Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

ACT: trucking volume spike in August hints at turning point in the freight cycle

Retailers may be nearly done destocking excess pandemic inventory, turning back to fresh freight demand

ACT Volumes.png

Retailers may be nearing the end of a long effort to destock the excess inventory they accumulated during the pandemic recovery, and beginning to generate higher trucking demand as they seek to obtain new goods, according to a study from transportation analysis firm ACT Research.

However, analysts cautioned observers against too much optimism that the statistics heralded an end to the ongoing freight recession, saying it was too soon to say if they indicated a true turning point or just a “head fake.”


Columbus, Indiana-based ACT said the September version of its For-Hire Trucking Index suggests an approaching turning point in the freight cycle, but perhaps not as quickly as for-hire fleets would prefer.

The index measures monthly balances of volume, pricing, capacity, productivity, and drivers. Among those variables, the Supply-Demand Balance surged to 55.6, seasonally adjusted (SA), in August from 42.2 in July, in the first result above the neutral 50 level in 18 months. And the Volume Index notably jumped 12.3 points in August to 54.4, seasonally adjusted, from 42.1 in July. 

“This is the highest result in 18 months, but our diffusion indexes measure the breadth of a signal, not the strength. This month’s number indicates volumes picked up for a big number of fleets in our survey, but it wasn’t necessarily a large increase. So, we wouldn’t suggest this means the freight downturn is over, but it is a considerable ‘green shoot’ that suggests the retail inventory destock is playing out,” said ACT’s vice president & senior analyst, Tim Denoyer.

While that’s an encouraging signal, the increase may not be indicative of a market turning point just yet, he said. “New Class 8 tractor sales are still near record levels, so while we observe capital discipline among for-hire fleets, we also think private fleets continue to grow. Driver availability also remains extraordinarily good for the diverse group of for-hire fleets in our survey. In our view, this probably isn’t enough yet to turn the tide in the spot market, but the market rebalancing is progressing and this should be a good leading indicator of better times ahead,” Denoyer said.


 

 

Recent

More Stories

GEODIS_Teammate_During_Peak_Season_Photo_Credit_Eli_Hiller.jpg

Geodis kicks off peak season hiring boom with 3,700 seasonal jobs

The winter peak season hiring boom has begun, as logistics service provider (LSP) Geodis said Thursday that it plans to hire 3,700 seasonal workers across its warehouses and distribution centers in the U.S. and Canada to help manage the expected rise in volumes.

That hiring surge marks a significant jump in relation to the company’s nearly 17,000 current employees across North America, adding 21% more workers.

Keep ReadingShow less

Featured

photo-1556740772-1a741367b93e.jpeg

NRF: U.S. is on the cusp of nailing a “soft landing” in inflation fight

With the economy slowing but still growing, and inflation down as the Federal Reserve prepares to lower interest rates, the United States appears to have dodged a recession, according to the National Retail Federation (NRF).

“The U.S. economy is clearly not in a recession nor is it likely to head into a recession in the home stretch of 2024,” NRF Chief Economist Jack Kleinhenz said in a release. “Instead, it appears that the economy is on the cusp of nailing a long-awaited soft landing with a simultaneous cooling of growth and inflation.”

Keep ReadingShow less
xeneta air-freight.jpeg

Air cargo carriers enjoy 24% rise in average spot rates

The global air cargo market’s hot summer of double-digit demand growth continued in August with average spot rates showing their largest year-on-year jump with a 24% increase, according to the latest weekly analysis by Xeneta.

Xeneta cited two reasons to explain the increase. First, Global average air cargo spot rates reached $2.68 per kg in August due to continuing supply and demand imbalance. That came as August's global cargo supply grew at its slowest ratio in 2024 to-date at 2% year-on-year, while global cargo demand continued its double-digit growth, rising +11%.

Keep ReadingShow less
seegrid CR1_Renders_1-2_11zon.png

Seegrid lands $50 million backing for autonomous lift trucks

Seegrid Corp., which makes autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) for pallet material handling, has landed $50 million in new financial backing to accelerate its autonomous lift truck initiatives, which are generating more growth than expected, the company said today.

“Unrelenting labor shortages and wage inflation, accompanied by increasing consumer demand, are driving rapid market adoption of autonomous technologies in manufacturing, warehousing, and logistics,” Seegrid CEO and President Joe Pajer said in a release. “This is particularly true in the area of palletized material flows; areas that are addressed by Seegrid’s autonomous tow tractors and lift trucks. This segment of the market is just now ‘coming into its own,’ and Seegrid is a clear leader.”

Keep ReadingShow less
littler Screenshot 2024-09-04 at 2.59.02 PM.png

Congressional gridlock and election outcomes complicate search for labor

Worker shortages remain a persistent challenge for U.S. employers, even as labor force participation for prime-age workers continues to increase, according to an industry report from labor law firm Littler Mendelson P.C.

The report cites data showing that there are approximately 1.7 million workers missing from the post-pandemic workforce and that 38% of small firms are unable to fill open positions. At the same time, the “skills gap” in the workforce is accelerating as automation and AI create significant shifts in how work is performed.

Keep ReadingShow less