Truckload stocks appeared priced for perfection heading into the fourth-quarter earnings season. Shares ran more than 40% higher from the week before Thanksgiving to mid-January, when J.B. Hunt Transport Services reported. The move was in lockstep with rising tender rejections and spot rates. Earnings misses and lackluster outlooks were set to be punished until a surprisingly positive manufacturing update provided the group another shot in the arm. However, that bump was partially dashed by a tiny tech company touting plans to disintermediate the space.
Carriers reported decent peak-season demand, underscoring supply-side tightening from increased regulation of the driver pool. Winter storms in December further stretched the dynamic. However, improving fundamentals came late in the quarter, leaving the period more indicative of the prolonged downturn. While the space appears on the verge of an upswing, management teams were unwilling to bake a recovery scenario into their 2026 outlooks.
Following the 40% runup into earnings season (the S&P 500 was up only 6% over that stretch) shares moved sideways after the first couple of reports. However, TL and less-than-truckload stocks jumped in the first week of February after January’s Purchasing Managers’ Index report showed life across the manufacturing complex for the first time in a year.
The group sold off following the Thursday release of a white paper from a largely unknown company, claiming its AI tools will significantly reshape freight brokerage and generate large savings for users. Algorhythm Holdings (NASDAQ: RIME), a firm with a sub-$10 million market cap and better known for its days as a seller of karaoke machines, said its formula has unlocked significant reductions in empty miles and headcount.
A version of its platform in India is coming to the U.S.
Industry participants and analysts largely panned the claims. The operation appears to require mass collaboration from shippers, carriers and 3PLs to achieve the stated synergies. That seems unlikely as most intermediaries have spent billions building siloed tech platforms to garner market share.
The news caused a mid-teen percentage selloff in 3PL stocks. It also dragged down shares of asset-based carriers by mid-single digits. Both groups were up low-single-digits in midday trading on Friday.
(The events positively and negatively skewed post-earnings stock reactions for some carriers.)
J.B. Hunt Transport Services (reported Jan. 15)
J.B. Hunt (NASDAQ: JBHT) delivered more positives than negatives in the fourth quarter. It again saw the fruits of a $100-million cost reduction program (80 basis points of operating margin). Adjusted operating income was up 11% year over year even as revenue dipped 2%.
