FreightCar America To Close Barton Plant And Move Operations To Mexico

by Staff
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BARTON-On Thursday, September 10 FreightCar America announced it will close it’s manufacturing facility in Barton and move their Barton operation to Mexico. According to FreightCar America the majority of layoffs at the Barton plant will take place in December.  The company attributes the move from Barton to Mexico to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Here is the press release from FreightCar America:

“FreightCar America, Inc. (NASDAQ: RAIL) (“FreightCar America” or the “Company”) today announced additional steps in its manufacturing and operational realignment as it plans to acquire its partner’s 50% interest in the joint venture in Castaños, Mexico and consolidate all of its production there by January. As part of this decision, the Company has started the process to permanently close its manufacturing facility in Cherokee, Alabama (“Shoals”).

Highlights:

  • Aggressive footprint consolidation will establish a much more flexible business structure, allowing the Company to realign costs to the near-term demand environment.
  • Company has initiated the process to permanently close the Shoals manufacturing facility with production to cease by approximately year-end.
  • The state-of-the-art Castaños, Mexico facility is scalable over time and will be able to accommodate significantly greater volume when industry conditions improve.
  • When completed, the Company expects to save more than $20 million in annual fixed costs, and further lower its production breakeven to less than 2,000 cars per annum.
  • The Company has signed a letter of intent and is engaged in negotiations to acquire the remaining 50% ownership in the Castaños, Mexico joint venture, and intends to complete the transaction later this year.

Shoals Facility Closure

The closure of the Shoals manufacturing facility will further align costs and manufacturing capacity with the current realities of depressed railcar demand, which have been magnified by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Additionally, the closure of Shoals will accelerate the Company’s goal to achieve profitability on significantly lower railcar volumes. The Company will continue to produce railcars at Shoals through approximately the end of 2020, with the full closure expected by the end of the first quarter of 2021.

Jim Meyer, President and Chief Executive Officer of FreightCar America said, “Today we have announced the difficult, but necessary, decision to exit our Shoals manufacturing facility by early 2021. As part of our ‘Back-to-Basics’ multi-year plan, we have taken significant cost out of our business, while making significant investments in our products, people and processes.  The efforts of our Shoals’ team helped us to reduce our breakeven production levels by roughly one-third since the start of the plan.  However, the ongoing impact of the industry downturn has been further intensified by the COVID-19 pandemic and required an additional and significant response to both protect our franchise and reposition the business for immediate success post-downturn.”

Castaños, Mexico Joint Venture

In September 2019, the Company announced the formation of a 50-50 joint venture with Fabricaciones y Servicios de México, S.A. de C.V. (“Fasemex”), to manufacture new railcars and convert existing railcars at a new facility in Castaños, Mexico. This facility recently started production of its first order and is working to achieve AAR certification this fall. A second production line is expected to be operational by year-end and additional lines will be added as market conditions improve. Each production line has capacity of approximately 1,000 railcars per year. The Company is now engaged in negotiations to acquire Fasemex’s interest in the joint venture under a letter of intent and expects to complete the acquisition later this year.

Meyer commented, “The Castaños plant is the newest purpose-built railcar manufacturing facility in Mexico and we have the ability to increase its scale as market demand rebounds. It is roughly one-fifth the size of Shoals and will lower our fixed costs by approximately $20 million per year. The consolidation will significantly reduce our breakeven production levels, from 6,000 railcars before our ‘Back-to-Basics’ plan was started, to under 2,000 railcars per year once the new plant is fully operational. To date, we have hired a very experienced workforce at Castaños, have started production on the first line and are preparing for certification.”

Balance Sheet, Capital Considerations & Liquidity

  • FreightCar America maintains a strong balance sheet, with cash and cash equivalents including restricted cash and certificates of deposit of $52.4 million as of the end of the second fiscal quarter.
  • As a result of the footprint consolidation, the Company expects to incur pre-tax cash charges of approximately $6.0-to-$8.0 million by the end of the first quarter of 2021, consisting of employee-related costs and other cash shutdown costs.
  • FreightCar America is negotiating its exit with the Shoals facility owner and landlord, the Retirement Systems of Alabama (RSA).
  • The Company owns significant and valuable assets at the Shoals facility, some of which it expects to sell.
  • The Company expects annual fixed cost savings of approximately $20 million on a go-forward basis when the plan is complete, consisting of reduced rent, taxes, and other fixed overhead.

Meyer concluded, “Today’s news is both a sad end and a new beginning for FreightCar America. We owe our Shoals’ team a great deal of gratitude and thank them for everything they have done for the Company. We will provide transition assistance for them as part of the planned shutdown. As we look forward, we do so with an eye to become the lowest cost and highest quality producer in our industry. We will operate from a new position of strength and our portfolio will not only be more competitive, it will be broader in scope and capability given our improved cost structure. We remain committed to completing the work against the 750-to-1,000 delivery goal we set for the second half of 2020.  Our customers have been very consistent on the importance of the Company as an alternative supplier, and we believe they will be highly supportive of these decisions as today’s announcement makes us a much stronger partner moving forward.  Lastly, we ended the second quarter with over $52 million in cash and cash equivalents and will continue to prioritize our balance sheet, while we invest prudently in our future through today’s strategic announcement.”

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2 comments

John September 11, 2020 - 8:35 am

So when the years of “tax cuts” and “monetary benefits” the state gave them to locate there ended, they just moved.

Reply
David September 11, 2020 - 11:10 pm

The “giant sucking sound” continues.

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