Cass Transportation Index Report

Trucking Picking Up Slack; Costs Continue to Rise

August 2021 Year-over-year change 2-year stacked change Month-to-month change Month-to-month change (SA)
Cass Freight Index – Shipments 1.234 12.3% 3.7% 4.8% 5.0%
Cass Freight Index – Expenditures 3.832 42.2% 34.9% 9.2% 11.3%
Truckload Linehaul Index 148.8 12.6% 7.8% 1.1% NA

 

Cass Freight Index – Shipments

The shipments component of the Cass Freight Index® grew 12% y/y in August and should slow to mid-single-digit growth into year-end on tougher comps.

  • On a seasonally adjusted (SA) basis, the Cass Shipments Index rose by 5.0% m/m in August, after a 7.2% m/m drop in June and July
  • The two-year stack reaccelerated to 3.7% growth from 0.5% in July.

The recovery after a skid in June and July amid further slowdowns in rail volumes suggests trucking is picking up slack from the railroads, currently snarled by the chassis shortage.

But shipment volumes remain limited by the capacity of the freight network, as shown by the backlog of 125 or so containerships at anchor off North American ports. SoCal just hit a new record of 49. This containership backlog clearly represents a stronger and longer than average peak season demand outlook.

The extent to which constraints on equipment and driver supply ease in the coming months will largely dictate volumes, with declines likely to continue in intermodal and more pressure on trucking to shoulder the load.

  • Equipment. The intermodal chassis shortage, following tariffs totaling over 200% on key imported steel back in May, is a key reason chassis production has been dismal this year and the intermodal network has run short. Class 8 tractor and trailer supply chain challenges have also limited capacity.
  • Drivers. Though driver capacity is still generally tight, the BLS trucking employment data have improved for three straight months and the ACT Research For-Hire Driver Availability Index continues to recover.

 

Chart: Cass Shipments Index, January 2010 – August 2021 (01’1990=1.00)

Cass Freight Index Shipments August 2021x

 

See the methodology for the Cass Freight Index.

 

To access forecasts of the shipments component of the Cass Freight Index® and the Cass Truckload Linehaul Index® through 2023, subscribe to the ACT Research Freight Forecast report.

 

Cass Freight Index – Expenditures

The expenditures component of the Cass Freight Index measures the total amount spent on freight. This index slowed a little more in August to 42% y/y growth from 43% in July. If normal seasonality were to play out for the rest of this year, the full-year increase in this index would be 35% in 2021, after a 7% decline in 2020 and no change in 2019.

  • After a 4.8% month-to-month drop on an SA basis in July, August expenditures surged 11.3% m/m as a result of both higher volumes and rates.
  • On a two-year stacked basis, the Cass expenditures index was up 35% in August, about 90% of which is due to higher rates, with the rest due to volume.

Tougher comparisons in the coming months will naturally slow these y/y increases further, but extraordinary growth rates will continue in the near-term, driven by increases in both shipment volumes and freight rates.

 

Chart: Cass Expenditures Index, January 2010 – August 2021 (01’1990=1.00)

Cass Expenditures August 2021x

 

Inferred Freight Rates

A simple calculation of the Cass Freight Index data (expenditures divided by shipments) produces a data set of inferred freight rates that explains the overall movement in rates.

The expenditures component of the Cass Freight Index measures the total amount spent on freight. This index slowed a little more in August to 42% y/y growth from 43% in July. If normal seasonality were to play out for the rest of this year, the full-year increase in this index would be 35% in 2021, after a 7% decline in 2020 and no change in 2019.

  • After a 4.8% month-to-month drop on an SA basis in July, August expenditures surged 11.3% m/m as a result of both higher volumes and rates.
  • On a two-year stacked basis, the Cass expenditures index was up 35% in August, about 90% of which is due to higher rates, with the rest due to volume.

Tougher comparisons in the coming months will naturally slow these y/y increases further, but extraordinary growth rates will continue in the near-term, driven by increases in both shipment volumes and freight rates.

A good bit of the month-to-month movement in this data series can be attributable to modal mix shifts, but the average m/m increase over the past six months has been 2.5%, with a 15% total increase. For full-year 2021, if normal seasonality were to play out, this index would be up 20% from 2020.
Outside of mix shifts impacting the m/m data patterns, this data series shows broad and material increases in freight rates across modes. The data set is diversified among all modes, with truckload representing more than half of the dollars, followed by rail, LTL, parcel, and so on.

