Norfolk Southern's quarterly profits were again inflated by insurance payments related to its disastrous 2023 derailment in eastern Ohio, but even without that, the railroad's profits still grew.
The Atlanta-based railroad reported a major rebound in its results Wednesday with $750 million profit, or $3.31 per share, in the first quarter. Last year, the first quarter results of $53 million, or 23 cents per share, were held down by the $600 million class action settlement the railroad agreed to pay residents near the East Palestine derailment.
Since last year's second quarter, Norfolk Southern has been consistently collecting more in insurance payments than it was spending on the derailment cleanup and response, so its bottom line has received a boost each of the last several quarters. In the first quarter, the insurance payments boosted the railroad's net income by $141 million. Without that, it would have earned $609 million, or $2.69 per share, compared to $2.49 per share last year.
Wall Street analysts focus on ongoing operations, which strips out the insurance windfall, and by that measure the railroad beat the average estimate reported by FactSet Research by 3 cents per share.
The railroad has received close to $1 billion in insurance payments to date to help cover the roughly $2 billion it has spent since the East Palestine derailment. Chief Financial Officer Jason Zampi said he expects less than $100 million in remaining insurance payments to come in.
The railroad's revenue was essentially flat at just under $3 billion, but it was able to continue cutting expenses as part of its larger effort to get more efficient even as it dealt with roughly $35 million of winter storm related costs.
Norfolk Southern CEO Mark George said the railroad overcame disruptive winter weather during the first three months of the year to improve service and efficiency. The railroad also delivered about 1% more shipments in the quarter because consistent service is helping it win new business. Norfolk Southern's main competitor in the East, CSX railroad, posted a 1% decline in volume during the quarter as two major construction projects and the storms disrupted its network, so it appears that some shipments shifted between the two railroads.
''Our service performance is increasing our customers' confidence in Norfolk Southern and allowing us to gain share,'' George said in a statement.