23 17 46 11
Deshler Ohio-crossroads of the B&O Matt eats your fries.YUM! Clinton st viaduct undefeated against too tall trucks!!!(voted to be called the "Clinton St. can opener").
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds Consultants will generally say anything you pay them to say and "prove it" with a bunch of BS numbers - kind of like lawyers.......
Carl
Railroader Emeritus (practiced railroading for 46 years--and in 2010 I finally got it right!)
CAACSCOCOM--I don't want to behave improperly, so I just won't behave at all. (SM)
James Sanchez
QUOTE: Originally posted by CSSHEGEWISCH I don't see how small farmers, who are small customers, are ever going to grow into big customers. The amount of land in Montana that is arable is finite, and you can produce only so much wheat from that land. Crop yields will not expand ad infinitum, a farmer will have good years and bad years, but there is a limit to what will be produced in a good year.
QUOTE: Originally posted by jsanchez ... that have done nothing but anger farmers, elevator operators, state legislatures, federal representatives, the public, and could fuel the case for reregulation. Reregulation would wind putting the rail industry back into the dark ages, so I hope BNSF somehow wisens up.
QUOTE: Originally posted by bobwilcox Its past time to give Montana to Alberta.
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal QUOTE: Originally posted by bobwilcox Its past time to give Montana to Alberta. At least then Montanans would have two Class I's to choose from. It's ironic you mention this, because I have always thought we should give the entire Northeast U.S. to Canada, and in exchange we'll take everything west of Ontario (Sorry, Junctionfan, I know you'd probably rather be with us, but geography is geography!) It's almost a win-win for all, we get rid of a political cancer and gain vast natural resources, they get to regulate and malevolate each other to their small stoney hearts' content.[:p]
"We have met the enemy and he is us." Pogo Possum "We have met the anemone... and he is Russ." Bucky Katt "Prediction is very difficult, especially if it's about the future." Niels Bohr, Nobel laureate in physics
QUOTE: Originally posted by CSSHEGEWISCH I normally don't step into political frays if I can help it but as far as political cancers are concerned, there are many people who feel the same about certain inhabitants of Montana and Idaho since the states seem to attract certain bigots from the extreme right.
QUOTE: Originally posted by CSSHEGEWISCH I hardly refer to Jeanette Rankin, she had the courage of her convictions. Where is she when we need her the most? I do refer to such types as the Aryan Nation, survivalists, Randy Weaver, etc.
QUOTE: Originally posted by bobwilcox ... why don't we ask farmers to face the same risks as any other business.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Cris Helt So the history of railroads vs. farmers continues to repeat itself. CN and CP stiff the farmers in Alberta, C&NW angers the farmers in Iowa, and UP overcharges the farming folk in Nebraska. Now it's BNSF's turn. Would it help if the railroad assigned enough sales reps to an area and actually have them live there so the rep could get to know the people and the way things are done in their assigned area? It's a throwback to the "good old days," and the railroad (in this case BNSF) may balk at the extra cost, but it's better than having to play phone tag with a railroad employee stationed a thousand miles away who has no idea what's going on, aside from some stats on a piece of paper.
QUOTE: Originally posted by bobwilcox If farmers can take our money through taxes, how about a government subsidy for every local Ace Hardware put out of business by Lowes or Home Depot? On the other hand why don't we ask farmers to face the same risks as any other business.
QUOTE: [i] Even so, it is sophomoric and insulting that his response to Montana farmers being gouged by BNSF is to suggest that the entire state be shipped north. If any states should be "shipped north", e.g. cast out from this nation, it should be those that have done the least for this nation.
