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TSE:CNR
This summary was created by AI, based on 45 opinions in the last 12 months.
Canadian National R.R. (CNR) is experiencing a challenging period due to a prolonged freight recession, soft economic conditions in Canada, and external pressures such as tariffs. However, experts highlight the company's strengths, including its irreplaceable network and strong operational efficiency, which provide a clear competitive advantage. Many analysts express long-term confidence in the stock, recommending it as a good buying opportunity, especially at current valuations, which are seen as attractive relative to historical levels. Additionally, the company has a solid history of returning capital to shareholders through dividends and buybacks, amidst expectations that demand will improve with a healthier economic backdrop.
Canadian National (CNR-T) vs Canadial Pacific (CP-T). He owns CNR-T and thinks CP is more commodity based (grains and agriculture and lumber). CNR-T moves more goods. Oil companies are careful to over committing to rail, because it is more expensive to ship than by pipe. Buy CP if you thing more commodity shipments will occur. Buy CN if you think more inter-modal goods will be shipped.
The industry had many years that were terrible but then companies were bought and it has been rationalized. Good opportunity. Good pricing power. Good capacity on the oil side as he sees more oil being moved by rail particularly in Canada. It is a play on global growth as rail is efficient. It has underperformed CP lately and thinks it is going to catch up (Analysts' price target is $ 106.75).
His long-term view on this is positive, having owned the stock since 1997. The economy is going to drive this company, so it depends on which way the economy goes. They were a little short on their earnings in the last quarter because they spent some money on locomotives. Somebody has to move the products regardless of what happens to NAFTA. This is the kind of stock you want to put in your portfolio.
Just came out with their Q4. Revenue was in line but their costs were higher than expected, and the stock sold off. CapX got a little higher than expected as well. This still trades at a 1 point premium to Canadian Pacific and the rest of its peers. However, this is the prize in the rail space, and he models an easy 10% EPS over the next 5 years. He would buy this on the current dip.
Railways are strong moat type companies, having a strong competitive advantage because of having tracks. The competition is relatively small. He likes this company a lot. They are going to be exposed to the business cycle just like any other cyclical type of company. Feels this is better run than Canadian Pacific (CP-T). Their ROE and growth metrics are better.
One of the staples in his portfolio. He will add or trim when it gets to certain levels. The issue with rails is that there is a lot of uncertainty with NAFTA. If something negative were to happen on the NAFTA front, rails would certainly be impacted. These are really great, long term consistent businesses, operating in a sort of oligopoly. It's one you want to own over the long-term. He would be a buyer on weakness.
Is the ripping up of NAFTA a serious concern for them? Long-term, a good economy means a good stock for this company. He expects the economy to be quite good in 2018 for both the US and Canada. A 15% pullback could be a possibility on a break up of NAFTA, but doesn't see anything disrupting their long-term business plan until a recession hits. If this stock drops below $100, that will be an opportunity. This is one you need to own if you want to own the North American economy.
He agrees with a viewer’s comment that this is part of the backbone of the Canadian economy. The rails are great to own long-term. However, NAFTA changes could interfere with CN, which is very big in the intermodal business. It fills a lot of boxcars that it transports across Canada and through the United States, and to Mexico. CN is also having trouble servicing all of the new capacity that it took on last year. He prefers CN to CP. Increasing pipeline capacity will not harm CN by taking oil-transportation business away from CN, because CN is so busy that it can’t currently take advantage of the opportunity to carry lots more oil, so when that opportunity declines, there won’t be much business lost. He added to his CN position a month ago.