Originally posted by rrshock
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I would also like to point out that 30+ years ago, intermodal traffic was a lot more high-margin to the railroads than unit grain/coal trains. They carried a high schedule risk - I can remember when the GM plant in Oklahoma City was open and if there was a shutdown car on a train that was delayed, even for a few minutes, it was really questioned by management. Intermodal traffic for UPS and FedEx also carries a high schedule risk - trains that carry intermodal traffic used to get preferred handling en route by the dispatchers (especially the old 315 Dallas UPS train). The customers pay extra for this service, which improve the margins in general.
I would think that crude oil trains would seem to be a high-risk proposition, as if you have one derailment in the right place it will cost the carrier millions and millions of dollars. If I were a railroad executive, I would be wanting to reduce my risk in that area where possible.
Based on my dated experience, a 5 or 6 percent drop does not necessarily mean that we're having a recession. It does mean the economy may be slowing, but our economy is dynamic, it slows down for awhile and then it picks back up. In addition, there may be other factors involved such as season and weather.
A prolonged 15% reduction in carloadings across the board - I would think that a recession would be coming.
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