QUOTE: Originally posted by edblysard QUOTE: [i] Even so, it is sophomoric and insulting that his response to Montana farmers being gouged by BNSF is to suggest that the entire state be shipped north. If any states should be "shipped north", e.g. cast out from this nation, it should be those that have done the least for this nation. Yeah, but who in their right mind would want Louisiana? [:D]
QUOTE: Ed writes: I personally like captive customers. It enables me to make good margins. That is the goal.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 BTW, how did you like Merging Lines? I would highly recommend the followup book Main Lines. But, I didnt understand your comment about "petty and childish behavior." Please explain.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 BTW...speaking of BP, their ROE is 20.5%, NS's is 13.6%. Easy to ***, when your supplier is making all that money, isnt it. ed
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal Note to NuclearWinter: You can edit the topic title to get rid of the "Framers" misspelling and replace it with the proper "Farmers" spelling, unless "Framers" really was your intent? Do it, if for no other reason than to make the subsequent "framers" references look just plain stupid.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 What is the USOC and NGB? Too bad about the book. Saunders did a great job with that book. It is a book that actually could have been bigger. I am hoping he is following up on a third such book. I will call him today and see if he is.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 I would be the USOC group would be a pretty political group, not unlike the diverse opinions found here.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Nuclearwinter QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal Note to NuclearWinter: You can edit the topic title to get rid of the "Framers" misspelling and replace it with the proper "Farmers" spelling, unless "Framers" really was your intent? Do it, if for no other reason than to make the subsequent "framers" references look just plain stupid. Actually I did that at 6 in the morning, my bad will change it now :)
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 Now, do me a favor. I could probably do it, but we have brilliant minds on this discussion that could do this in a fraction of the time I could. What is a typical rate (today) from Montana to a major market for a unit train of wheat? How many bushels will that unit train hold and how much per bushel will the transportation cost? What is the price for a bushel of Montana wheat (today). What has it historically been? How much was it 1 year ago, 5 years ago, 10 years ago? What is the size of an average farm in Montana (or is referred to as a ranch?). What is value of that farm (value per acre)? How does that compare to 1 year ago, 5 years ago, 10 years ago?
QUOTE: Originally posted by DaveBr Gentlemen,You have your Montana farmers trying to survive with the railroads.Have any one heard the full scoop on the Oregon farmers and the water they will be able to get? I understand it's going to be a fight between the Salmon coming upstream and the farmers trying to irrigate their land? At Klamath Falls DaveBr.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 I am very interested in the economics of the Montana wheat farmers, so I am really looking forward to your answers to the questions I posed.
QUOTE: Small farmers virtually died twenty years ago after the credit crunch in the early 1980s. They are usefull when agri-business is after a political payoff such as a subsidy from the local evil railroad.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 I simply want to know this...what does a car of wheat cost, how many bushels in a car (I despite an MBA can then do the math to determine bushel cost) and then look at the cost of wheat and figure what the transportation costs are.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 Thanks for the info. Any idea of what a typical acre of land is worth? It will be interesting to plug the numbers in and compare to farms in this area.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol Well, this is pasted from an Excel Spreadsheet, but if you place these back into EXcel and then graph these, you will see that Montana and North Dakota wheat is one the few railroad items which has increased in shipping costs under Staggers, rather than benefitted from the huge drop in cost per ton-mile enjoyed by most other rail shippers, even as the price of wheat at Great Falls has stayed below $3.50 per bushel and even as operating costs are 375% higher in 2005 than they were in 1975. National Average 0.063 0.039 0.0295 0.024 MT Cost to ship/ton-mile 0.023 0.028 0.034 0.038 Cost to ship/carload 1800 2268 2736 3066 Distance 870 870 870 870 Price of wheat 2.67 3.47 2.74 3.31 1975 1985 1995 2005 Best regards, Michael Sol
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 MP173 So a Montana acre in 2004 produced $124.55 in revenue. That acre is worth $386 per acre, so the revenue per acre/asset value per acre ratio is .32. The Illinois farm valued at $2425 produces about $350 (based on 175 bushels of corn @ $2) for a ratio of .14. The typical Montana farm generated $266,412 in revenue in 2004, much higher than I would have thought. The farm would have been valued in excess of $800,000.
QUOTE: The problem was the land was not too great, the growing season was fairly short, and the primary markets for the products were far away. Something like Montana.
