Trucking Conditions Index Weakens in May
The outlook for the rest of 2019 generally is for stability close to neutral conditions
FTR’s Trucking
Conditions Index fell back nearly two points in May to a new reading of
-2.3. The TCI has been in negative territory since March and reflects a
general weakness in conditions affecting carriers. The outlook is for relative
stability through the year with the possibility of some slightly positive
readings month-to-month during the period.
The May TCI reading was primarily brought down by the
softening rate environment. Freight demand was the only positive contributor
in the May measure, albeit not a particularly strong one.
Details of the May TCI are found in the July issue of FTR’s Trucking
Update, published June
28. The ‘Notes by the Dashboard Light’ section in the current issue includes an
analysis of spot market truck availability. Along with the TCI and ‘Notes by
the Dashboard Light,’ the Trucking Update includes data
and analysis on load volumes, the capacity environment, rates, costs, and the
truck driver situation.
Avery Vise, vice president of trucking,
commented, “Although we have dropped from double-digit TCI readings to negative
readings in less than a year, we believe the outlook for the rest of 2019
generally is for stability close to neutral conditions. It’s also important to
recognize that most of the weakness is in the industrial sector, so trucking
activity related to consumer demand should be relatively stronger than the rest
of the industry.”
The Trucking Conditions Index tracks the changes representing
five major conditions in the U.S. truck market. These conditions are: freight
volumes, freight rates, fleet capacity, fuel price, and financing.
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