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'Stars align' for CP Rail deal to buy rival for US$25 billion, HQ remains in Calgary

CALGARY — Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd.'s deal to buy U.S.
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CALGARY — Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd.'s deal to buy U.S. rival Kansas City Southern for US$25 billion will create the first single-owner rail network linking Canada, the United States and Mexico, the companies said Sunday, touting the deal as mutually beneficial. 

On a conference call to discuss the deal, executives described it as "historic" and "unparalleled" and said it will result in US$800 million in annual revenue growth within three years after U.S. regulatory approval is received, expected in mid-2022.

"A deal like this, the stars have to align and I would suggest that the stars have aligned to make this deal happen," said CP Rail chief executive Keith Creel, noting the two smallest North American Class 1 railroads have had among the top growth profiles over the past three years.

"If you take the power of the two and put it into one extended network, what that opens up is compelling. The value it creates for competition, the value it creates for additional service options for our customers, the reach that it creates. The value it creates for our employee bases given the growth it attracts will drive their growth."

The COVID-19 pandemic has brought home the value of risk-free supply chains, and the passage of the free trade deal between Canada, the United States and Mexico last year offers "certainty and stability" for a combined company with operations in all three countries, said KCS CEO Pat Ottensmeyer on the call.

"The operational and cultural alignment between our two companies makes this a natural fit," he said.

On Twitter, Alberta Premier Jason Kenney said he'd been briefed by the companies and assured there would be no job losses in Calgary, which will remain the global headquarters for the merged firm while Kansas City, Mo., will house its U.S. headquarters.

"The combined rail network will give CP direct access to the U.S. Gulf Coast and beyond, allowing it seamlessly to transport Alberta energy directly to Gulf Coast refineries, improving the economics of crude by rail," Kenney tweeted.

Under the deal, shares of Kansas City Southern will be valued at US$275 per share, representing a 23 per cent premium over Friday's closing prices, the companies said in a joint news release.

KCS shareholders will receive 0.489 of a CP share and US$90 in cash for each KCS common share held. The resulting company will be 75 per cent owned by CP Rail shareholders.

The merger must be approved by the Surface Transportation Board, a U.S. federal regulatory agency, to proceed, executives said. They said it doesn't require regulatory approvals in Canada or Mexico.

The merger will likely be welcomed by investors of both companies in the form of higher stock prices on Monday, analysts with Credit Suisse said in a report, adding they expect it will win approval from the U.S. regulator.

"There is little overlap between the CP and (KCS) networks, with the one major connection point in Kansas City (where the two rails share a yard)," they said. "...We don’t think the combination will set off any major alarms concerning significant competitive harm to shippers or other railroads."

The combined company is to operate more than 32,100 kilometres of rail in Canada, the U.S. and Mexico, employ about 20,000 workers and generate total revenue of about US$8.7 billion based on 2020 figures.

KCS said it earned about 47 per cent of its 2020 revenue in Mexco, where it operates under a 50-year renewable concession with the federal government that expires in 2047.

The combined railroad is to be renamed Canadian Pacific Kansas City and Creel is to continue as CEO.

CP Rail also announced Sunday that it had amended Creel's incentive compensation under his contract to ensure he leads the company until at least early 2026 to oversee completion of the deal.

The company expects to realize US$180 million in annual cost savings from fuel efficiency, administration, equipment rents, facilities, information technology and licensing, but that doesn't mean it will have fewer employees, said Nadeem Velani, chief financial officer for CP Rail, on the call. 

"Although there will be rationalization of some redundant functions, our expectation is that head count across the network will grow when the synergies are realized in 2023 to 2025," he said.

John Brooks, chief marketing officer for CP Rail, said the company expects to grow revenue by  US$800 million per year and adjusted earnings by US$600 million in the same time frame by taking market share from trucking, attracting new customers and offering new routing options to existing clients.

To fund the stock consideration of the merger, CP will issue 44.5 million new shares. The cash portion will be funded through cash and taking on about $8.6 billion in debt, it said.

As part of the merger, CP will assume about US$3.8 billion of KCS' outstanding debt. Following the close, CP expects its outstanding debt will be US$20.2 billion. 

The deal with KCS follows failed attempts by CP Rail to merge with American railway CSX in 2014, and a few years later with Norfolk Southern.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 21, 2021

Companies in this story: (TSX: CP, TSX:CNR)

Dan Healing, The Canadian Press