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CSX Attracts New CEO and Stock Price Rises Sharply

In 2017, CSX Corporation, a leading railroad company, paid or committed to pay (subject to certain conditions) over $200 million (including grant-date value of a stock option discussed below) to attract E. Hunter Harrison as its new chief executive officer.

On Jan. 18, 2017, Canadian Pacific Railway Limited announced that Harrison was resigning as its CEO. The Wall Street Journal reported (after regular trading hours ended) that Harrison, who is age 72, was "joining with an activist investor in an attempt to shake up management at rival railroad CSX Corp. They are expected to try to put Harrison in a senior management position at CSX ."1 The following day, January 19, the price of CSX shares on the Nasdaq Stock Market jumped approximately $8 billion to $42 billion an increase of 23 percent from $34 billion. As of June 30, CSX's stock market value had increased over $16 billion to $50 billion, an increase of 47 percent, since the day before the public announcement.

Harrison, before becoming employed by CSX as its CEO on March 6, had compiled an extraordinary record in leading three major companies in the railroad industry: Illinois Central Railroad Co., Canadian National Railway Company and Canadian Pacific Railway Limited. In each case he applied what is described as "precision railroading" or "precision scheduled railroading." "Precision railroading" includes, among other things, keeping trains running as close to schedule as possible and making major reductions in "down-time" of rail equipment. Table 1 (below), based on a presentation to shareholders of CSX by the activist investor involved, Mantle Ridge LP, shows the reduction in operating costs as a ratio of operating revenues over the periods of time that Harrison served as an executive of the three railroads noted.2

During the same periods of time, the following chart, also based on the Mantle Ridge presentation, shows the total shareholder return for each of the three companies, as follows in Table 2.

Mantle Ridge was instrumental in Harrison's move from Canadian Pacific to CSX. Mantle Ridge was founded by Paul C. Hilal who had been a partner of William A. Ackman at another hedge fund, Pershing Square Capital Management, L.P. In late 2011 Pershing Square acquired a 14 percent stake in the shares of Canadian Pacific and led a proxy fight against Canadian Pacific that was started in January 2012 and settled in May 2012, resulting in, among other things, Pershing Square getting its seven director nominees on the Board on May 17, 2012 and getting its CEO-pick, Harrison, the CEO role on June 28, 2012. History repeated itself in 2017 as Mantle Ridge became an activist shareholder in CSX and Harrison became the CEO of CSX.