Loose Southern California truck market set to get looser
(Photo: Jim Allen/FreightWaves)
(Photo: Jim Allen/FreightWaves)

Carriers in port cities brace for ‘air pocket’

The Los Angeles outbound tender rejection rate is only 2% compared to the national tender rejection rate of 5.4%. (Chart: SONAR)

Import volume remained strong in April, as FreightWaves described, with imports up 1.2% from March and 9.1% year over year. Going forward, a major drop-off in imports seems imminent with the questions being severity and duration – and ultimately whether that will lead to stockouts and a need for more expedited surface transportation. (Could truck regain some share from the rails?) Some of the ports are expecting volume in the coming weeks to be down anywhere from 20% to 35%, which seems reasonable based on data in SONAR. Drayage and intermodal are likely to be among the first modes impacted. Los Angeles is a freight market to watch given its sailing proximity to China and status as the largest port complex. That market has been unusually soft with a current outbound tender rejection rate of just 2%; a lack of imports could exacerbate the looseness in the market. A positive spin is that some carriers are calling it an “air pocket,” implying that demand will resurge once trade deals are reached and/or inventories become depleted.

Intermodal remains a strong value proposition for shippers

Domestic containerized intermodal volume outbound from LA (white) has outperformed the volume of long-haul truckload tenders outbound from LA. (Chart: SONAR)

On Thursday afternoon, domestic intermodal carrier Hub Group provided comments that added context to a number of the trends we are seeing in SONAR data. First, the rate spread between intermodal and truckload remains wide by historical standards – about 30% currently. I typically think of a historical spread as closer to 15%. Hub was also complimentary of rail service for both its Western rail partner (Union Pacific) and Eastern rail partner (Norfolk Southern). Relative rates and service levels, combined with the pull-forward factor that reduces time sensitivity, explain why containerized intermodal volume in SONAR has outperformed truckload tender volume. Domestic intermodal capacity is plentiful, as measured by container availability. Hub says it has 20%-25% of its containers stacked and could handle 35% additional volume before it would have to spend capital for additional containers. The coming weeks will likely show a drop in intermodal volume as a result of an air pocket of imports, but the intermodal value proposition for shippers should remain strong.

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(SONAR: DAIR.PVGLAX)