Norfolk Southern said its adjusted first-quarter profit edged lower as sharply higher fuel costs and persistent operating expenses squeezed earnings at the Atlanta-based railroad.
The carrier posted adjusted earnings of $2.65 per share for the quarter, down from $2.69 per share a year earlier. Railway operating revenue remained essentially flat at $3 billion versus the prior-year period, while railway volumes fell 1% year-on-year.
Management pointed to several factors that pressured results. Chief Executive Mark George said the company "navigated the quarter" but highlighted the effects of a "dramatic rise" in fuel prices in March, along with severe winter weather and a rapidly shifting macroeconomic environment.
Norfolk Southern’s adjusted operating ratio - the industry-standard gauge of efficiency - deteriorated by 80 basis points compared with the year-ago quarter, moving to 68.7%.
Fuel costs have climbed notably in recent weeks in the wake of U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, putting additional strain on margins for energy-intensive parts of the economy, including transportation and logistics. U.S. average gasoline prices rose above $4 a gallon in March for the first time in more than three years, registering what the company described as the steepest monthly increase in decades.
Railroads overall continue to carry elevated cost burdens as labor and maintenance spending remain high, safety-related expenditures increase and severe weather disrupts networks. Those trends have pushed operating costs higher across the sector.
Union Pacific - which completed an agreement last year to acquire Norfolk Southern in an $85 billion deal - warned separately that a surge in fuel prices sparked by the conflict in the Middle East is expected to weigh on rail margins.
A sidebar in the report asked whether investors should consider a $2,000 position in Norfolk Southern. The note described ProPicks AI, an analytical tool that evaluates NSC alongside thousands of other companies monthly using more than 100 financial metrics to identify potential risk-reward opportunities. The note cited prior selections that included Super Micro Computer (+185%) and AppLovin (+157%), but did not provide a recommendation.
Overall, the quarter’s results show steady top-line revenue but narrower operating performance as external cost pressures and weather-related disruptions eroded efficiency.