 

Chart: Cass Inferred Freight Rates, January 2010 – August 2021 (01’1990=1.00)

Cass Inferred Rates August 2021x

 Download the data.

Truckload Linehaul Index

The Cass Truckload Linehaul Index® value of 148.8 in August rose 1.1% from July and 12.6% y/y, decelerating from a 13.4% y/y increase in July. This series has been under some pressure from longer-haul mix related to the chassis shortage and intermodal network congestion in recent months, so we would again caution shippers not to get too excited and carriers not to worry too much. This mix issue is noise, not signal, and the dampening effect on the index is considerable.

Even as easing shortages become more likely, the number of broken or strained links in the supply chain has risen recently, including likely inflationary effects from Hurricane/Tropical Storm Ida, the Delta variant worsening the chip shortage, and the chassis shortage. With a still-tight supply/demand balance, we would suggest the uptrend isn’t over yet.

Though equipment production is still limited by parts and labor shortages, capacity is beginning to return as drivers respond to higher pay, utilizing parked equipment until parts shortages ease. This will gradually change the trajectory of truckload rates, but it will take time.

 

Chart: Cass Truckload Linehaul Index®, January 2010 – August 2021 (01’1990=1.00)

Cass Truckload Linehaul Index August 2021x

 

See the methodology for the Cass Truckload Linehaul Index.

 

The length of haul in the data rose considerably again this month, about 20% y/y and 5% m/m, and as shown in the chart below, rates tend to fall on a per mile basis as mileage lengthens. The mix of these large carriers is not comparable to the Cass data, but it illustrates that longer mileage equals lower rates. So, we would argue that underlying truckload rates are up more in the 15%-20% range, more in line with the Cass Inferred Freight Rates and public carrier rate trends. This shift in freight patterns is more symptomatic of the congested rail network, leading to more transloading of longer-haul import shipments from the West Coast ports to the Midwest via truck.

 

Truckload Rates vs Length of Haul August 2021

Source: ACT Research Publicly Traded For-Hire Truckload Carrier Database.

 

 

Freight Expectations

Class I railroad trends have had a rough few months, lagging seasonal trends due in large part to worsening chassis shortages. ACT Research expects chassis production to be significantly limited for some time, and the intermodal network is unlikely to be able to adjust to a large shortfall in chassis quickly. Though some sizable orders have been placed and manufacturers are on it, we’d roughly estimate it will take six to nine months before chassis production gets to the point where the shortage starts to ease. So, intermodal volumes are unlikely to bounce back quickly. Chassis production data and forecasts are available in this month’s Freight Forecast report.

 

Rail volumes by segment August 2021x

 

Normal seasonality would suggest high-single-digit growth in rail volumes in Q3, down from the 23% y/y increase in Q2, but momentum slowed significantly over the past few months as network fluidity has suffered and chip and chassis shortages have worsened. Q3 may still end up with low-single-digit growth, but rail volumes may well decline y/y in Q4.

 

Class I rail volumes by segment August 2021x

 

Trucking isn’t subject to the same capacity constraints, and the truck driver recovery, though gradual, is likely to help the trucking industry continue to pick up the slack in the coming months. Eventually this will help rebalance the market, but several recent factors, including Hurricane Ida, the Delta variant and the chip and chassis shortages have been inflationary for freight rates, extending the cycle at the margin.

Freight demand fundamentals remain strong, based on a strong U.S. consumer balance sheet, inventory restocking, and an industrial sector struggling to grow into record orders with infrastructure stimulus likely on the way.

But the dynamics of tight supply and exceptionally strong demand which have characterized the past year or so will not last indefinitely. The chip shortage continues to be a key fulcrum on which much in the world economy depends. As discussed in depth in ACT Research’s monthly report, there’s good reason to hope easing will start in Q4.

 

The release date for the Cass indexes is the 12th of each month, barring weekends and holidays.

Originally published by Cass Information Systems: https://www.cassinfo.com/freight-audit-payment/cass-transportation-indexes/august-2021