Posts Tagged ‘LTL’

How to lower your LTL Shipping Rates!

It does not matter whether your company is big or small; the cost of your LTL freight shipping seems to keep taking a bigger chunk out of your expenses and operational costs. Trying to get gain the upper hand on these costs can be a challenging proposition as the amount of time involved in searching for better shipping rates is likely to be something you really cannot afford. But if you don’t call Southern Logistics Group you are going to keep spending too much on shipping.

Southern Logistics Group Can Help You Get the Lowest Rates on Your LTL Freight Shipping

If you are trying to find better rates on your LTL freight shipping and don’t have the time to handle your own research, take the time to contact us at Southern Logistics Group and join our no cost Co-Op.

Southern Logistics Group (SLG) is a national LTL freight consulting Co-Op (not a broker) that offers companies the opportunity to join our membership of companies in order to greatly reduce their Less than Truckload (LTL) costs. Our members achieve this by participating in our national LTL Co-Op that utilizes the negotiating power of millions of dollars of our members’ LTL freight.

Call Us:     Don McCoy @ 469-688-3269    

Emails:  don@southernlogisticsgroup.net   

Posted By:  Tom Sanderson  Date Posted:  Tuesday, August 13, 2013  2:06 PM

Stephens Inc. reported that Q2 LTL rates increased 2.8% from 2012 to 2013, and also rose sequentially from Q1 by a moderate 0.3%. Stephens maintained their estimate for a 3% increase for the full year in their LTL rate index. From the peak level in 2007 LTL rates dropped 11.5% to their trough in 2010. While rates have increased over the last three years, they still remain 2.4% less than peak rates in Q3-2007. Weight per shipment increased as lower weight shipments shift to parcel carriers and TL carriers avoid multi-stop shipments. Generally, the higher the weight per shipment the lower the cost per hundredweight, so real prices for equivalent shipments may be rising at a faster pace than the Stephens index indicates. Tonnage decreased 0.5% in Q2 compared to the same period last year. The challenges facing LTL carriers are apparent as the current pricing levels are equivalent to 2006, despite significant increases in costs over that period. Some of the capacity issues that will impact the TL segment, like CSA and the new Hours-of-Service rules, are not as relevant to the LTL segment, but industry consolidation does provide better pricing power than is the case for TL carriers.

Reduce Your Freight Costs!
Be a Part of our FREE National No Cost LTL Co-Op and pay less!

Call Southern Logistics Group Today at 469-688-3269

MAYBE NOW IS THE TIME TO CONSIDER HOW DO YOU CAN LOWER YOUR LTL SHIPPING COSTS! 

CALL SLG TODAY!

Despite signals of a slowing U.S. economy, shipping giant FedEx (FDX:  87.29, +1.19, +1.38%) revealed plans Friday morning to boost freight  shipping rates by 6.9% this summer.

Memphis-based FedEx said the price hike applies to freight shipments within  the contiguous      U.S., between the contiguous U.S.  and Canada as well as within Canada.

The shipper also said the new rate will be slapped onto cross-border  shipments between the     U.S. and Mexico, but only for the  U.S. portion of the shipment.

FedEx, which earlier this year raised rates for express and ground shipments,  said the higher freight prices will take effect on July 9.

The costlier shipping charges come as global markets fret about the potential  for slower growth in the coming months due largely to China’s cooling economy  and Europe’s worsening sovereign debt crisis.

