Stock Markets February 4, 2026

Union Pacific and Wabtec Ink $1.2 Billion Pact to Modernize AC4400 Locomotives

Deal aims to begin deliveries in 2027 and upgrade more than 1,700 locomotives with fuel, tractive effort and reliability gains

By Leila Farooq UNP
Union Pacific and Wabtec Ink $1.2 Billion Pact to Modernize AC4400 Locomotives
UNP

Union Pacific and Wabtec have agreed to a $1.2 billion program to modernize the railroad’s AC4400 locomotives, with deliveries slated to start in 2027. The companies describe the agreement as the largest locomotive modernization investment in rail industry history and say the upgrades will cut fuel use, boost tractive effort and substantially improve reliability. Completion of the order will bring more than 1,700 modernized units into Union Pacific’s fleet and represents the fourth such modernization deal between the two firms.

Key Points

  • Union Pacific and Wabtec agreed to a $1.2 billion modernization program for AC4400 locomotives, with deliveries expected from 2027.
  • The companies state the upgrades will reduce fuel consumption by over 5%, increase tractive effort by 14%, and improve reliability by 80%; upon completion Union Pacific will have more than 1,700 modernized locomotives.
  • The deal is the fourth modernization agreement between the two companies and is described as the largest locomotive modernization investment in rail industry history; it aligns with broader U.S. rail fleet replenishment efforts tied to recent infrastructure investments.

Union Pacific and locomotive components manufacturer Wabtec announced a $1.2 billion agreement to modernize the railroad’s AC4400 locomotives, the companies said on Wednesday. The program is designed to begin deliveries in 2027 and, according to the two firms, constitutes the largest investment in locomotive modernization in rail industry history.

The companies outlined expected performance gains from the upgrades. They said the modernized locomotives will cut fuel consumption by more than 5 percent, increase tractive effort by 14 percent and improve reliability by 80 percent. On completion of the order, Union Pacific will have in excess of 1,700 upgraded AC4400 locomotives in its roster.

This agreement marks the fourth modernization contract between Union Pacific and Wabtec. It comes as U.S. rail operators have been accelerating fleet replenishment efforts tied to infrastructure funding enacted under the Biden administration, replacing older locomotives with models described as more fuel-efficient and digitally enabled.

The companies positioned the deal as part of a broader movement to refresh aging motive power across the U.S. rail network by leveraging recent infrastructure investments. The planned improvements - in fuel economy, tractive performance and reliability - are framed as operational gains the railroad expects to realize as units are returned to service in modernized form.

Separately, the announcement included promotional content about stock evaluation tools. It noted that a product called ProPicks AI assesses Union Pacific alongside thousands of other firms using over 100 financial metrics, seeking to identify promising stock ideas based on fundamentals, momentum and valuation. The notice cited past winners flagged by that tool, including Super Micro Computer (+185%) and AppLovin (+157%), and posed the question of whether Union Pacific (UNP) appears in any ProPicks strategies.


Context and implications

The contract represents a significant capital commitment to modernizing existing locomotive assets rather than buying entirely new units. Union Pacific and Wabtec characterized the work as an effort to realize fuel and performance improvements through a large-scale upgrade program starting in 2027 and culminating in more than 1,700 modernized locomotives.

Risks

  • Timing and delivery - The plan is to start deliveries in 2027; any delays to the delivery schedule could affect expected operational improvements and fleet availability.
  • Execution risk - Achieving the cited fuel, tractive effort and reliability improvements depends on successful implementation of the modernization program across all units.
  • Funding and program scale - While described as a $1.2 billion investment, the large scale of the program entails coordination and capital allocation risks for both the railroad and the supplier.

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