Winter Storms Hurt Trucking Firms In February
Freight tonnage hauled by American trucking companies during the first two months of 2011 is up 5.9%, despite a 2.9% dip in February’s Truck Tonnage Index.
The American Trucking Associations’ For-Hire Truck Tonnage Index decreased 2.9% in February after increasing a revised 3.5% in January 2011. In January, the index equaled 116.6. During December 2010 and January 2011, the tonnage index jumped a total of 6.1%.
Compared with February 2010, tonnage climbed 4.2%, although this was smaller than January’s 7.6% year-over-year increase. Through the first two months of the year, tonnage is up 5.9% compared with the same two months last year.
For all of 2010, tonnage was up 5.7% compared with 2009. In 2009, the index plunged 8.7%.
Continued relative gains in the closely watched trucking sector report are good news for Fort Smith-based Arkansas Best Corp. and Van Buren-based USA Truck Inc. The two trucking companies that employ hundreds in the Fort Smith region and thousands nationwide have struggled financially during a freight recession that began in late 2006.
ATA Chief Economist Bob Costello said winter storms, not economic factors, in February probably reduced the index. He also said anecdotal reports from trucking companies are “very encouraging.”
“Tonnage is not going to increase every month and in general I’m very pleased with freight volumes early this year,” Costello noted in the ATA statement. “I’m hearing a significant amount of positive news from fleets and that the largest concern continues to be the price of diesel fuel, not freight levels.”
According to the ATA, trucking serves as a barometer of the U.S. economy, representing nearly 68% of tonnage carried in 2008 by all modes of domestic freight transportation, including manufactured and retail goods.