QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds The Milwaukee was a basket case that went broke. Extending their pricing strategy to the rest of the world through assumption is quite a stretch. ICC Chairman Daniel K. O'Neal testified to the US Senate in January, 1978 that there were four railroad "basket cases," the Rock Island, the Illinois Central Gulf, The Milwaukee Road and the North Western, but that the other railroads were not far behind. When Milwaukee petitioned for bankruptcy, it had something like $10 million cash on hand and $38 million accoounts payable. When Stanley Hillman left ICG, it had 0 in the cash drawer and $100 million in accounts payable outstanding. Interestingly, as of December, 1977, the Milwaukee Road was not technically bankrupt, and ICG technically was. Best regards, Michael Sol
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds The Milwaukee was a basket case that went broke. Extending their pricing strategy to the rest of the world through assumption is quite a stretch.
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds The Milwaukee was a basket case that went broke. Extending their pricing strategy to the rest of the world through assumption is quite a stretch. ICC Chairman Daniel K. O'Neal testified to the US Senate in January, 1978 that there were four railroad "basket cases," the Rock Island, the Illinois Central Gulf, The Milwaukee Road and the North Western, but that the other railroads were not far behind. When Milwaukee petitioned for bankruptcy, it had something like $10 million cash on hand and $38 million accoounts payable. When Stanley Hillman left ICG, it had 0 in the cash drawer and $100 million in accounts payable outstanding. Interestingly, as of December, 1977, the Milwaukee Road was not technically bankrupt, and ICG technically was. Best regards, Michael Sol Well, my paychecks were good. Neat trick with zero cash. I think you may have made another "typo". Being bankrupt is a legal condition, not a financial condition. You're not bankrupt until a judge says you're bankrupt. You might be insolvent, might not be able to pay your bills, bt you can't be bankrupt until "The Man" says so. As I said, the ICG never missed a payroll and never went to bankruptcy court. So I guess "technically" we were a going concern. Boy we fought it hard. We ran what I considered to be the best intermodal operation in the country. We went head to head with truckers between Chicago and St. Louis. Our longest realistic haul was 900 miles - and there wasn't much of that. But we never missed a payroll and, unlike the Milwaukee Road, we never tucked our tails between our legs and went to court for protection from our creditors.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 Mileage may be the determining factor for a "rate", but the determining the final "cost" will almost always be based on demand and supply. Well, these economic platitudes are starting to wear a little thin. Demand is the greatest where? Supply is the most constricted where? And the rates are the lowest on those corridors, not the highest. QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 ...you just realize the necessity to adjust the throttle. So this explains why rates are lowest where demand is the highest? Well, that is exactly what you are saying. And rates are highest where demand is the lowest because of supply and demand? I have long been puzzled by these frequent simplistic references to "laws" of supply and demand, because they have made just about zero sense in this context. The discussion has been about captive and non-captive shippers. The economic fact of life is that supply and demand has nothing to do with it; it is a matter of market share pricing, rather than cost pricing, which leads to plummeting margins for most traffic, especially where demand is the greatest and capacity supply the lowest which is exactly why the railroads are struggling with excessive demand and inadedquate supply -- because they keep lowering the price, not raising it. Except to certain parts of the system where, ironically, there is little congestion and seemingly, lots of supply of train and track capacity. It does not take an MBA to see that the platitude and the reality are two different things. Best regards, Michael Sol
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 Mileage may be the determining factor for a "rate", but the determining the final "cost" will almost always be based on demand and supply.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 ...you just realize the necessity to adjust the throttle.
QUOTE: Originally posted by samfp1943 QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal Yep, just post something about railroad rate gouging, and the ilks will slither up from the cesspool of arrogant idiocy. Sounds like it must be ilk hunting season in montana, do they use stamps or tags? Is ilk hunting with howitzers permitted?
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal Yep, just post something about railroad rate gouging, and the ilks will slither up from the cesspool of arrogant idiocy.
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds Well, this one goes in my book, along with his contention that The Railroad (Milwaukee Road) went broke because it had too much business. So, supply and demand has nothing to do with prices. You could get the Nobel Prize in Economics if you could actually show that.
QUOTE: I think you may have made another "typo". Being bankrupt is a legal condition, not a financial condition. You're not bankrupt until a judge says you're bankrupt.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 Supply and demand is quite simple in the case of Montana. There is a demand for transportation services (grain) and very little supply (rail service). Perhaps I put it into too simple of terms to understand, but when there is an abundance of competition (supply of services) the prices will find equilibrium by falling. Happens all the time.
QUOTE: I would like an explanation, tho on the difference between regulated and unregulated business.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 Supply and demand is quite simple in the case of Montana. There is a demand for transportation services (grain) and very little supply (rail service). Perhaps I put it into too simple of terms to understand, but when there is an abundance of competition (supply of services) the prices will find equilibrium by falling. Happens all the time. "Supply" and "competition", for good reasons, are not the same word. QUOTE: I would like an explanation, tho on the difference between regulated and unregulated business. Well, this is getting ridiculous. The definition you offer makes no allowance for regulated rates prior to Staggers, and argues that the process of rate making is exactly the same as post-Staggers. A statistical analysis shows a considerable difference in the effect of mileage on the rate under regulation as compared to deregulation. Why that might have become a controversial observation to a couple of individuals is a mystery I care little about since the facts speak for themselves. However, since you define the process of rate-making as independent of regulation, there is no point in continuing the conversation. I have no reason based on other exchanges to think you actually believe that, but since you are now offering the idea that rate deregulation had no effect on how rates are actually set, the topic need not include me any more, since I have nothing to offer on that unusual premise. Best regards, Michael Sol
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds The Milwaukee was a basket case that went broke. Extending their pricing strategy to the rest of the world through assumption is quite a stretch. ICC Chairman Daniel K. O'Neal testified to the US Senate in January, 1978 that there were four railroad "basket cases," the Rock Island, the Illinois Central Gulf, The Milwaukee Road and the North Western, but that the other railroads were not far behind. When Milwaukee petitioned for bankruptcy, it had something like $10 million cash on hand and $38 million accoounts payable. When Stanley Hillman left ICG, it had 0 in the cash drawer and $100 million in accounts payable outstanding. Interestingly, as of December, 1977, the Milwaukee Road was not technically bankrupt, and ICG technically was. Best regards, Michael Sol Well, my paychecks were good. Neat trick with zero cash. ... You might be insolvent, might not be able to pay your bills, but you can't be bankrupt until "The Man" says so. As I said, the ICG never missed a payroll and never went to bankruptcy court. So I guess "technically" we were a going concern. ... But we never missed a payroll and, unlike the Milwaukee Road, we never tucked our tails between our legs and went to court for protection from our creditors.
QUOTE: QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds And I'm telling you, .... by the amount of subsidies going to the farmers, and by the amount of blaming someone else .... From what I've read here, the BNSF could haul that wheat for free and those farmers would still need to take confiscated money (a subsidy) from the rest of us.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 I have always maintained that if I were negotiating the Montana wheat rates (for the farmers), I would use a method of tying that freight into a much larger pool of traffic. Large agricultural concerns such as Cargil, ADM, etc possibly have, or should have much favorable rates, based on mileage. Darn, I wish I had gotten my MBA! ed
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol Milwaukee Road total Federal Government transfers, 1977-1984: $102,951,000. Illinois Central Gulf total Federal Government transfers 1977-1987: $198,145,000. ICG received 192% more direct federal subsidy than Milwaukee Road.
QUOTE: Yup.
Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.