Read more: http://www.foxbusiness.com/industries/2012/06/08/fedex-hikes-freight-rates-by-6/#ixzz1xE6WphC8

Call:        Don McCoy @ 469-688-3269    or    Chris Rogovich @ 201-679-7160

Emails:  don@southernlogisticsgroup.net     or     chris@southernlogisticsgroup.net

That is unless you join Southern Logistics Group’s  National LTL Co-Op for free and pay less!!!
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By Jeff Berman, Group News Editor April 13, 2012
While publicly-traded less-than-truckload (LTL) carriers are gearing up to announce first quarter earnings results, it appears—at least on the surface—that the sector has made up significant ground from the depths of the Great Recession. This is due, in part, to tighter capacity and steady rate gains since 2010.
Regarding LTL pricing, Ross wrote that rates are expected to increase 4 percent-5 percent, excluding fuel surcharges, in 2012, explaining that given the increased price rationality among competitors and the structural tightening in active capacity (the number of trucks and people moving LTL freight), pricing power should remain with carriers through at least 2014, adding that this is contingent on how carriers deal with capacity, which will in turn determine the actual level of rate increases. But at the same time he pointed out that pricing is still not where it needs to be for LTL carriers to earn their cost of capital.
So after a real pricing decline in 2009-2010 carriers are more focused than ever on ensuring they are getting adequate price increases from their customers due to the investments they are making into their business. You are seeing significant yield increases year-over-year now.”

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CALL US TODAY AND WE WILL HELP YOU BEAT THE HIGH COST OF LTL SHIPPING!

Call:        Don McCoy @ 469-688-3269 

Emails:  don@southernlogisticsgroup.net    

LTL freight cost can be a tricky thing to negotiate

Especially for a 3PL.  Generally freight companies would like to know what they are shipping before they give out pricing. They also do not want to lose money on shipments so they have to offset deep discounts with higher pricing in other areas. Large Brokers and 3PLs have pricing that fits for a majority of their customers.  For example on 3PL may move a lot of Automotive Parts which can be bulky and another company may move pallets of stretch film that is really heavy and dense.  In this example the price breaks may be different. The effect on a customer would be that if you are manufacturing and shipping heavy freight you need to ship with the 3PL that has pricing that matches up with your product type.  The 3PL that ships car parts may not have as great pricing as the one that ships stretch film.

Another thing to look at is where the freight is going.  Depending on the lanes the pricing could be very different.  It is the same situation.. a LTL carrier will only give discounts for certain lanes and certain product types to a particular 3PL.

However, Southern Logistics Group (SLG) is a national LTL freight consulting Co-Op (not a broker or a 3PL) that offers companies the opportunity to join our membership of companies in order to greatly reduce their Less than Truckload (LTL) costs regardless of product or destination. Our members achieve this by participating in our national LTL Co-Op that utilizes the negotiating power of millions of dollars of our members’ LTL freight.

SLG is a performance based company that only profits from the sharing of a member’s overall savings

Call Us:     Don McCoy @ 469-688-3269    or    Chris Rogovich @ 201-679-7160

Emails:  don@southernlogisticsgroup.net     or     chris@southernlogisticsgroup.net

Don’t get bogged down negotiating non competitive LTL tariffs with each individual carrier that also might lock your company into a long term freight contract.

Go with a single source solution platform that gives you all LTL carriers in one location without any contracts.

Go with Southern Logistics Group!

Call Us:     Don McCoy @ 469-688-3269    or    Chris Rogovich @ 201-679-7160

Emails:  don@southernlogisticsgroup.net     or     chris@southernlogisticsgroup.net

How to lower your LTL Shipping Rates!

It does not matter whether your company is big or small; the cost of your LTL freight shipping seems to keep taking a bigger chunk out of your expenses and operational costs. Trying to get gain the upper hand on these costs can be a challenging proposition as the amount of time involved in searching for better shipping rates is likely to be something you really cannot afford. But if you don’t call Southern Logistics Group you are going to keep spending too much on shipping.

Southern Logistics Group Can Help You Get the Lowest Rates on Your LTL Freight Shipping

If you are trying to find better rates on your LTL freight shipping and don’t have the time to handle your own research, take the time to contact us at Southern Logistics Group and join our no cost Co-Op.

