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Pandemic grips commerce, hits railroader Union Pacific

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OMAHA, Neb. — Union Pacific’s second-quarter profit fell 28% from a year ago as carload revenue tumbled in the coronavirus pandemic.

The railroad expects improvement in the second half with full-year carload volumes to be down around 10% compared with 2019, assuming there isn't a second wave of virus-related economic shutdowns.

To get to a 10% full-year decline, the company said it expects freight volumes to be down 6% to 8% in the second half as businesses continue to recover. “We're growing our optimism here in the near term,” CEO Lance Fritz said.

Union Pacific made $1.13 billion from April through June, or $1.67 per share, beating Wall Street estimates. Analysts polled by FactSet expected earnings of $1.56 per share. Revenue of $4.24 billion was down 24% for the period, slightly below Wall Street projections.

In the second quarter big freight users such as automakers were forced to close their factories for weeks in an effort to slow the spread of the virus.

As a result, Union Pacific’s freight revenue fell as pricing gains were offset by lower volumes and decreased revenue from fuel surcharges, the company said Wednesday in a prepared statement.

“We've never experienced such a steep and deep decline in our carloads,” Fritz said in an interview. “We've really climbed out pretty steadily since, call it early May, which is really encouraging.”

The number of rail cars generating revenue tumbled 20% for the quarter, led by a 64% drop-off in the auto sector. Coal fell 24%, while industrial chemicals and plastics were down 10%. Metals and minerals were off 19%. Empty cars transported by the railroad don't generate revenue.

Company executives said freight volume is recovering enough for them to start recalling furloughed employees. But Fritz said that due to productivity gains such as running fewer trains that are longer, Union Pacific won't need as many workers as it did before the pandemic began.

The railroad is getting more engineering work done with fewer people, it's using fewer locomotives, and fewer cars are needed because they're travelling more miles per day, he said. The number of trains also has decreased, he said.

"You put that all together, there's no doubt that when we recover fully and start growing from last year, it's going to be done with fewer people than we had last year," he said.

The railroad has cut about 22% of its workforce in the past year and now has about 30,000 full-time workers, which Fritz said will still grow as freight volumes increase.

The railroad's customers see spotty, slow recoveries, but no significant shutdown like the country went through in March and April, Fritz said. “Given the fact that there is some pent-up demand and there is some restocking that needs to occur, it feels to us like sequentially for sure things are getting better,” he said.

Shares in the railroad, which operates 32,400 miles (52,143 kilometres) of track in 23 Western states, fell 2.6% to $174.71 in late-day trading.

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This story has been corrected to show that the copany predicts freight volumes to decline 6% to 8% in the second half, not 9% to 10% as the CEO said on a conference call.

The Associated Press

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