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Investing.com -- Canadian Pacific Kansas City Limited (TSX:CP) shares rose 3.4% Tuesday following a rare public rejection of industry merger pressure, with the company stating it has no intention to engage in rail consolidation. The Calgary-based railroad, the product of a 2023 union between Canadian Pacific and Kansas City Southern, cited significant risks to the North American supply chain and shippers.
The firm’s comments come as consolidation pressure intensifies within the rail sector, following Union Pacific Corporation’s (NYSE:UNP) $72 billion agreement to purchase Norfolk Southern Corporation (NYSE:NSC). That transaction would form the first coast-to-coast U.S. rail operator and has stoked investor interest in potential follow-up deals across the industry.
CPKC pushed back against this momentum, arguing that the benefits often touted from mergers can be achieved via cooperation among existing carriers. “We believe that a transcontinental merger would trigger permanent restructuring of the industry and result in a disproportionately large railway whose size and scope would require others to take action,” said Keith Creel, CPKC President and CEO.
The company emphasized that interline arrangements and strategic partnerships, such as its Southeast Mexico Express venture with CSX, offer railroads the ability to deliver service improvements without consolidation. Creel added, “This will likely result in an unnecessary wave of railway mergers that today is not the best way to support American businesses nor the public interest, and has the potential to create more issues than it solves.”
CPKC warned that additional mergers could undermine optionality for shippers and disrupt the careful balance now supporting the supply chain. Executives stressed that the current six-carrier system already provides near-seamless continental service and is better served by investment in network capacity, not restructuring.
While the company did not directly address the Union Pacific-Norfolk Southern proposal, its statement represents one of the clearest critiques of the merger trend from within the industry. The announcement also responded indirectly to calls from investors, such as Ancora Holdings, urging CPKC to explore a potential tie-up with CSX.
Shares in CPKC traded higher in both Toronto and New York following the announcement, signaling investor confidence in the standalone strategy amid broader industry upheaval. The company’s resistance comes at a moment when other players may face growing pressure to follow Union Pacific’s lead or quickly reaffirm their independence.