Periódico independiente sobre economía y política de transporte
17:33 GMT+2
CENTRO INTERNAZIONALE STUDI CONTAINERS
ANNO XXXVIII - Numero GIUGNO 2020
ROAD TRANSPORT
TRUCKING TRENDS: PRODUCE SEASON COMING JUST IN TIME FOR
TRUCKERS
This spring the COVID-19 crisis put trucking companies on a path
to success that resembles a double-black-diamond ski slope. Not only
has the virus created working conditions that are potentially
dangerous for a truck driver's health, truckload volumes spiked in
mid-March and then plunged while stay-at-home orders persisted and
much of the economy shut down.
The DAT Truckload Volume Index, a measure of dry van,
refrigerated, and flatbed loads moved by truckload carriers, fell 19
percent in April compared to March and was down 8 percent year over
year.
With so much of the manufacturing supply chain shut down during
March and April, capacity from contract carriers shifted to the load
boards. The April load-to-truck ratio for van freight averaged 1.0
nationally, the lowest since February 2016. For three weeks in April
the ratio was actually less than 1.0, meaning there were more
available trucks than freight on the spot market. Van spot rates
averaged $1.63 per mile nationally last month, 23 cents lower
compared to March and off 17 cents versus April 2019. Some truckers
parked their equipment to wait for better conditions.
Finally, there are signs that volumes are building again, with
much of this activity related to fresh fruits and vegetables and
temperature-controlled freight. Here are three things to watch in
the coming weeks:
1. Fruits and vegetables are on the move
The U.S. grows about 70 percent of the food consumed in this
country, and the next highest supply comes from Mexico via gateways
in Texas, Arizona, and California. After seeing volumes of
refrigerated freight increase in isolated border-crossing markets in
late April, the number of loads moved during the week of May 4-11
increased on 49 of the top 72 reefer lanes monitored by DAT compared
to the previous week. The average spot rate was higher on 36 of
those lanes.
The good news is that reefer volumes are gaining like they're
supposed to during May. The bad news is that they're starting from
exceptionally low levels and have a long way to go.
2. Food supply chains are adjusting
With restaurants and other commercial kitchen closed or severely
limited in their operations, foodservice companies are trying
mightily to maintain their supply chains by promoting take-out
services and transitioning into becoming retail grocery suppliers.
This isn't as easy as making a sale. The types of products and size
of the packaging on the commercial and wholesale market often isn't
suitable for individuals buying groceries. But the foodservice
supply chain is adapting.
3. Crucial weeks ahead
The next two to four weeks are crucial for small carriers and
independent operators, which provide vital capacity for fruit and
vegetable producers. If many can't financially survive deeper into
produce season, or rates are too low to operate, or crop yields are
poor, the impact on the ag and food supply chains could be
significant.
These small trucking operators have few places to turn for
relief from low volumes.
A drastic reduction in manufacturing, oilfield activity, and
construction has contributed to a deep decrease in the national
load-to-truck ratio for flatbeds, down from 21.8 in March to just
5.3 last month, an all-time low. The national average flatbed spot
rate was $1.93 per mile, 26 cents less than March and the lowest
since January 2017.
Carriers of dry-van retail goods are facing double-digit
year-over-year declines in import traffic this spring and summer.
According to the National Retail Federation, U.S. ports handled 1.37
million TEU in March, the latest month for which after-the-fact
numbers are available. That was the lowest volume since 1.34 million
TEU in March 2016, down 9.1 percent from this February and down 14.8
percent year-over-year.
For now, any uptick in reefer volumes is a welcome sight. I'm
treating these trends with cautious optimism, understanding that the
forces driving the market are very fragile and largely depending on
how successful states are with their reopening plans. In the
meantime, be safe and stay healthy.
Ken Adamo is the chief of analytics at DAT Solutions, which
operates the largest load board network for truckload freight and
provides forecasting and other market intelligence to the
transportation industry. For more analysis about the impact of
COVID-19 on truckload freight, visit
dat.com/industry-trends/covid-19.
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