CSX Revenue Falls 12% as Coal Shipments Continue to Slip
14 Jul 2016
CSX Corp. said Wednesday that revenue for its second quarter fell 12% as falling coal shipments—a key business for freight lines—continued to pressure the railroad operator.
Shares of CSX, though, rose 4.4% to $28.21 on Wednesday as the company’s earnings topped expectations. The stock is up 9% for the year.
The Jacksonville, Fla., company released its earnings report more than an hour earlier than expected to correct “information released via Twitter earlier today.”
A spokeswoman for CSX said in an email message that the posting, which went up on the social media site at about 2 p.m. ET, was removed “immediately.” She didn’t specify what the message said but added that CSX officials moved ahead with an early release of their earnings report to provide “investors the correct information as quickly as possible.”
CSX has struggled over the past two years as sagging demand for coal, amid plunging energy prices and a strong U.S. dollar, has cut into rail traffic.
For the latest quarter, coal volume for CSX was down 30%. The company has said it expects the market to remain challenging, with coal volumes down about 25% for the year.
“The environment that we see is really typified by low natural-gas prices, low commodity prices and a strong U.S. dollar, and we expect those to continue even though we had seen some small moderation in those in the past few weeks,” CSX Chief Financial Officer Frank Lonegro said in May at an industry conference, according to a FactSet transcript.
On Wednesday, CSX said it expects 2016 full-year earnings per share to decline. The company, though, didn’t provide a specific forecast.
SOurce: WSJ.com