Chattanooga Times Free Press

Activist investor firm’s bid to take over Norfolk Southern gains steam

- BY KELLY YAMANOUCHI THE ATLANTA JOURNALCON­STITUTION (TNS)

An activist investor campaign to gain control of Atlanta-based Norfolk Southern has won some support from unions and others as a crucial Thursday shareholde­rvote approaches.

Ancora Holdings Group, the activist investor firm, wants to replace a majority of Norfolk Southern’s board members and its CEO, Alan Shaw. Ancora also wants former UPS executive Jim Barber as the CEO of the Atlantabas­ed railroad, and wants to install a former CSX executive as chief operating officer.

On Thursday, shareholde­rs will decide the fate of Norfolk Southern’s leadership at the company’s virtual annual meeting.

Since the February 2023 fiery derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, of a Norfolk Southern train carrying hazardous materials, the railroad has been beleaguere­d by public criticism and well over $1 billion in charges related to the wreck. Last month, the company reported a steep decline in first quarter profit, after tallying hundreds of millions of dollars of expenses in the fallout from the derailment.

Norfolk Southern management and Ancora and its allies have bombarded investors and analysts with last minute appeals for support, turning it into a sort of corporate version of a presidenti­al campaign. And like an unpredicta­ble election season, there’s already been an October surprise.

A major union that represents some of Norfolk Southern’s workforce, the Brotherhoo­d of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen (BLET) division of the Teamsters union, has switched allegiance­from management to Ancora.

In February, after Ohiobased Ancora launched its takeover bid, BLET’s general chairs called Ancora’s proposal “reckless,” “bad for investors” and “likely to lead to more train wrecks.”

But in late April, Ancora announced it had won the support of BLET, along with the Brotherhoo­d of Maintenanc­e of Way Employees Division of the Teamsters. Together, the two labor groups make up about half of the unionized workers at Norfolk Southern, according to Ancora.

Norfolk Southern had roughly 20,000 employees, and about 80% of them are unionized.

Another major union at Norfolk Southern, the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transporta­tion Workers Transporta­tion Division (SMART-TD), is opposed to a takeover by Ancora and accused BLET of “deciding to buy in with a hedge fund.”

SMART-TD contends the BLET union, by reaching a memorandum of understand­ing with Ancora to get better work rules, severance, representa­tion on committees and other terms, “decided to sell out to catch up.”

The AFL-CIO has also urged Norfolk Southern shareholde­rs to reject Ancora’s takeover, which it said could derail safety and service improvemen­ts underway.

‘DOWN TO THE STUDS’

The support of some, but not all, unions at Norfolk Southern comes after Jamie Boychuk, the former CSX executive who Ancora wants to install as COO of Norfolk Southern, said during a town hall for shareholde­rs: “Norfolk Southern has good bones, structure. It just needs to be stripped down to the studs and we need to rebuild this thing.”

A major Norfolk Southern customer, steelmaker Cleveland-Cliffs, has also announced support for Ancora. Other customers have voiced support of Shaw and current management.

While unions and customers of Norfolk Southern are not necessaril­y shareholde­rs that vote on the matter, Jason Seidl, an analyst with investment bank TD Cowen, wrote in a note to investors that their support of Ancora “has the potential to influence the shareholde­r vote.”

Norfolk Southern has mounted a vigorous defense and rolled out some of its own reforms, including the replacemen­t of its chief operating officer with John Orr, who was Canadian Pacific Kansas City’s (CPKC) chief transforma­tion officer.

The appointmen­t of Orr as COO cost Norfolk Southern $35 million, a recent filing said. That includes $25 million Norfolk Southern previously said it had agreed to pay CPKC for a waiver of Orr’s noncompete provisions and other “financial and commercial considerat­ions.”

The company is also on a path to reduce its total head count by 2% by the end of the year.

Beyond the unions and investment community, others have spoken out. In published remarks last week, the retiring chair of the Surface Transporta­tion Board, the economic regulator of the railroads, warned of “serious concerns” about Ancora’s plans.

“There is little doubt in my mind that if Ancora succeeds in taking control of NS and strips it down as it promises, service will suffer a significan­t deteriorat­ion,” said Martin Oberman, who is stepping down from his role later this month.

In recent days, shareholde­r advisory firms have lent their support to at least some of Ancora’s proposed board members.

Advisory firm Egan-Jones recommende­d that shareholde­rs vote for all seven of Ancora’s board nominees, saying the East Palestine tragedy and other derailment­s “demonstrat­e the lack of adequate operationa­l plans for emergency operations that led to value destructio­n and loss of public confidence and trust.”

Glass Lewis, another shareholde­r advisory group, said “Ancora has publicly laid out a fairly detailed, three-year plan” focused on precision scheduled railroadin­g principles, to cut costs and increase efficiency, improve safety and service. It said “Ancora has presented a compelling case for supporting a substantia­l overhaul” of Norfolk Southern’s leadership, and supported six of Ancora’s seven nominees to the 13-member board.

 ?? MIGUEL MARTINEZ/THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON/TNS ?? The Norfolk Southern logo is displayed April 4 at the company’s headquarte­rs in Atlanta.
MIGUEL MARTINEZ/THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON/TNS The Norfolk Southern logo is displayed April 4 at the company’s headquarte­rs in Atlanta.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States