Truck drivers see orders, miles fall in
latest U.S. slowdown signal
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[April 17, 2019]
By Stephanie Kelly and Jessica Resnick-Ault
(Reuters) - At a truck stop in Ridgefield,
New Jersey, driver Paul Richards reviews a notebook where he tracks
miles driven and what he is hauling. His paycheck is down about 25
percent from the same period a year ago, and his weekly miles have
dropped as well.
"This hasn't been a very good week," said Richards, who carries building
materials and recycled goods through the U.S. Northeast. "Last week
wasn't, either."
Across the United States, drivers, regional operators and industry
officials say the $700 billion U.S. trucking sector slipped in late
2018, with the fall continuing into this year. While the decline in
freight rates and hauling does not suggest the United States is headed
into a recession, that softness is consistent with slippage in the
economy as a whole.
The effects have been uneven nationwide, with weaker orders and miles in
the U.S. Midwest and Southeast than on the West Coast, economists and
regional officials said.
Trucking accounts for 70 percent of U.S. shipment tonnage, and is key to
supplying the manufacturing, construction and retail sectors, all of
which showed sluggishness in the first quarter. The most common factors
for the decline include the U.S.-China trade war and weakness in the
Farm Belt.
An ACT Research index of truck carrier volumes that surveys about 60
fleets crossed into negative territory in November for the first time
since July 2016. It briefly returned to positive territory in January
but dipped again in February. It matches forecasts for a soft first
quarter for U.S. gross domestic product, which is expected to come in at
1.8 percent growth, according to Reuters polling.
"Clearly, the economy is slowing down," Kenny Vieth, president of ACT
Research, said in a recent interview. "When the economy moderates, the
trucking industry can be exceptionally worse than the overall economy
because of the deep cyclical trend that characterizes the industry."
To be sure, another indicator, the American Trucking Associations
tonnage index, is at a healthy level at 117.4, still far above
recession-era levels between 2008 and 2012, when it remained below 90.
(GRAPHIC: Truck tonnage and U.S. real GDP: https://tmsnrt.rs/2OjFgls)
REGIONAL SOFTNESS
The industry's softness is not uniform nationwide. Reuters spoke to 47
out of 50 state trucking associations, and of those that responded, 16,
including Illinois, Wisconsin, Ohio and Tennessee, said activity had
slowed. Another 16 said there was little change, and the rest could not
say one way or another.
Shipments in the Midwestern and Southeastern United States have been hit
harder than other regions, according to Bobby Holland, vice president
and director of Minneapolis-based U.S. Bank Freight Data Solutions. In
the Midwest, export tariffs on crops have hurt agricultural sales, and
auto production is also moderating, he said.
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Trucks are pictured at a truck stop along I-95 in Darien,
Connecticut, U.S. January 16, 2019. REUTERS/Jessica Resnick-Ault
Neal Kedzie, president of the Wisconsin Motor Carriers Association,
said activity started to slow at the end of 2018. Brokers had been
connecting trucking companies known as carriers with requests from
those who needed to haul freight. Now, though, carriers are starting
to reach out to brokers to find loads.
"Carriers are having to do more searching on their own versus the
brokers, who (before) had so much to deliver that they couldn't find
enough trucks," Kedzie said.
Northeast shipments were strong last year, U.S. Bank said, but state
officials in Maine, Connecticut and Rhode Island all told Reuters
that early 2019 has been weaker.
A year ago, Larry Hobson was driving 14 hours a day hauling
refrigerated food from Tennessee to New England. Now he is working
eight or nine hours a day, and his paycheck has dropped by about
$1,000 a week because of the decrease.
"I am a lot less busy," he said at a service center in Darien,
Connecticut.
PROFIT WARNINGS
Spot total rates for freight have slumped as well, averaging $1.85
per mile in March, according to DAT Solutions, a freight exchange
company. That's the lowest seasonally since 2017.
That weakness is starting to show up in company results. In
mid-March, Chattanooga, Tennessee-based Covenant Transportation
Group Inc warned of weak first-quarter results, saying average
freight revenue per tractor was down 5 percent in early 2019 from
the year-ago period, with average miles down more than 11 percent.
"The truckload freight environment has been weaker this year from
late January through mid-March," CEO David Parker said in a
statement last month. Covenant shares are down more than 20 percent
in the last six months.
Analysts have lowered quarterly per-share estimates for J.B. Hunt
Transport Services Inc, Covenant and service company Knight-Swift
Transportation Holdings Inc by 9 percent, 40 percent and 5 percent,
respectively, according to Refinitiv Eikon data.
"There's no doubt that we have been seeing a deceleration in
volumes," said Bob Costello, chief economist for the American
Trucking Associations (ATA). "This is an indication that the economy
is decelerating."
(Reporting by Stephanie Kelly and Jessica Resnick-Ault in New York;
Writing by Stephanie Kelly; Editing by David Gaffen and Matthew
Lewis)
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