Trailer orders slow in June

Trailer orders slow in June

truck-leaving-generic

According to the latest preliminary numbers from both ACT Research Co. and FTR, trailer orders were down in June, in line with typical yearly trends. ACT found that while orders are still strong, June was the first time in 18 months that trailer orders have been down year-over-year. ACT has trailer orders numbers for June at 20,048, down 1.3% year-over-year and 13% month-over-month.

“Dry vans were the driving force in the last two months’ performances and solid volume kept that year-over-year improvement streak alive in May,” said Frank Maly, director of CV transportation analysis and research at ACT Research. “It was dry van weakness in June that was responsible for the total industry’s negative y/y posting, while the other nine trailer categories were all in the black year-over year.”

According to Maly, those ten trailer categories include: dry vans; reefers; flatbeds; heavy low-beds; medium low-beds; dumps; liquid tanks; bulk tanks; grain/commodity; and “all other.”

“Production surged sequentially in June. While build usually increases in an end-of-quarter month, there were also extenuating circumstances last month,” Maly added. “Reports of red-tagged units being moved to completion were heard and that shift from work-in-progress to completion artificially increases calculated build rates.”

FTR reported trailer orders at 18,600 units. Trailer orders have now totaled 335,000 units for the past twelve months.

“You can expect order rates to remain subdued for a couple of months,” said Don Ake, FTR vice president of commercial vehicles. “Fleets should begin placing substantial orders for 2019 beginning in September, a month earlier than normal, because production next year is expected to be hefty once again. The economy is healthy, freight growth is sturdy, and sales remain strong. The market is performing according to traditional trends, albeit at record-setting levels.”

You May Also Like

Isaac Instruments celebrates 25 years

While marking a quarter-century in business, ISAAC instruments is also celebrating 10 years exclusively focused on helping fleets succeed.

logo-ISAAC-25-years

Isaac Instruments announced it is celebrating its 25th anniversary as a provider of telemetry data to the transportation industry. As part of the yearlong celebration, Isaac unveiled a 25th anniversary logo and is planning anniversary-themed giveaways at trucking industry events throughout 2024.

“Isaac Instruments has 25 years’ experience developing technology for vehicles, with many of these years focused on research and development of OEM prototypes,” explained Jacques DeLarochelliere, co-founder and chief executive officer of Isaac. “We were initially involved in projects that were extremely sophisticated and complex.”

Merchants Fleet hires AI expert Suzannah Hicks

Merchants Fleet says Hicks will work to implement AI-driven solutions to optimize operations, enhance efficiency and drive cost savings for the company and clients.

Merchants-Fleet-hires-AI-expert-Suzannah-Hicks
Noregon adds Fault Guidance, bi-directional testing to JPRO

The new JPRO update also includes an optional Technician as a Service (TaaS) add-on.

Noregon-JPRO-update
Powerfleet, MiX Telematics approved for business combination

The combination is expected to be complete in the first week of April, after which the businesses will be branded as Powerfleet.

Powerfleet-x-MiX-telematics-integration
Scania speeds up autonomous transport pilot program

Equipped with Plus, Scania has been testing its trucks in Sweden since 2021 — now it plans to expand operations throughout Europe, this year.

SCANIA-Logo-vector

Other Posts

FTR announces new senior rail analyst

Before FTR, Towers worked directly with Class Is, shortlines, OEMs, operators, and private equity clients as a freight rail specialist.

FTR-joseph-towers-senior-analyst-rail
Interact Analysis: HRS construction in China lags behind 2025 target

Some areas currently have a ratio of nearly 140 commercial hydrogen fuel cell vehicles for each hydrogen refueling station.

Interact-Analysis-Hyrdogen-stations-china-HRS-Graph3
ACT Research predicts ‘year of transition’ as trailer orders fall in March

ACT says while softer order activity still meets expectations, net orders remain challenged by weak profitability for for-hire truckers.

ACT-Research-US-Trailer-Net-Orders-Prelim-April
ACT Research data shows Class 8 order surge paused

At a seasonally adjusted 17,100 units, March marks the first month since May 2023 for seasonally adjusted activity below 20,000 units.

ACT-March-24-Class-8-order-surge-pauses