Southern Logistics Group (SLG) is a national LTL freight consulting Co-Op (not a broker) that offers companies the opportunity to join our membership of companies in order to greatly reduce their Less than Truckload (LTL) costs. Our members achieve this by participating in our national LTL Co-Op that utilizes the negotiating power of millions of dollars of our members’ LTL freight.

Call Us:     Don McCoy @ 469-688-3269    

Emails:  don@southernlogisticsgroup.net   

Goals and Objectives of SLG Members:

  • Save money
  • Lock-in a benchmark for your current LTL rates/pricing
  • Retain total and absolute control of all LTL operations
  • Utilize all of our services at no additional cost with no associated fees, retainers or expenses

 

Benefits SLG Members Receive:

  • Free web access to a fully integrated logistics management system
  • Selection from a list of over 40 LTL carriers
  • Total and absolute control of all LTL operations
  • Automated creation of BOLs and auditing of all LTL freight invoices
  • AP control and automation of LTL/Truckload invoice payments directly to carriers
  • Web-based freight savings and management reports
  • Loyalty and Growth Incentive Program

 

Call Us:     Don McCoy @ 469-688-3269    or    Chris Rogovich @ 201-679-7160

Emails:  don@southernlogisticsgroup.net     or     chris@southernlogisticsgroup.net

Call Don McCoy @ 469-688-3269 or Chris Rogovich @201-679-7160 to avoid rising LTL Rates and Costs….

By John D. Schulz, Contributing Editor December 19, 2011

The $26.5 billion less-than-truckload (LTL) is a tiny share of the nation’s $700 billion total freight transportation pie, but it increasingly is seen as a vital component in shippers’ supply chains.   That’s because LTL carriers, with their networks of thousands of terminals and hub-and-spoke system of pickups and deliveries, enjoy significant barriers to entry in the otherwise deregulated trucking industry. In fact, there has not been a significant, sizeable new entrant into the LTL sector since UPS and FedEx made forays into the niche through acquisitions in the early 1990s.

Because of that, capacity in the LTL sector is rather finite, especially with the current driver shortage that is only expected to worsen with tighter regulations on drivers. Although the LTL sector did ratchet down capacity by as much as 20 percent during the economic downturn of 2007-09, freight demand has returned to LTL and is “fairly steady at the moment” even with its usual seasonal declines at this time of year, according to David Ross, trucking analyst at Stifel Nicolaus, Baltimore.

Paced by market leader Old Dominion Freight Line, LTL carriers are reporting year-over-year tonnage increases for 2011 and those gains are expected to repeat again in 2012. Ross is predicting a “slow, potentially choppy” economic recovery with price increases in the 2-3 percent range, although that could vary widely by geography, lane, customer and carrier.

Most major LTL carriers announced general rate increases (GRI) between 5.9 and 6.9 percent, effective in the fourth quarter. Privately, carrier executives say they would be happy to actually get half that amount from its customer base. But event that amount would continue a trend of increasing LTL yields (excluding fuel surcharges) that began in 2010.   “I don’t see the rate environment getting a whole lot firmer, but I don’t see it getting softer either,” said Jeff Rogers, president of YRC, a subsidiary of YRC Worldwide (YRCW), the nation’s second-largest LTL carrier. “Everybody’s GRI was very effective when they were announced in August. That has held well. The pricing environment remains steady to favorable. We are able to drive rate increases.”   Carrier executives and analysts say LTL carriers have been successful in gaining price increases from customers on specific lanes and “we believe this pricing power should remain with the carriers for at least the next couple of years,” according to Ross.   The determining factor for the LTL sector will be how well each carrier deals with the capacity issue when freight demand really hits high gear—which could occur in 2012, executives and analysts say. Obviously, if carriers added capacity faster than volume grows, that would reduce their ability extract healthy rate increases.     Another factor in the equation is the increasing role that third-party logistics companies play in the LTL industry. Analysts say carriers should try to get increasing rates from their large national accounts, which use their leverage to insulate themselves from the GRIs and other rate hikes.   Carriers will need to get better pricing from their large national accounts because the traditional, higher-margin smaller shippers have been gravitating toward 3PLs in an attempt to gain some leverage in pricing. This is affecting LTL carriers’ margins and some analysts say the only place to restore that is through the large, national accounts.   “Somebody is going to have to pay more to offset that 3PL margin decline,” said Rogers. “As freight shifts to the 3PLs, you do lose a little margin. I agree that significant price increases are going to come on the national accounts. It has to. There’s no place else to get it.”   As for now, LTL capacity and pricing is approaching that “sweet spot” that carriers enjoy.

