InvestorsHub Logo

hummba

10/17/17 11:06 AM

#72933 RE: puffadder #72932

Acgx cooling off

XenaLives

10/17/17 11:29 AM

#72934 RE: puffadder #72932

What is your basis for that statement?

This is what I found:



By Jennifer Smith
Oct. 16, 2017 6:00 a.m. ET
5 COMMENTS
Trucking companies are convincing shippers to pay more to move freight, but difficulty finding drivers could weigh on earnings.

Analysts expect rising driver pay and storm disruptions to eat into what would otherwise be stronger third-quarter results for truckload carriers. The freight market has picked up as manufacturing activity expands and retailers restock inventories in advance of the holiday season. For-hire truck tonnage jumped 8.2% in August compared with the same time in 2016, according to seasonally adjusted figures from the American Trucking Associations.

Meanwhile, trucking capacity has tightened after a long stretch when too many big-rigs were competing for cargo. Hurricane relief efforts in Texas and Florida have exacerbated the crunch, diverting trucks from other regions and sending prices soaring on the spot market, where companies book transportation on a daily basis.

On Friday J.B. Hunt Transport Services Inc., JBHT +0.57% one of the largest U.S. freight carriers and the first major fleet to report results this quarter, said net earnings fell 8.2% in the third quarter. The company cited storm disruptions and accelerating driver wages and recruitment costs, among other factors.

J.B. Hunt shares fell 4% to $104.01 on Friday, and the company’s weaker-than-expected results sent other trucking stocks lower. Schneider National Inc. shares were down 2.1%, while Knight-Swift Transportation Holdings Inc. shares fell 3.1%.

Tighter capacity is normally good for carriers, which see profits soar along with the rates they charge shippers. But some fleets have indicated they are struggling to find enough drivers.


https://www.wsj.com/articles/trucking-sector-hiring-slows-in-march-1491585390