Daniel Loeb's Third Point LLC reduced combined exposure to Norfolk Southern and Union Pacific by approximately $147 million in the first quarter, according to the firm's 13F filing disclosed this week. The hedge fund cut its Norfolk Southern position by roughly 60% and trimmed Union Pacific by nearly 40%, marking one of the sharper sector-specific reductions in Third Point's $4.2 billion equity portfolio.
The Norfolk Southern stake fell to 1.1 million shares from 2.8 million at year-end, while Union Pacific dropped to 780,000 shares from 1.3 million. At quarter-end prices, the combined positions represented less than 3.5% of Third Point's disclosed long book, down from nearly 7% three months prior. Loeb's firm entered both names in mid-2023, riding optimism around precision scheduled railroading implementations and recovering intermodal volumes post-pandemic. The timing of the exit is notable: Norfolk Southern shares traded near $245 when Third Point began selling in January, before the East Palestine derailment anniversary pressures and slowing industrial shipment data pushed the stock toward $220 by March.
The reduction carries weight beyond position sizing. Rails have served as a bellwether for domestic manufacturing sentiment and cross-border trade flows, particularly as Mexico nearshoring themes gained traction through 2023. Third Point's retreat suggests diminished conviction in 2024-2025 volume forecasts, especially as carload data from the Association of American Railroads showed flat to negative growth in chemicals, metals, and automotive shipments during Q1. Union Pacific's management recently guided toward mid-single-digit revenue growth for the year, a deceleration from prior quarters, while Norfolk Southern faces ongoing operational disruptions and $600 million in East Palestine-related costs. Loeb's willingness to exit during what should be a seasonally strong period for freight—March through May typically sees agricultural and construction material upticks—implies skepticism about the second-half recovery narrative that sell-side analysts have broadly endorsed.
Allocators should monitor June carload reports from AAR for confirmation of volume weakness, particularly in intermodal conversions where trucking alternatives remain price-competitive due to softer diesel costs. Norfolk Southern's July 24 earnings call will provide updated guidance on operational efficiency metrics and whether the company maintains its mid-60s operating ratio target for year-end. Union Pacific reports July 18, where commentary on Mexican cross-border traffic and inventory destocking in key chemical corridors will clarify whether industrial demand has genuinely bottomed. The Surface Transportation Board's pending review of rail merger guidelines, expected in Q3, adds regulatory overhang that could compress multiples further if consolidation paths narrow.
Third Point's rail reduction follows a pattern: Loeb tends to exit cyclical industrials six to nine months before consensus downgrades catch up, as seen in his 2019 departure from select industrial stocks ahead of the pre-pandemic manufacturing slowdown. The $147 million in proceeds likely rotated into technology and consumer defensive names, where Third Point added $320 million in new positions during the same quarter, per the filing.