Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. truckers hit digital junction

More consolidat­ion predicted as brokering moves online

- THOMAS BLACK

U.S. trucking is entering a tumultuous period that will likely reshape the $875 billion industry.

Shipping rates that spiked during disruption­s caused by the covid-19 pandemic have plummeted — some are now calling it a “freight recession” — as inventory gluts across the United States lowered demand.

That has placed the sector at a disadvanta­ge during annual contract negotiatio­ns now in full swing, but also means retailers and other customers will benefit from lower transporta­tion costs.

There’s also a digital shakeout among brokers who match trucking companies with shippable loads. Silicon Valley entered the fray a few years ago and digitized what had been a transactio­n done with phone calls and paper. Large and establishe­d brokers have also bolstered their technology, leaving the 17,000 smaller firms that haven’t evolved vulnerable.

“There’s going to be consolidat­ion,” said Brett Suma, CEO of Loadsmith, a startup founded in 2019 that’s projected to generate sales of $130 million this year and turn a profit.

When Suma started his career in the truck industry a couple of decades ago, he said, his job was to open packets of paperwork delivered by courier to log the deliveries made by drivers for Knight-Swift Transporta­tion Holdings Inc. Now the company he runs is trying to eliminate all that paper.

“The haves of the technology are going to grow,” Suma said. “The have-nots

of the technology will be consumed.”

INVENTORY GLUT

Meanwhile, uncertaint­y reigns. Retailers still have too much inventory, a result of consumers pulling back from apparel and other discretion­ary goods after splurging last year. The U.S. might also be heading into a recession, which would put more pressure on spot-market truckload rates that are down 40% from a year ago, according to KeyBanc Capital Markets.

Contracted freight tonnage that’s seasonally adjusted fell 2.3% in October from September, the largest decline since the beginning of the pandemic, according to the American Trucking Associatio­ns. Contract freight rose 2.8% in October compared with a year ago, the lowest gain since April, the trade group said.

The brokerage battlefiel­d is pitting legacy brokers, such as C.H. Robinson Worldwide Inc. and RXO Inc. that are expanding automated systems, against digitally native newcomers, such as Uber Technologi­es Inc.’s freight unit and Convoy Inc.

Large trucking companies, including Lowell-based J.B. Hunt Transport Services Inc. in Northwest Arkansas and Werner Enterprise­s Inc., are adding more competitio­n by building out their own digital brokerages.

The race to become the leading digital platform includes Werner’s $113 million acquisitio­n this month of ReedTMS Logistics, a Tampa, Fla.-based freight broker with $372 million in annual revenue. That came after Uber Freight’s purchase of Arkansas’ Transplace last year for $2.25 billion.

Most brokers are assetlight, which means they don’t own trucks.

Instead, they shepherd freight from origin to destinatio­n by playing matchmaker between shippers and truckers. Brokers build capacity in this fragmented industry by signing up as many of the 2 million U.S. freighters as they can. These carriers are mostly small, with half of them being just one-truck operations. Less than 6,000 carriers own more than 100 trucks.

The automation technology removes labor by providing a computer applicatio­n for truckers to find freight and accept the price for hauling it. There’s still a lot of paperwork used in the industry. But services, including Transflo, are bridging the transition by allowing drivers to scan trip documents at truck-stop kiosks to digitize the paperwork for fleet operators.

Uber Freight and Convoy have gobbled up market share but struggled to make a profit. Convoy, which raised $260 million in April, led by Baillie Gifford, is still investing in its technology and capturing market share, CEO Dan Lewis said.

Bob Biesterfel­d, CEO of C.H. Robinson, has been through several dips in the freight market and is responding by planning to cut costs by $175 million — mostly through personnel reductions — to preserve profit while also boosting spending on automation.

C.H. Robinson projects the freight downturn will pressure its operating margins but expects to come out stronger when the cycle eventually turns positive, he said.

“We want to drive profitable market share growth and deliver strong shareholde­r returns through the cycle,” Biesterfel­d said.

BREWING BATTLE

RXO, the digital freight broker spun out from XPO Logistics Inc., expects to make money during the downturn and pick up new business, according to CEO Drew Wilkerson. The company brought on Yoav Amiel, a former Uber exec, from XPO to supercharg­e its automation technology.

The digital startups that have scooped up customers have done so mostly by offering lower prices, which isn’t a new tactic in the industry, Wilkerson said. In the end, it’s still a relationsh­ip business because shippers depend on brokers to deliver their freight on time.

“If a customer lets you in on price, they’re going throw you out on price as well,” Wilkerson said.

Suma projects Loadsmith will generate $8 million of earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortizati­on this year and plans to fund expansion with its own cash.

The company expects sales growth to slow down next year amid the downturn in freight demand. The company also will pursue an acquisitio­n at the end of 2023 or beginning of 2024 to catch the upswing in the freight cycle.

“We look at ‘23 as a year where we implement a bunch of new technology,” Suma said. “Then we come out of the gate swinging in ‘24.”

 ?? (AP/Georgia Port Authority) ?? Trucks loaded with shipping containers maneuver through a traffic circle in the container yard at the Georgia Ports Authority’s Garden City Terminal.
(AP/Georgia Port Authority) Trucks loaded with shipping containers maneuver through a traffic circle in the container yard at the Georgia Ports Authority’s Garden City Terminal.

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