Warren Buffett Will Decide When It’s Time to Do a Rail Deal

CSX Corp. had a rough go this year, but it’s starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel.

Hurricanes Milton and Helene washed out tracks and rail bridges, cutting a main line. The company had to move forward on a scheduled tunnel expansion in Baltimore that crimped port traffic beginning in February; it reopened last week. The good news is that CSX is well on its way to recovering from these external factors.

The company’s operating margin recovered to 36% in the second quarter from 30% in the first but was still down from 39% in the second quarter 2024 before all the disruptions. The key service metrics — dwell time at switching yards and train velocity — have all rebounded.

service repair

That’s why it was a bit odd that the CSX board decided to oust Chief Executive Officer Joe Hinrichs, a former executive of Ford Motor Co. Analysts agree that CSX was recovering nicely and regaining its position as one of the most profitable railroads. The new CEO hired by CSX’s board, Steve Angel, doesn’t have railroad experience, so it likely wasn’t about the railroad’s operations.

“As we have highlighted over the last few weeks, fundamentals at CSX are showing strong momentum into year-end with service at the best level in years, weekly volumes accelerating as a result of recently announced partnerships, and infrastructure project headwinds in the rear view,” Stephanie Moore, an analyst with Jefferies, wrote in a note on Monday after the news of the management change.

The move has everything to do with CSX shareholders wanting BNSF Railway Co. — which is owned by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. — to make an acquisition offer to counter the merger plans that Union Pacific Corp. and Norfolk Southern Corp. unveiled at the end of July. But BNSF, which competes directly with Union Pacific in the West while Norfolk and CSX are competitors east of the Mississippi River, can’t be compelled to make an offer, nor should it be rushed.