Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd yesterday said it has agreed to buy Kansas City Southern for $25bn in a cash-and-shares deal to create the first rail network connecting the United States, Mexico, and Canada, betting on a pick-up in North American trade.
Shareholders of Kansas City Southern will receive 0.489 of a Canadian Pacific share and $90 in cash for each KCS common share held, the companies said in a joint statement.
The deal, which has an enterprise value of $29bn including debt, values Kansas City Southern at $275 per share, representing a 23% premium to Friday’s closing price of $224.16.
The transaction is the biggest M&A launched in 2021.
“The new competition we will inject into the North American transportation market cannot happen soon enough, as the new USMCA Trade Agreement among these three countries makes the efficient integration of the continent’s supply chains more important than ever before,” Canadian Pacific chief executive Keith Creel said in the statement.
“This will create the first US-Mexico-Canada railroad.”
The new and modernised US-Mexico-Canada trade pact took effect in July last year, replacing the earlier deal that lasted 26 years, and is expected to further foster manufacturing and agriculture trade activities among the three countries.
Kansas City Southern’s board has approved the bid and the two companies have notified the US Surface Transportation Board to seek the agency’s required approval.
Canadian railroad operators’ attempts to buy US rail companies have met limited success because of antitrust concerns.
Creel will continue to serve as CEO of the combined company, which will be headquartered in Calgary, the statement said.
The deal comes amid expectations of a pick-up in US-Mexico trade after Joe Biden replaced Donald Trump as US president.
The companies also highlighted the environmental benefits of the deal, saying the new single-line routes that would be created by the combination are expected to shift trucks off crowded US highways, and cut emissions.
Rail is four times more fuel efficient than trucking, and one train can keep more than 300 trucks off public roads and produce 75% less greenhouse gas emissions, the companies said in a joint statement.
Shareholders in Kansas City Southern are expected to own 25% of Canadian Pacific’s outstanding common shares after the deal, the companies said.
Canadian Pacific said it will issue 44.5mn new shares and raise about $8.6bn in debt to fund the transaction.
The Financial Times first reported on the deal.
Calgary-based Canadian Pacific is Canada’s No 2 railroad operator, behind Canadian National Railway Co Ltd, with a market value of $50.6bn.
It owns and operates a transcontinental freight railway in Canada and the United States.
Grain haulage is the company’s biggest revenue driver, accounting for about 58% of bulk revenue and about 24% of total freight revenue in 2020.
Kansas City Southern has domestic and international rail operations in North America, focused on the north-south freight corridor connecting commercial and industrial markets in the central United States with industrial cities in Mexico.
Canadian Pacific’s latest attempt to expand its US business comes after it dropped a hostile $28.4bn bid for Norfolk Southern Corp in April 2016.
Canadian Pacific’s merger talks with CSX Corp, which owns a large network across the eastern United States, failed in 2014.
A bid by Canadian National Railway Co, the country’s biggest railroad, to buy Warren Buffett-owned Burlington Northern Santa Fe was blocked by US antitrust authorities in 1999-2000.
BMO Capital Markets and Goldman Sachs & Co LLC are serving as financial advisers to Canadian Pacific, while BofA Securities and Morgan Stanley & Co LLC are serving as financial advisers to Kansas City Southern.
A Canadian Pacific Railway engine sits in a railyard in Port Coquitlam, British Columbia, Canada. Canadian Pacific’s latest attempt to expand its US business comes after it dropped a hostile $28.4bn bid for Norfolk Southern Corp in April 2016.