QUOTE: Originally posted by jeaton The problem was the land was not too great, the growing season was fairly short, and the primary markets for the products were far away. Something like Montana.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol The wheat producers who were located the farthest from the market, offering a poorer quality wheat, got the better profit, entirely because of railroad policy.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol QUOTE: Originally posted by jeaton The problem was the land was not too great, the growing season was fairly short, and the primary markets for the products were far away. Something like Montana. During the "settlement" era, these were the statistics available and used by the railroads, MILW, GN and NP, to promote settlement in Montana. Average bushel per acre production of some Midwestern states and Montana from 1900 to 1910 (Wheat) State/ Average Bushel Production North Dakota 12.1 South Dakota 12.1 Nebraska 17.5 Kansas 14.0 Wisconsin 16.6 Minnesota 13.0 Iowa 14.0 Montana 26.3 Source: The United States Department of Agriculture, Yearbook of Agriculture, Washington: Government Printing Office, 1911, p.532. Best regards, Michael Sol
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds They evidently were trying to get people to move to Montana and start farming.
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds It's reasonable to conclude that the best land would have been brought under cultivation first so any expansion of farming would have brought the "average" yield down.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds It's reasonable to conclude that the best land would have been brought under cultivation first so any expansion of farming would have brought the "average" yield down. 1910 26.3 bushels 2004 34.5 bushels As to the average going down, keep working on your math as well. It also needs work. Best regards, Michael Sol
QUOTE: Greyhounds: If they've only increased the yeild by 8.2 (did I get that right?) bushels per acre since 1910 they must be farming some pretty poor land. The big revolution in farming has been education. Two out of three farmers I know (and I know three farmers) have degrees from the University of Illinois. One in Ag and one in Ag economics.
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds And I'm telling you, by the market valuation, by the amount of subsidies going to the farmers, and by the amount of blaming someone else so you don't have to blame yourself, Montana farm land seems to be close to nothing. 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 MichaelSol Let's see. If the average goes up 8.2%, that's the same as "going down." In other words, you had no idea what you were talking about, it was clear, so you changed the subject. It has long been clear that ag is not an industry you know anythiing about. Your math on rail cars was bad enough -- five loose cars a day will make "hot trains run late." But, this is so obviously outside your experience, I'm not sure why you insist on commenting. Actually, I've wondered that on several threads.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 I maintained back in the original thread months ago that part of the problem with Montana and Dakota wheat is the length of haul and the need to add value to their product. Both are high hurdles to jump.
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds [But again, you misrepresent the numbers - falsely calling it to be an "8.2 %" increase. Look, a 8.2 bushel per acre increase is not an "8.2 percent" increase as you claim. And yet, you criticize MY math. You use numbers without understanding the numbers. I deal with people like you every *** day. You folks cause a lot of useless trouble.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 How do you figure the Illinois farmer gets three times the subsidy as the Montana farmer? It appears your figures are based on aggregate subsidies.
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds The statistics you cited said the average acre of wheat in Montana yeilded 26.3 bushels in 1910 while the 2004 yeild was 34.5 bushels. That's a 8.2 bushel increase. That's pathetic considering the impovements in farming since 1910. It's only a 31% increase. Again, that's a pathetic increase in farm productivity since 1910.
QUOTE: Originally posted by rick bonfiglio now i can see why both kids had to go to the principals office. what a convoluted and confusing way to point out what the railroads and farmers have been doing to each other for the last 150 years (and don't criticize my math). when it's all said and done, the farmers will still suffer, and the railroad will get smaller due to public resentment. this is an old story, and i can't believe i wasted the time to read all five pages. -rrick
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal QUOTE: Originally posted by rick bonfiglio now i can see why both kids had to go to the principals office. what a convoluted and confusing way to point out what the railroads and farmers have been doing to each other for the last 150 years (and don't criticize my math). when it's all said and done, the farmers will still suffer, and the railroad will get smaller due to public resentment. this is an old story, and i can't believe i wasted the time to read all five pages. -rrick What you're missing is that until Staggers, rail rates were regulated to reflect mileage based hauls, and frankly there were more railroads to do business with. The rate differential between Montana grain shipments and Nebraska grain shipments with the same destination and same relative mileage was for all intents and purposes indistinguishable. Since Staggers, you get to the point where the captive shippers like Montana are paying double the rates of the non-captive shippers like Nebraska. So it's not an analysis of the last 150 years of acrimony between farmers and the multitude of railroads, it's the focus on the last 25 years of acrimony between suddenly captive rail shippers and the immense railroad oligarchy. It's a situation that needs to be rectified before we lose our ag and industrial base to foreign producers.
