The Transport Capital Partners 4th Quarter 2011 Business Expectations Survey found carriers optimistic for the year ahead with 61% of carriers expecting volumes to increase in 2012, and only 7% expecting volumes to decrease.
Both large and small carriers responded similarly. According to Richard Mikes, TCP Partner and survey leader, "Carriers shared a higher level of confidence despite the roller coaster ride reflected in stock market over the last quarter."
The survey volume outlook correlated with the majority of carriers reporting freight rates moving up over the last three months as well.
Half the of the carriers surveyed reported rate increase of 5% of more, with only 1% of carriers reporting an increase of 15% or more, compared with almost 8% that experienced the 15% threshold in the second quarter. However, 48% reported rates remaining the same over the last three months with only 3% reporting rate decreases.
Carriers over $25 million experienced stronger rate increases in both the 5% and 10% increase categories than that of the smaller carriers. This is not surprising, as the larger tend to have more market "power" and the smaller carriers move their rates after the larger carriers, TCP suggests. Moreover, 5% of the smaller carriers actually experienced rate decreases.
"Freight rates in the spot market are generally upward according to many sources as capacity remains flat and volumes are pushing upward in the industry," notes Lana Batts, TCP Partner.
The brightest light in the survey was that almost three-fourths of the carriers expect rates to increase in 2012.
"Most economists are seeing growth in the economy, albeit it slow growth. This is pushing more freight on to a very limited truck base, with shippers and brokers scrambling for trucks as carriers phones 'ring off the wall," Mikes observes.
Carriers are cautious, however, about adding more trucks according to other parts of the survey yet to be fully analyzed. As Batts points out, "The industry cut 15-20% of their capacity by not buying new trucks, and most carriers and dealers are telling us that the new surge in orders is primarily to replace the aging national fleet, not to add more capacity."
TCP uses this quarterly survey along with partner conversations with carriers to provide a meaningful insight into future industry expectations.
More info: www.transportcap.com
New TCP National Survey: Carrier View 2012 showing Opportunities for Volumes and Rates
The Transport Capital Partners 4th Quarter 2011 Business Expectations Survey found carriers optimistic for the year ahead with 61% of carriers expecting volumes to increase in 2012, and only 7% expecting volumes to decrease
More Fleet Management

'Beyond Compliance,' Regulations, Driver Coaching on ATRI’s 2026 Research List
The American Transportation Research Institute will examine driver coaching, regulatory impacts — including the "Beyond Compliance" concept —and weather disruptions that shape trucking operations.
Read More →
Fleet Advantage's Brian Antonellis on the Growing Need to Replace Old Trucks
Fleet Advantage's Brian Antonellis says it's time for fleets to get back to the fundamentals of good maintenance practices. And that includes replacing older, inefficient equipment.
Read More →
Truckstop.com Adding to Open Deck, Heavy Haul Offerings
Load matching for flatbed, lowbed, oversize and overweight loads can't be automated like basic van freight, but Truckstop.com is adding more high-tech tools to help.
Read More →
Trucker Path, Truckstop.com Expand Load Access Partnership
An expanded Trucker Path and Truckstop.com integration brings more freight opportunities into the TruckLoads app while emphasizing security and network quality.
Read More →
Truckload Rates Hit Two-Year Highs as Diesel Costs Surge, DAT Says
Strong March freight demand combined with a spike in fuel costs pushed both spot and contract truckload rates to their highest levels in more than two years.
Read More →
The AI Conversation You Need to Have with Your TMS Provider
Everyone’s talking about AI — but is your transportation management system actually built for it?
Read More →
Kriska Buys Fellow Canadian Carrier Sharp Transportation Systems
Being part of KTG will allow Sharp to expand and improve its services.
Read More →
Bill in House Would Raise Minimum Insurance for Motor Carriers to $5 Million
The Fair Compensation for Truck Crash Victims Act would increase insurance requirements for interstate motor carriers by nearly seven times.
Read More →
FTR Trucking Conditions Index Hits Four-Year High in February
Strong freight rates push TCI to 10.2, but FTR expects fuel-price volatility to skew March results.
Read More →
C.H. Robinson Offers Carriers Relief as Diesel Prices Surge
C.H. Robinson is waiving fees on fuel cards and cash advances for April and May, aiming to help carriers offset rising diesel costs tied to geopolitical instability.
Read More →
