Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd. is moving away from a proxy fight for Norfolk Southern Corp. but still plans to pursue a takeover from the U.S. carrier, a person familiar with the plan said.
Canada’s second-largest railroad likely won’t present an alternative slate of directors at Norfolk Southern’s annual meeting, said the individual, who asked to not be identified since the deliberations haven’t been made public. Instead, Canadian Pacific will most likely request a nonbinding resolution on the ballot which would ask the Norfolk Southern board to start talks, the individual said Tuesday.
Canadian Pacific Ceo Hunter Harrison is due to speak at an investor conference in Coral Gables, Florida, on Wednesday afternoon, and may make a comment regarding Norfolk Southern then, the person said. Representatives for Norfolk Southern and Canadian Pacific declined to discuss the plans, which were reported earlier by Dow Jones.
Acquiring Norfolk Southern would allow Harrison to create a coast-to-coast railroad that eliminates rail-car exchanges between your carriers and would enable him to apply his efficiency expertise to Norfolk Southern, which lags behind other large carriers in key service measures. Norfolk Southern’s board has rejected proposals from Canadian Pacific – including one in mid-December that was worth about $27 billion.