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds Ed, He's probably not gonna' like your math. Ken
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 2. As of 2003 BNSF engaged in "inverse pricing". I must assume that since the term "as recently as 2003..." that the inverse pricing is not a current issue, nor was it in 2004.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MP173 If, as you say, the Montana wheat is superior to all other wheat, it should be commanding a premium on the market, even as a commodity.
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal What you're missing is that until Staggers, rail rates were regulated to reflect mileage based hauls, and frankly there were more railroads to do business with. No they weren't. Prior to Staggers, we charged less to move a load from New Orleans to Chicago than we did to move a load from Chicago to New Orleans. The miles are obviously the same. Mileage is only one small factor in rail costs.
QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal What you're missing is that until Staggers, rail rates were regulated to reflect mileage based hauls, and frankly there were more railroads to do business with.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol Regulated tariffs show an approximately 93% or greater correlation with mileage through linear regression analysis. For a statistician, that's not a "small" factor but very close to a sole determining factor. Under deregulation, competitive rates are approximately 55-75% correlated with mileage, and non-competitive rates to captive shippers can correlate as high as 97% with mileage. Best regards, Michael Sol
QUOTE: Originally posted by Limitedclear QUOTE: Originally posted by futuremodal QUOTE: Originally posted by rick bonfiglio now i can see why both kids had to go to the principals office. what a convoluted and confusing way to point out what the railroads and farmers have been doing to each other for the last 150 years (and don't criticize my math). when it's all said and done, the farmers will still suffer, and the railroad will get smaller due to public resentment. this is an old story, and i can't believe i wasted the time to read all five pages. -rrick What you're missing is that until Staggers, rail rates were regulated to reflect mileage based hauls, and frankly there were more railroads to do business with. The rate differential between Montana grain shipments and Nebraska grain shipments with the same destination and same relative mileage was for all intents and purposes indistinguishable. Since Staggers, you get to the point where the captive shippers like Montana are paying double the rates of the non-captive shippers like Nebraska. So it's not an analysis of the last 150 years of acrimony between farmers and the multitude of railroads, it's the focus on the last 25 years of acrimony between suddenly captive rail shippers and the immense railroad oligarchy. It's a situation that needs to be rectified before we lose our ag and industrial base to foreign producers. Oh, boy, here we go again... I thought I was watching the ad for "Chicken Little" again... But, no, it's just FM with his usual, "the sky is falling" approach to railroads... Of course, in the pre-Staggers world many of the granger roads were nearly or really bankrupt. Look at the finances of the CRIP, MILW or CNW and you'll find that all were having a tough go of it. Also, the dynamics of the grain markets have changed quite a bit over the years with a large shift to western ports for exports rather than domestic use or shipments from the Gulf Ports via the river systems. Last time I checked Montana was pretty challenged in terms of water transport to any deepwater port. LC
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds The existance of a tariff rate, in itself, means nothing. If the freight wasn't moving on that rate, it's just a piece of paper. You'd have to do your correlation on rates that actually moved business, and 25 years after the fact, I'd be supprised if you can develop that data.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds The existance of a tariff rate, in itself, means nothing. If the freight wasn't moving on that rate, it's just a piece of paper. You'd have to do your correlation on rates that actually moved business, and 25 years after the fact, I'd be supprised if you can develop that data. In this instance, the data was developed in March of 1979 in preparation for ICC Hearings and most of the data for that was provided by Glenn Reynolds, Milwaukee Road's Director of Pricing. Best regards, Michael Sol
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds Which regulated tariffs? If you're going to cite a tariff, then name the tariff.
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds I know we took mileage into consideration, but it was part of a mix and it didn't govern our decisions. And we charged less to move freight north than we did south because the demand for northbound freight was less than the demand for southbound freight. Even if the miles were the same, we charged different rates.
