The ongoing trend of middling freight transportation shipment and expenditure readings remained intact again in June, according to the most recent edition of the Cass Freight Index Report from Cass Information Systems.
Many freight transportation and logistics executives and analysts consider the Cass Freight Index to be the most accurate barometer of freight volumes and market conditions, with many analysts noting that the Cass Freight Index sometimes leads the American Trucking Associations (ATA) tonnage index at turning points, which lends to the value of the Cass Freight Index.
June shipments, at 1.181, decreased 5.3% annually, marking the seventh consecutive month of shipments declines, on the heels of a 6% May decline, a 3.2% April decline, and a 1% decline in March, and were down 3.8% compared to May. Shipments initially turned negative in December 2018 for the first time in 24 months, when it fell 0.8%. January and February were down 0.3% and 2.1%, respectively. As previously reported, the December and January shipment readings were up against respective all-time highs reached in December 2017 and January 2018, coupled with stabilizing patterns in nearly all underlying freight flows.
“With the -5.3% drop in June following the -6.0% drop in May, we repeat our message from last month: the shipments index has gone from ‘warning of a potential slowdown’ to signaling an economic contraction,” wrote Donald Broughton, the report’s author and principal of Broughton Capital. “We acknowledge that: all of these negative percentages are against extremely tough comparisons; and the Cass Shipments Index has gone negative without being followed by a negative GDP.”
Broughton added that the weakness in spot market pricing for many transportation services, especially trucking, is consistent with the negative Cass Shipments Index and, along with airfreight and railroad volume data, strengthens our concerns about the economy and the risk of ongoing trade policy disputes. Weakness in commodity prices and the decline in interest rates have joined the chorus of signals calling for an economic contraction…Bottom line more and more data are indicating that this is the beginning of an economic contraction.”
On the pricing side, June expenditures, at 2.919, slipped 0.9% annually and were up 2.6% compared to June.
“The Cass Freight Expenditures Index was signaling continued, overall pricing power for those in the marketplace who move freight,” wrote Broughton. “With demand no longer exceeding capacity in most modes of transportation for several months, it is not surprising that realized pricing power has gone negative. Unfortunately, the weakness in spot market pricing (especially in trucking) and the decline in fuel prices, suggests that realized pricing will be under increasing amounts of pressure and is at risk of staying negative through the end of the year.”