“As far as capacity in LTL, it is tight but certainly not too far out of balance,” said Chuck Hammel, president of Pitt Ohio, a leading Northeast regional LTL carrier. “Pricing is firm but not out of control yet. As you might expect, customers always push back on price increases and this environment is no different. However there are simply too many uncontrollable cost factors in play within the trucking industry that carriers and shippers alike simply cannot ignore.”   Other carrier executives say there are other factors besides capacity working against shippers in the current economic environment.
“While it is a factor, I believe it is too early to attribute tightening capacity as the lone cause for the pricing pendulum to swing in favor of the carriers,” said UPS Freight Senior Vice President of Sales John Fain.
He said LTL pricing has firmed around the industry’s GRIs announced this summer for a variety of reasons, including fuel surcharges, but primarily due to a new found pricing discipline that has replaced those carriers that were sacrificing yield to build volume.   “The nation’s continuing sluggish economy compounded by increased costs for labor, healthcare and materials have forced many carriers to revaluate their pricing strategies,” Fain said. He said UPS Freight took a different approach.

“We gained market share not by discounting but by offering LTL shippers a value package unmatched in the industry” Fain continued. “As example, we recently rolled out technology previously reserved only for package customers, a pickup notification system directed at eliminating missed pickups.”
Whereas 95 percent of parcel pickups are scheduled, in the LTL industry the number is closer to 50 percent. When you are calling for a truck on a tight schedule with a number of pallets and different weights a carrier must make critical equipment decisions at a moment’s notice.   “Any delay can lead to an unwanted added expensive missed pickup for both shipper and consignee,” said UPS Freight spokesman Ira Rosenfeld.   The UPS Freight LTL Pickup Notifications, which it says is unprecedented in the LTL field, eliminates those extra costs by confirming when a pickup is scheduled; informing all parties the shipper when the driver is en route and notifying the shipper when the pickup has been is made. “UPS Freight’s system will not only tell a shipper a truck is on the way, it allows the customer to reschedule a pickup en route in case of delay,” Rosenfeld added.   Phil Pierce, executive vice president of sales and marketing at Averitt Express, a major regional and interregional LTL carrier, said shippers are more willing to accept rate increases if service levels are such that they are guaranteed sufficient capacity.   “As we head into 2012, we’re continuing to see our customers value the services we provide them,” Pierce told LM. “We’re working together with them to arrive at win-win solutions while capacity in the LTL market tightens. Shippers are more willing to accept a reasonable increase in rates if it assures them that their freight will keep moving.”   Effective Dec. 1, 2011, all YRC customers that used the current versions of the legacy Roadway and Yellow base rates were converted to YRC base rates. The current versions of the Roadway, Yellow and YRC base rates are equivalent, so this is a change in name only and will have no effect on your rates or discounts. As a part of YRC’s commitment to service, this change will extend the YRC no-fee, LTL standard service guarantee to all current rate customers.

Rogers of YRC Worldwide said that tariff change “should be invisible” to YRC shippers, who nevertheless will be analyzed on a lane-by-lane basis as to what their freight is contributing to YRC’s profitability.

Why Pay a 7% increase, when you can lock in your rates and save 30%?

Analyst says another round of general rate increases slated for February 2012.

