The U.S. truckload market ratcheted tighter into the beginning of this week, with closing spreads between contract and spot rates and multiple major trucking markets rejecting more than 7% of outbound shipments. However, there’s still no clear ‘melt-up’ or cascade toward meaningfully higher rates compared to conditions during the holiday retail peak season.
(The Outbound Tender Reject Index measures the percentage of electronically tendered truckload shipments rejected by carriers and serves as a proxy measure of the relative balance between the supply of trucking capacity and volume demand. Chart: SONAR. To learn more about SONAR, click here).
Notably, Los Angeles has softened compared to the rest of the country; while the national average tender rejection rate is still in nominally inflationary territory at 7.11%, LA’s outbound rejections have cooled to just 4.44%. Because Los Angeles is such an important origin for retail imports, it’s considered an ‘upstream’ market that influences markets further inland. If LA is soft compared to the national average, it implies that national average tender rejections will also come down.
But Dallas, rejecting 7.25% of its outbound truckload shipments, and Chicago, rejecting 7.64% of its outbound truckload shipments, are both tighter than the national average. Both markets experienced recent weather-related spikes in tender rejections and are still loosening back up, but Chicago in particular looks like it could stay tighter for longer.
Recent results from publicly-traded trucking carriers reinforces the thesis that while the trucking market is improving for carriers, progress in tightening capacity and rising rates is halting and gradual.
Knight-Swift’s 2024 fourth-quarter earnings report provides a revealing snapshot of the current U.S. trucking market, particularly within the truckload segment, and it’s especially illuminating to compare it with Knight-Swift’s less-than-truckload (LTL) business. The company’s LTL unit showcased a robust 20.2% year-over-year revenue increase, reaching $279 million. This growth was driven by a 13% rise in daily shipments and a 6.6% boost in revenue per shipment, excluding fuel.
If LTL experienced positive trends in volume and pricing, truckload (TL) was the opposite: soft, with falling volumes and rates. Knight-Swift reported a 4.4% year-over-year decline in TL revenue, which fell to $1.1 billion. This downturn occurred even as the company managed to increase revenue per tractor by 1.7%, thanks in part to a 6% reduction in the number of tractors in service. The company’s strategic move to rationalize its tractor and trailer counts aimed to improve fleet utilization, resulting in a 2.4% increase in loaded miles per tractor. Despite these efficiency gains, revenue per loaded mile slightly decreased by 0.7%, a 1% sequential improvement from the third quarter of 2024.