Despite shipment decline, CSX railroad 2Q profit rises 5 percent as fuel costs stay low

CSX Corp.'s second-quarter profit improved 5 percent on lower costs, even though the number of shipments the railroad delivered declined slightly.

Shares rose as earnings beat analyst expectations, even though revenue dropped 6 percent to $3.06 billion, a steeper decline than Wall Street had expected.

Total volume at CSX Corp., which operates more than 21,000 miles of track in 23 Eastern states and two Canadian provinces, slipped 1 percent. Coal revenue fell another 15 percent to $630 million.

Crude oil shipments, which have been a growth area for railroads in recent years, increased modestly, but shipments of fracturing sand declined in the quarter, indicating reduced drilling activity.

Controlled expenses helped profit. The railroad's expenses fell 9 percent to $2.05 billion as fuel costs dropped to $263 million from last year's $416 million.

"I think management did a pretty solid job in light of the headwinds we're seeing," said Edward Jones analyst Logan Purk.

CSX officials maintained their forecast for mid-to-high single-digit earnings per share growth in 2015.

The Jacksonville, Florida-based railroad said Tuesday that it generated $553 million net income, or 56 cents per share, in the second quarter. That was up from $529 million net income, or 53 cents per share, last year.

Revenue fell to $3.06 billion from $3.24 billion.

CSX's profit beat the 53 cents per share that analysts surveyed by Zacks Investment Research were expecting, but revenue fell short of the forecast of $3.14 billion.

The railroad's shares gained $1.11, or 3.5 percent, to $33.18 in after-hours trading Tuesday.

___

Follow Josh Funk online at www.twitter.com/funkwrite