volumes are weak to stable but silver linings on the horizon

volumes are weak to stable but silver linings on the horizon

volumes are weak to stable but silver linings on the horizon

Coming a few weeks after an earnings season that saw a lot of trucking companies struggling (or even failing) to turn a profit, and an interim update from LTL carriers that was decidedly weak, the FreightWaves September State of Freight webinar spent much of the time parsing through various data points of a market firmly in year three of a freight recession.

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But by the end of the one-hour webinar, FreightWaves and SONAR CEO Craig Fuller was able to offer an optimistic outlook. The road to get there still has plenty of hurdles.

Here are five takeaways from this month’s session with Fuller and Zach Strickland, SONAR’s director of freight market intelligence.

A discussion about comparing data sets on volume indicators noted that Cass data, which is widely respected, is based on invoices. So there is a lag between it and the data in the Outbound Tender Volume Index in SONAR.

The publication of Cass data a day before the State of Freight webinar was largely negative across the board. Its multimodal transportation index was down 9.3% year-over-year. Volumes in August were down 1.5% from a month earlier. Particularly weak were LTL shipments.

“Being invoice data it means that these invoices come in when the carrier, the provider, bills them,” Fuller said. “And sometimes it can be weeks or months. So you get this lag in Cass’ data.”

The OTVI, being based on real time data, shows that while the freight market measured by volume was “a pretty marginal summer, but it wasn’t a collapse.”

But the bigger picture, Fuller noted, is that the OTVI is now not far from where it was in 2018, which was considered a robust freight market. “The truth is that none of the volume data should ever revert back,” Fuller said. “It’s like having a business where you’re like, oh, we’re doing better than we were seven years ago. How is that something to brag about? You’ve lost seven years of compounded growth.”

Strickland noted that back in 2018, the Outbound Tender Rejection Index in SONAR was 17.5% against a volume that is largely unchanged. It’s now just over 5%.

With so much focus on the push by the federal government to remove non-English speaking and other non-qualified drivers from the road, Strickland and Fuller turned to the issue of capacity.

Strickland noted that despite all the market turmoil, SONAR’s OTRI is still hovering a little more than 5%, and has been for awhile.