Class 8, “heavy duty” truck orders are down 39% from a year ago.
First, let’s take a look at the reports, then we will take a look at what this may mean for the economy.
Class 8 Truck Orders Plunge 39%
The Wall Street Journal reports Truck Orders Fall in April.
Last month, trucking fleets ordered just 13,500 Class 8 trucks, the big rigs used on long-haul routes, down 16% from March and 39% from a year earlier. It was the fewest net orders in any April since 2009, FTR said.
DAT Solutions, an Oregon-based transportation data firm, reported that loads available for dry vans, the most common type of tractor-trailers used for shipping consumer goods, fell 28% in April while capacity on the market was up 1.7% on a year-over-year basis.
Eaton Corp. , the sales leader in heavy-duty truck transmissions, predicted that organic sales from its vehicles unit will fall 10%-12%, after earlier predicting that sales would drop 7% to 9%. The company lowered its outlook for the business after concluding there are at least 20,000 heavy-duty trucks built last year that are still sitting on dealer lots.
Engine maker Cummins Inc. said on Tuesday it doesn’t expect any improvement in the truck market later in the year. It now expects heavy-duty truck production in North America to be at 210,000 vehicles this year, down 5% from its earlier view and down 28% from 2015’s actual volume. Cummins’ first-quarter sales of diesel engines to the heavy-duty truck market dropped 17% from a year earlier to $631 million.
Worst Yet to Come
CCJ reports Sagging truck orders ‘will probably get worse before it gets better’.
Last month was the worst April for Class 8 truck orders since 2009 according to preliminary data released by FTR Wednesday.
North American Class 8 truck net orders fell for the fourth consecutive month in April to 13,500 units, down 16 percent month-over-month and 39 percent year-over-year.
Don Ake, FTR’s vice president of commercial vehicles, says “surprisingly low” orders across the board were weak as the Class 8 market tries to find the bottom of this cycle.
Kenny Vieth, president and senior analyst for ACT Research, says the blame for low orders was widespread.
” … an ongoing overcapacity narrative, a resulting weak freight rate environment, softness in late-model used truck values, and excessive new vehicle stocks,” he adds.
Large Truck Sales vs. Recessions
Variant Perception reports Peak in Heavy Truck Sales Point to Cyclical Pain.
Heavy truck sales are oddly a good leading indicator for the economy. It is odd because a lot of industrial production is coincident with the business cycle. However, if you go back over forty years, you can see that recessions have always been preceded by a decline in heavy truck sales. This is particularly true if the increase in truck sales is very large. Today, truck sales are not far from where they were at previous cyclical peaks in 1999 and 2007.
Heavy Truck Sales
Orders are down, sales will follow, sharply!
Topping off the the automotive sector please don’t miss About Those Record Auto Sales: Let’s Communicate!
Mike “Mish” Shedlock
Rail stinks.
https://www.aar.org/Pages/Freight-Rail-Traffic-Data.aspx
maybe everything being moved by blimps … or maybe Santa Claus started a shipping service??
Thanks, I was going to ask if rail was picking up the slack. If rail were up / truck orders down, it would imply consumers were more willing to wait longer for their online orders to arrive in exchange for lower shipping costs.
One should also take a look at the figures for specialized freight (flatbed). Building materials, heavy equipment, all manner of machinery and agricultural machinery are moved by flatbed. This would include heavy haul (large excavators, Dozers, and whatnot) as well as propeller blades for windmills. Specialized loads are one of the leading indicators of a recovering economy.
Then we have that fool Bullard out flapping his gums about the economy and a rate hike in June. A lot of this lying accounts for the Trump phenomenon. People realize that everyone in authority is lying through their teeth and he seems to be the only guy telling the truth.
The U.S. Lie-Stream Media??????
I’m in shock, shock, shock I say.
Coming soon from Tesla: Class 8 Drones?
Section 8 drones, maybe.
Sell Sell Sell!! THE SKY IS FALLING!!!
It that chart real? A business with volumes regularly up and down 40-80% YOY?
In any case, it looks like sales declined around 7 times and there were only 3 recessions. Not really a great indicator.
Perhaps it is just a transitory blip.
The Obamacare tax kicked in on schedule after April 15. A heavy tax will always turn a Great Recession into a Great Depression.
Federal income taxes in the US are about half of what they should be and the US Congress needs to get federal income taxes raised substantially and very quickly as the US ran racked up more than $1 trillion in additional national debt just over the past 6 months. Or perhaps they could cut federal government spending…
The federal budget is double what it should be. 47% are not pulling their fair share.
I assume that means 53% are still busy keeping the oppression racket lucrative for it’s perpetrators.
A “fair share” of the Federal Government’s harebrained schemes, would be awfully close to nothing at all. On the high side.
Much, much better than expected. Earlier reports had large truck orders down as much as 80%.
“Well honey, it may not be long but it sure is skinny!” She said!
It almost sounds good if you say enthusiastically.
I know a lot of truckers and they are having major mechanical issues with the new emission standards that are a requirement on new trucks. Engines blown just after warranty (and a $40,000 bill to replace the engine) are now a common occurrence. They are keeping their older trucks on the road as long as possible, well past the point they would usually sell it as it is much cheaper to keep fixing the old truck than invest in a new truck that will have much more problems.
An example: the trucks are logging trucks and are driven on rough logging roads for their entire life. Instead of spending $200,000 on a new truck the owner opted to spend $50,000 refurbishing his old truck even though it already has 1.8 million miles on the odometer. The usual lifespan of a truck he owns is about 1.5 million before replacement.
Cue Cummins and Eaton feverishly lobbying congress, to get those “unsafe” old clunkers banned from usage on all public roads………… Not sure if either company is currently owned by PE or Hedge Fund hacks who has politicians ears. If not, it’s only a matter of time. And then, regulation profiteering…..
Trump Picks Former Goldman Partner And Soros Employee As Finance Chairman
so, Mish, tell me again how the hairdo is an outsider?
What fleet manager wants to bulk up on labor intensive rigs on the eve of automated freight hauling?
EX-employee, but still, man, it’s a big danger signal.
Perhaps this time is different. But one has to understand the government definition of recession does not match main streets reality. It appears to me that the peak heavy truck sales occur about one year from the official onset of recession and three years from the peak these sales bottom which is outside the bound of official recession. That would mean if the pattern holds it will not be until 2018 that large truck sales would rebound
These blogs have been predicting a recession for,,,well, since the last recession. Maybe someday, like a stopped clock, they will be right.
Of course, in past circumstances, we didn’t have QE’s and ZIRP and a Fed with an open ended mandate to “Do whatever it takes,” so past performance is no guarantee……..
So, let’s get truckin’ there Janet. Cash for Class 8 clunkers up next? Zero percent no down no doc for 30 years?
Recession indicators that doesn’t take debt growth into account, are about as realistically useful as personal wealth indicators that measure only spending, with no eye towards credit card balances. Borrowing money, to spend on lavishly paying the people lending you the money, then adding their income to the “services” component of GDP, and concluding everything is going great, isn’t really a game for the more discriminating of players.
Then there are the 292 locomotives sitting on a siding in Arizona.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-05-05/haunting-pictures-transportation-recession-freight-rail-traffic-plunges
“Total US rail traffic in April plunged 11.8% from a year ago…”
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