spite of the revenue decline, they are only down about 2.5% in terms of earnings. A cautionary note for the near term is that transport stocks tend to move with the market, and often tend to lead the market. If we see a 5%-10% pullback, this is good to follow. Trading at 18X forward earnings, a level that it has been trading at for the last 3-4 years. Doesn’t expect a lot of earnings growth in the near term. 16X forward earnings would be a great entry point. Dividend yield of 1.8%.