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds I know we took mileage into consideration, but it was part of a mix and it didn't govern our decisions. And we charged less to move freight north than we did south because the demand for northbound freight was less than the demand for southbound freight. Even if the miles were the same, we charged different rates. On the way to work, I was wondering what on earth this meant. Why look at the price differential on direction, when there are hundreds of price differentials on the same mileage in the same direction, because a railroad hauls different commodities/products at different prices, even over the same distance. Direction has nothing to do with it. There are simply another set of tariffs over the same mileage. Chicago to New Orelans has/had hundreds of tariffs at different rates for the same mileage. Does that change the statistical relationship between each tariff and the mileage? Not one bit. The "standard error" is a different statistical measure than correlation (r-squared). The strength of statisitical analysis is to be able to measure a relationship that may in fact have offsets up or down for a variety of reasons, but for which a specific factor is still the controlling factor in setting a rate. Greyhounds is discussing a situation which would affect the standard error (in large samples, the standard deviation), not the correlation. The standard error has nothing, or at least little, to do with determining whether or not the rates are set by reference to mileage, only whether or not such rate differentials exist -- which is a completely different measure than correlation. Over very large data sets, a correlation can be very strong, and still have a relatively large standard error, that is, a variety of different rates over the same distance, and a multiple of such distances, all of which ultimately are set by reference to mileage, will yield a statistical analysis that shows exactly that. Which is exactly what linear regression analysis is supposed to do. Best regards, Michael Sol
QUOTE: Originally posted by MichaelSol QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds Which regulated tariffs? If you're going to cite a tariff, then name the tariff. "A" tariff could tell you just about zilch. . A credible linear regression requires as many data points as possible. Which tariff? As many as possible. In this instance, a data set of Milwaukee revenue carloadings including, from actual waybills, distance (from origin and destination) and product. Statistically, that is the relevant data. For a linear regression to assess rate/mileage correlation, rate and mileage is extracted from the data set. A citation to a specific tariff is irrelevant at that point because the linear regression doesn't care: it wants actual, real data. We requested waybill data and that's what we got. Since the purpose of the study was not to determine if Milwaukee waybills matched published tariffs, nor any reason whatsoever to suspect they didn't, there was absolutely no reason whatsoever to be looking for individual tariff numbers in a compilation of thousands of waybills no doubt including hundreds of tariffs. At that point in time, it was a safe guess that all such rates were regulated and so there was no question that every single combination of price and distance was governed by a regulated rate. For current pricing on wheat carriage, BNSF Rate Book 4022K was used. Within that rate book are subsets of unregulated and regulated rates, corresponding neatly with competitive and captive shippers. Best regards, Michael Sol
QUOTE: Originally posted by greyhounds But you're trying to extend a waybill study of Milwaukee Road traffic to the rest of the rail network, and that's dubious. 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 I know we took mileage into consideration, but it was part of a mix and it didn't govern our decisions. And we charged less to move freight north than we did south because the demand for northbound freight was less than the demand for southbound freight. Even if the miles were the same, we charged different rates. On the way to work, I was wondering what on earth this meant. Why look at the price differential on direction, when there are hundreds of price differentials on the same mileage in the same direction, because a railroad hauls different commodities/products at different prices, even over the same distance. Direction has nothing to do with it. There are simply another set of tariffs over the same mileage. Chicago to New Orelans has/had hundreds of tariffs at different rates for the same mileage. Does that change the statistical relationship between each tariff and the mileage? Not one bit. The "standard error" is a different statistical measure than correlation (r-squared). The strength of statisitical analysis is to be able to measure a relationship that may in fact have offsets up or down for a variety of reasons, but for which a specific factor is still the controlling factor in setting a rate. Greyhounds is discussing a situation which would affect the standard error (in large samples, the standard deviation), not the correlation. The standard error has nothing, or at least little, to do with determining whether or not the rates are set by reference to mileage, only whether or not such rate differentials exist -- which is a completely different measure than correlation. Over very large data sets, a correlation can be very strong, and still have a relatively large standard error, that is, a variety of different rates over the same distance, and a multiple of such distances, all of which ultimately are set by reference to mileage, will yield a statistical analysis that shows exactly that. Which is exactly what linear regression analysis is supposed to do. Best regards, Michael Sol No, I'm not. I'm talking about the fact that the northbound FAK intermodal charges on the ICG, which I put in, were significantly below the corresponding southbound FAK intermodal charges.
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 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 MP173 ...you just realize the necessity to adjust the throttle.
QUOTE: Originally posted by bobwilcox CSXT is raising pricessignificantly. The blurg from Train Orders is at http://www.trainorders.com/news/story.php?2900 BNSF, NS and UP should be following.
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 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 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 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.
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