U.S. trucking firms see freight downturn reversing after dour quarter
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[August 26, 2023] By
Priyamvada C
(Reuters) - The U.S. trucking industry may begin to see an uptick in
freight demand in the back half of the year after grappling with another
quarter of lower profits due to a slump in package volumes, company
executives and analysts said.
The expectations have been largely fueled by U.S. retailers' comments on
their improving inventory position and prospects of better inbound
container shipments.
Companies ranging from Target to Macy's have signaled that they have
largely moved past their bloated inventory issues from a year earlier as
retailers look to stock up on in-demand products ahead of the crucial
holiday season.
Meanwhile, a drop in volume of large containers handled by U.S. ports
compared to last year is also set to narrow in the coming months,
according to the National Retail Federation, indicating retailers are
preparing for increased demand during the year-end holiday period.
"Most of our retail customers have worked through that inventory...so it
does look like the freight markets have troughed from a demand
perspective," said logistics firm XPO's chief Mario Harik, adding that
freight markets could recover into 2024.
XPO, which serves companies such as Ulta Beauty, said it saw shipment
count and tonnage flip to positive in July, indicating the start of a
slightly improved freight demand environment.
Old Dominion Freight Line Chief Financial Officer Adam Satterfield also
expressed similar views last month on inventory.
"We get the sense that inventory levels are normalizing a bit,"
Satterfield said in an earnings call.
Freight demand slumped last year after a surge during the
pandemic-induced shift to online shopping as customers returned to
stores and household budgets were pressured by sticky inflation.
This led to retailers moving to stop an inventory pileup, sending a
ripple effect on trucks and railroads that move the goods.
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Two freight trucks are driven on the
Fisher freeway in Detroit, Michigan, U.S. March 27, 2009.
REUTERS/Rebecca Cook/File Photo
"I don't know that we've ever seen freight demand fall this far so
fast and for so long without an accompanying economic recession,"
logistics firm Knight-Swift Transportation chief David Jackson said
in a post-earnings call with analysts.
As a result, adjusted net income at trucking firms such as JB Hunt,
Old Dominion, CH Robinson and XPO fell between 22% and 69% in the
second quarter from a year earlier.
The second quarter was the most challenging for trucking firms in
recent times, analysts and industry executives said, owing to high
wage costs and ultra-low spot rates, or the current market price for
a one-time freight shipment.
But there is light at the end of the tunnel.
"We're still in the worsening part of the down cycle.. but by the
time we get into next year, we'll be returning to growth," said Tim
Denoyer of market research firm ACT Research.
Knight-Swift said a combination of demand recovery as import volumes
return to more normal levels and supply reduction should lead to
improving freight market conditions in the near future.
"There are still some areas where retail inventories are too high,
but more and more categories will need restocking as time
progresses," ACT Research's Denoyer said.
Meanwhile, the demise of Yellow Corp, the third-biggest U.S.
trucking company, may also help prop up rates for rivals such as XPO,
FedEx Freight, and Old Dominion among others, analysts said.
(Reporting by Priyamvada C in Bengaluru, additional reporting by
Aishwarya Venugopal; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila)
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