By Mark B. Solomon

Several of the nation’s top less-than-truckload (LTL) carriers, fresh from announcing rate increases of nearly 7 percent on their non-contract traffic, are prepared to impose another round of rate hikes in February 2012, according to a top executive at a firm that advises shippers on spend management issues.

John Haber, executive vice president of transportation for Atlanta-based NPI, said he’s been told by reliable sources at several LTL carriers to expect another round of general rate increases in February. That would be about six months after the most recent cycle of increases, most of which went into effect at the beginning of August. The one exception is FedEx Freight, the LTL unit of FedEx Corp. and the nation’s largest LTL carrier, which today announced a 6.75-percent rate increase, effective Sept. 6.

Haber, whose firm represents about 300 shippers of varying sizes, said he’s been told that the 2012 increases would likely fall in the 5- to 6-percent range, less than the 6.9-percent rate increases announced by UPS Freight, ABF Freight System Inc., YRC Worldwide Inc., and Con-way Freight or the 6.75-percent increase from FedEx Freight.

YRC CEO James L. Welch, in an Aug. 5 interview, declined comment on any future rate increases. Representatives for UPS Freight and ABF denied that such a rate increase was in the offing. A spokesman for Con-way declined comment.

From late 2006 through 2009, LTL carriers were buffeted by a freight recession exacerbated by a broad economic downturn that followed the financial crisis that began in September 2008. During that time, the industry was also embroiled in a persistent rate war that compressed carriers’ profit margins. Many speculate that the rate-cutting strategy was a concerted effort to drive financially ailing YRC, then the market leader, out of business.

YRC has survived, however, and since the start of 2010, the carriers have reversed course, raising rates and culling marginally priced freight in an effort to boost revenue per pound—or yields—and improve profitability. Since January 2010, for example, UPS Freight, the LTL unit of UPS Inc., has imposed three general rate increases. UPS Freight was the first carrier to announce a rate hike this time around.

Haber said LTL shippers can look for alternative solutions, but with the major carriers falling in lockstep—or poised to—they may have little room to maneuver. He said experienced shippers with significant volumes might be able to bargain the carriers down to a 3- to 5-percent increase, but likely no lower.

Haber said he understands the carriers’ need to generate adequate returns to offset higher labor and operating costs, satisfy shareholders, and reinvest in the business. However, he added that the amount and the frequency of the increases have been “excessive.”

Haber said FedEx Freight has been the most active in walking away from low-margin business after two years of aggressive rate-cutting designed to capture market share. The unit last month reported that it turned an operating profit in its fiscal fourth quarter, its first quarter in the black after six consecutive quarters of operating losses. In the quarter, FedEx Freight’s yields rose 13 percent year over year, while tonnage fell by 8 percent during that span.

In April, Alan B. Graf Jr., FedEx’s CFO, told an investor conference the company “shot ourselves in the foot” with its LTL discounting strategy. “We got too aggressive on yields and tried to make it up in productivity. The reality was that we could not,” he said.

In a statement accompanying ABF’s generally solid second-quarter results, Judy R. McReynolds, president and CEO of parent Arkansas Best Corp., cautioned that the “progress made so far does not produce sufficient returns for our shareholders nor does it allow us to adequately recapitalize our business.” The path to profitability lies with “improved pricing on ABF’s existing account base and from continuing efforts to achieve a more competitive cost structure,” she added.

The wild card in any future rate actions is likely to be the health of the U.S. economy. Charles W. Clowdis Jr., managing director-transportation advisory services for consultancy IHS Global Insight, said although “all of the LTL players would like to raise rates in early 2012,” a weak economy and stagnant or declining freight volumes may make it difficult to implement an increase at that time.

Unless business picks up appreciably, a rate increase is possible only if carriers can tighten capacity to the point where shippers must pay up to get their freight moved, according to Clowdis.

 

Call Us:     Don McCoy @ 469-688-3269    or    Chris Rogovich @ 201-679-7160

Emails:  don@southernlogisticsgroup.net     or     chris@southernlogisticsgroup.net