Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd. Enters the Churchill Rail Line Fray: Is This a Wise Move?

Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd. (TSX:FFH) has made a bold offer for the Churchill rail line. Will anything become of it? Is it a good financial deal? Here’s what we know.

| More on:

As if there weren’t already enough voices in the Churchill, Manitoba, rail-line dispute, a new player has entered the fray: Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd. (TSX:FFH). Fairfax has offered to join other potential buyers in a pitch to buy the beleaguered rail from Omnitrax, Inc., a private rail company based out of Denver, Colorado. Is Fairfax’s plan a brilliant move or simple folly? Let’s look at the details.

The history

Churchill, Manitoba, the tiny port town positioned on Hudson’s Bay, has been the centre of a dispute between Omnitrax and the Canadian government since a flood in the spring of 2017 washed out the rail line between Gillam and Churchill. The road ends in Gillam, so rail is the only ground transport into Churchill. You don’t need all of the details in a financial article, but Omnitrax and the federal government have spent months arguing over who is in charge of paying for the repairs. In the meantime, Churchill residents have seen soaring food prices and reduced tourism, and they would really just like anyone to fix the problem.

Omnitrax says it can’t afford the repairs and lays much of the blame on the federal government’s dismantling of the Canadian Wheat Board (CWB) in 2015, saying most of the grain shipments Omnitrax used to carry moved to other rail lines and locales.

Fairfax’s potential involvement

We’ve talked about Fairfax quite a bit here at the Motley Fool. It’s a holding company involved in insurance, reinsurance, and investment management.

On November 17, the company offered to partner with Missinippi Rail (a First Nations consortium) and One North (a group of northern Manitoba communities) in a purchase of the rail line. This is just a preliminary offer. No specifics have been settled on, and the group has not yet approached Omnitrax.

Would this be a good deal? Financially, it’s hard to say. Is Omnitrax’s inability to keep the rail line profitable really caused by outside sources such as the CWB changes or by its own mismanagement? If it’s the outside sources, how will a new group make the operation, which includes ownership of the Port of Churchill, profitable? Global warming might benefit the port, since goods can only be moved through it and Hudson’s Bay a few months out of the year. Increased temperatures might open this window more, but it could also cause more flooding issues on the rail line.

Maybe Fairfax believes taking over the line and restoring ground transport to Churchill is simply the right thing to do. It would provide publicity and goodwill for Fairfax, but that won’t necessarily translate into money earned. Fairfax has experienced its own problems recently with large insurance payouts in the wake of multiple hurricanes this fall, but it seems to be holding its own. And this plan may be a bold move into new territory.

Bottom line

We will have to wait and see if this offer moves into anything concrete and how Omnitrax’s dispute with the government pans out. It’s too early to say if this would be a good move for Fairfax, because we just don’t have enough details. Keep your eyes on the news if you are a Fairfax investor. We will know soon enough if this is a real deal.

Fool contributor Susan Portelance has no position in any stocks mentioned. Fairfax is a recommendation of Stock Advisor Canada.

More on Investing

Pile of Canadian dollar bills in various denominations
Stocks for Beginners

2 Canadian Stocks That Could Win if Rates Stay Put

If rates stay put, these two TSX stocks could look more attractive as investors favour predictable planning and cash-flow-backed growth.

Read more »

Two seniors walk in the forest
Dividend Stocks

2 High-Yield Dividend Stocks That Could Be Safer Picks for Canadian Retirees

Given their resilient business model, visible growth prospects, and high dividend yields, these two dividend stocks offer attractive buying opportunities…

Read more »

Hourglass and stock price chart
Tech Stocks

3 Stocks Every Long-Term Canadian Investor Should Consider

Here's why Constellation Software (TSX:CSU) stock, Waste Connections (WCN) stock, and another growth stock to buy should belong in your…

Read more »

The sun sets behind a power source
Dividend Stocks

What to Know About Canadian Utility Stocks in 2026

Canadian utility stocks like Canadian Utilities and Emera offer stability, dividends, and steady growth. Here’s what investors should know in…

Read more »

Person holding a smartphone with a stock chart on screen
Dividend Stocks

A Canadian Dividend Pick Down 22%: A Forever Hold

Telus is a Canadian dividend stock down 22% over the past year that long-term investors still view as a forever…

Read more »

Investor reading the newspaper
Metals and Mining Stocks

1 Cheap Canadian Stock Down 46% to Buy and Hold

Santacruz Silver Mining stock is down 46% from its 52-week high. Here is why this cheap Canadian silver miner could…

Read more »

Concept of rent, search, purchase real estate, REIT
Investing

This Practically Perfect 4% REIT Pays Monthly

Killam Apartment REIT (TSX:KMP.UN) has a 4% yield paid out monthly.

Read more »

Forklift in a warehouse
Dividend Stocks

2 TSX Stocks That Could Outperform in a Slower-Growth Market

Slow-growth markets can still reward patient investors, especially with income stocks backed by real assets like warehouses and iron ore.

Read more »