Truckload Freight Recovery Picks up Speed Heading into June
DAT Spot Truckload Trendlines: Week ending May 31, 2020
Spot truckload freight markets continued to gather momentum last week as load-to-truck ratios increased for dry van, refrigerated, and flatbed freight, said DAT Solutions, which operates the industry’s largest load board network. Truckload rates followed suit, rising on most lanes just in time for June, typically a peak month for the spot market.
The number of posted loads on the DAT network jumped nearly 10% during the week ending May 31, which had one fewer workday because of Memorial Day.
Compared to April, load-posting activity on the spot market increased 79.6% in May while truck posts declined 15.7%.
National Average Spot Rates Through May 31
– Van: $1.60 per mile, 3 cents lower than the April average
– Flatbed: $1.90 per mile, 4 cents lower than April
– Reefer: $2.02 per mile, 9 cents higher than April
Those are rolling averages for the month and current rates are higher. On June 1, the van spot rate averaged $1.72 a mile, the flatbed rate was $1.98, and the reefer rate was $2.08.
Trendlines
Van activity at 2019 levels: At 2.8 loads per truck, the national average van load-to-truck ratio is tracking closely to the same period in 2019, a soft year for spot freight but an improvement compared to the last five weeks.
Spot rates were higher on 79 of DAT’s top 100 van lanes by volume compared to the previous week. The number of loads moved on those 100 lanes was lower by an average of 18%, in line with expectations for a holiday-shortened work week.
Retail hubs make gains: Outbound rates increased in several retail freight markets. Los Angeles averaged $2.32 per mile, up 12 cents compared to the previous week, while Stockton, Calif., averaged $2.09 per mile, up 15 cents.
Rates from Atlanta ($1.80, up 9 cents), Charlotte, N.C. ($1.82, up 14 cents), and Columbus, Ohio ($1.85, up 14 cents) also made strong gains.
Flatbeds improve: The national average flatbed spot rate is less than $2 a mile on a 19.2 load-to-truck ratio but several lanes are reflecting increased demand for trucks. Among them:
– Birmingham, Ala., to Chicago jumped 21 cents to an average of $2.09 per mile
– Roanoke, Va., to Baltimore rose 17 cents to 2.52 a mile
Produce season swings higher: The national average reefer load-to-truck ratio was 3.7 last week, a half-point higher than the previous week.
Rates increased on 42 of the top 72 reefer lanes by volume. Fourteen lanes had lower rates compared to the previous week and half of those were out of Florida. In a one-week period, Miami to Atlanta went from an average of $1.87 to $1.68.
Cross-border reefer freight peaking: Peak shipping season for Mexican produce is driving demand for trucks in Nogales, Ariz., McAllen, Texas, and Ontario, Calif. Examples:
– Nogales to Dallas increased 29 cents to an average of $2.89 per mile. That lane averaged $1.88 a month ago
– Nogales to Chicago shot up 23 cents to $2.41, an increase of 69 cents over the last four weeks
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