After peak sales and build in 2019, significant declines are ahead in 2020, according to ACT Research. 
 -  Photo: Jack Roberts

After peak sales and build in 2019, significant declines are ahead in 2020, according to ACT Research.

Photo: Jack Roberts

Carrier profitability and by extension Class 8 demand are heading toward tougher business conditions in 2020, according to ACT Research’s recently released Transportation Digest.

The picture was also tough for medium-duty. Succumbing to the slowing economy, the Class 5-7 markets were awash in a sea of red ink in October, although moderate growth persists in build expectations, according to ACT.

The report, which combines ACT’s proprietary data analysis from a wide variety of industry sources, paints a comprehensive picture of trends impacting transportation and commercial vehicle markets.

“After peak sales and build in 2019, significant declines are ahead in 2020, as heavy-duty sales and build follow the net orders trend down," said Kenny Vieth, ACT’s president and senior analyst, in a news release. "But if our forecast of ongoing (but slower) economic expansion holds in 2020, the drop will be a correction (along the lines of 2015 and 2016), not a devasting recession (as in 2008 and 2009)."

Regarding the medium-duty market, Vieth said, “Given its traditional status as the strongest medium-duty order month of the year, October’s disappointment suggests further softening of customer demand. Following September’s bow shot, the downward trajectory of the seasonally adjusted annual rates in the past two months suggests the slowing of build rates the past two months are looking more like a new paradigm, rather than a pause that refreshes.”

ACT Research noted that three factors are at work in the weak outlook for heavy commercial vehicles in the coming two years: demand, supply, and timing. While some, like the oversupply of equipment, have been on the radar for a long time, others, like the growing weakness in manufacturing and the broader economy, have come on slowly over several months.

“The speed at which the economy is progressing – or not [progressing], in the case of the manufacturing sector – is insufficient to absorb the capacity overhang that was built in 2019," Vieth said. "If railroad and port activity are any indication, the freight slowdown is accelerating into year’s end and is as broad-based as it is disconcerting." ACT projects that because carriers bought more equipment than was actually needed for capacity in 2019, 2020 will see "the industry awash in excess equipment, most of which was added by private fleets.”

Vieth also noted that timing will play a significant role in how the truck markets will perform in 2020. “Add to the existing supply and demand imbalance the lack of a visible spark that will propel the U.S. economy to higher growth levels," he said. "This has to occur in time to drive heavy-duty market improvement into 2021. The process for this goes something like: Rising freight absorbs capacity, spot rates improve, contract rates recover, orders accelerate and backlog growth ensues, and then with comfort in new demand levels, supply chain are ramped. That connect-the-dots process will unlikely be finished in time to materially improve activity into 2021.”

About the author
Jack Roberts

Jack Roberts

Executive Editor

Jack Roberts is known for reporting on advanced technology, such as intelligent drivetrains and autonomous vehicles. A commercial driver’s license holder, he also does test drives of new equipment and covers topics such as maintenance, fuel economy, vocational and medium-duty trucks and tires.

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