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CP rail strike, unions and mgmnt

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    CP rail strike, unions and mgmnt

    I find it unbelievable in a fragile economy that someone would go on strike instead of working.

    What's even more confusing is how the management of this company that know full well when a contract is up, that they can't solve the problem before it comes to affecting the company's bottom line. Some negotiator they are, eh?

    I always wonder what it would be like to run a company and watch a bunch of incompetent ****heads botch a bunch of liquid lunches (negotiations) to keep the company running smoothly.

    The aftermath is that CP is now behind on deliveries, as if they were ever ahead, and won't catch up for weeks. Then the union says it has fatigue issues, no shit sherlock.

    The blame goes to both the union and the company for being complete incompetent ****heads.

    There are millions out of work in the states, that I am sure would love to move to Canada for a well paying job riding the rails and negotiating contracts.

    Replace them all.

    #2
    Ya Warren Buffet and Bill Gates love their
    railway co stocks. These boys can't afford to pay
    a decent wage. Hey let's get temporary foreign
    workers in do the job for super cheap! Let the big
    rich corporations decide the wage. You know just
    like caterpillar did with the locomotive plant in
    Ontario. Walk in buy the plant, demand everyone
    takes a 50 % pay cut. This while cat's profits are
    astronomical.

    Interesting how the oil companies in Fort Mac are
    75% foreign owned and want to build I pipeline
    all the way to the southern states but the
    government can't afford a proper divided highway
    into the place. Ya they fund our health care
    system but that highway to the oil is pathetic.

    Comment


      #3
      There was a hostile takeover via proxy vote and a guy
      named bill ackerman of pershing asset management
      ,a us hedge fund,went in and cleaned house.,fired the
      ceo and a bunch of other directors.

      They want major concessions in wages and pensions
      and work rules.This may get ugly imo because they
      are trying to take away things employees already
      have.

      Comment


        #4
        Read paper somewhere. Investor or
        shareholders want raise grain freight so
        they can raise dividend or shares. Fire
        them all shareholders or investors. If
        strike that okay. Can alway blame
        shareholders or investors

        Comment


          #5
          It pisses me off that people don't automatically get a cost of living increase and that's it. If the cost of living increase is 2.8% then that is what they get at the start of every year, period.

          Comment


            #6
            But CP officials claim their contract offer presented to the union is “fair and reasonable.” The Class I, which contributed about $1.9 billion of solvency deficit contributions to its pension plan over the past three years, requires changes to legacy pension and post-retirement benefits to make them industry-comparable, CP officials said in a prepared statement. Some proposed amendments would provide a guaranteed pension payment that is a multiple of average Canadian industrial pension payment and would exceed what the TCRC already has agreed to for the majority of its members at another major Canadian railway, they said.


            solvency deficit contributions ??????
            1.9 billion over 3 years for 4800 workers is a total of 395,833 per worker. Need more info

            Comment


              #7
              The strike comes at a difficult time for CP, whose chief executive and chairman quit 11 days ago after losing a boardroom dust-up with the company's largest shareholder.

              The shareholder, Pershing Square Capital Management, has vowed to improve CP's operating performance, which is the weakest in the industry.


              So Pershing Square Capital Management is telling CP how to run their business.

              Comment


                #8
                On October 28, 2011, in a 13D regulatory filing, Pershing Square Capital indicated it owned 12.2% of Canadian Pacific Railway, one of the two major Canadian railways.[10][10] Pershing Square began acquiring Canadian Pacific shares last year and in October announced that it held a 12.2 percent stake, which eventually increased to 14.2 percent, making Pershing the railway’s largest shareholder. At a meeting with the company that month, Ackman proposed replacing Fred Green as chief executive. Just hours before the railway’s annual meeting on Thursday, May 17, 2012, Green and four other board members unexpectedly resigned, giving effective control of the company to PSCM. The new board is dominated by Ackman’s appointees.

                Comment


                  #9
                  What do you think Cotton, is CP investment material today???

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Its a reasonable sector to invest in long
                    term,imo,looks like a correction should happen
                    someday,has moved quite a distance in a short
                    time,basically a monopoly that can control its rates
                    no matter what,unless its union can kill it,which
                    doesn't look likely with the full force of the canadian
                    government coming down on them.

                    Lots of rich people in the world probably called
                    harper and said end this now.

                    What we as farmers should have been doing is buying
                    shares for the past 100 years and voting as a
                    collective pool to keep us from getting bent over.We
                    are going to face horrible increases in shipping costs.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Ackman runs Pershing Square as an "activist" hedge fund, meaning he invests in very few companies and plans to "actively" change them from the inside, by getting a seat or seats on the company's board of directors

                      Seems this is what he does and is good at it. So things should get interesting.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        I suppose Ackman is not good at everything.

                        Pershing Square IV was established to bet solely on the rise of the stock of Target Corporation. The fund fell nearly 90% in 2008 and Ackman apologized for the losses.[8] The fund subsequently rebounded. Ackman claimed in a February 2009 letter to investors, “Bottom line, PSIV has been one of the greatest disappointments of my career to date

                        His stock fell 90 percent but Target only dropped just over 50 percent. Thinking he pocketted some cash somewhere. I cannot find Pershing Square iv today. Or Pershing Square on the stock market.

                        Comment

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