Repossessions and liquidations of tractor-trailer trucks nationwide have been high for the past five quarters, reports Nassau Asset Management. Yet, those same trucks are reselling at a brisk pace, illustrating
the diverse forces affecting the trucking sector.
Nassau's statistics indicate that truck repossessions and liquidations began to climb in the first quarter of 2005 after two years of relatively low volume. Comparing each quarter with the previous one, they rose 61 percent in Q1 2005, 30 percent in Q2 2005 and 32 percent in Q3 2005 at their 2005 peak. Compared with Q3 2005, truck repos dipped 118 percent in Q4 2005, which is traditionally the slowest period of the year. But the volume of repossessions was actually 145 percent higher than in Q4 2004. Truck repossessions in Q1 2006 increased 40 percent over the previous quarter.
Nassau's NasTrac Quarterly Index (NQI) reveals trends in equipment repossessions and orderly liquidations based upon the company's own internal activity in a given quarter compared to the same quarter the previous year. The company also has been tracking truck repossessions and liquidations from quarter-to-quarter due to the importance of this sector.
"In addition to our NQI, Nassau intends to publish quarter-to-quarter trends in trucking repossessions for the remainder of 2006. This may help everyone navigate any effects caused by the new federal engine standards for 2007, gasoline prices, and other forces," says Nassau President Edward Castagna.
Castagna says many factors – negative and positive – can affect truck repossessions and liquidations.
On the negative side, high fuel costs are contributing to repossessions and liquidations, Castagna adds. While the ability to apply fuel surcharges to customers is helping mitigate the effects for some of the larger truckers, most truckers do not exact fuel surcharges. Driver shortages may also be affecting the numbers of repossessions and liquidations, Castagna notes.
On the positive side, there are more financed vehicles on the road than there were a few years ago as equipment leasing and finance volumes have rebounded from the economic downturn in 2001. The more vehicles on the road, the more repossessions and liquidations, Castagna notes.
Another sign of a strengthening trucking industry, he adds, is increasing demand for new and used vehicles. The Monitor Daily reported May 2 that original equipment manufacturers sold more heavy-duty trucks to U.S. buyers in March than ever before. As reasons for the booming sales, manufacturers cited a generally strong economy and the pre-buy of vehicles to avoid 2007 models that will have more complicated anti-pollution systems. Nassau also notes that trucks the company has repossessed or liquidated are reselling quickly.
"We feel the rush to change out fleets before year end may leave a surplus of used trucks on the secondary market. We intend to monitor resale speed and price levels for the remainder of 2006," Castagna says.
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