The most recent edition of the Shippers Condition Index (SCI) from freight transportation consultancy FTR issued this week points to mild market conditions.
FTR describes the SCI as an indicator that sums up all market influences that affect the transport environment for shippers, with a reading above zero being favorable and a reading below zero being unfavorable and a “less-than-ideal environment for shippers.”
For November, the most recent month for which data is available, the SCI was -0.6, which was an improvement over October’s -3.1, and in line with September’s -0.5.
Going forward, FTR said it expects the SCI to head into a moderately negative range later this year, spurred on by the expectations for tight capacity for 2017 to kick in. And it explained that shipping costs are currently seeing a positive impact from low fuel costs that are basically offsetting increases in transport costs, coupled with the expectation that will remain the case until the second half of 2016, with the SCI expected to drop as a result of the pending capacity crunch.
“The tough conditions that shippers had been operating in since the end of the recession have been muted over the last year,” said Jonathan Starks, Chief Operating Officer at FTR, in a statement. “Over the last twelve months the SCI has averaged a reading of just -1, a sharp contrast to the -6 that it averaged for the 3 years prior. These more benign conditions have come about because of 2 key factors: fuel prices have yet to find a bottom, and truck and rail capacity is ample enough to handle any surges in freight. With oil prices continuing to fall to decade lows to start 2016, it looks like we could even see some positive readings during the first quarter of the year.”
And he added that the market will remain relatively neutral during 2016 and most of 2017 before shifting negatively for shippers in the latter part of 2017 as several key regulations (such as mandated usage of electronic logging devices) start having an impact on the market. Forward-looking shippers, he said, will be keeping a close eye on those dates in order to advantage of the current environment to nail down capacity and lock in rates.
While the economic landscape is muddled with conflicting pros and cons like low gas prices and loose capacity as part of the former and sluggish industrial output and cautious consumers as part of the latter, ongoing uncertainty is having an impact on shippers’ supply chain operations from various perspectives, including strategy, planning, and procurement.
This, in turn, has seen shippers try to lock in more contractual pricing instead of spot pricing, with carriers able to leverage that into future capacity commitments.
Industry stakeholders have told LM 2016 could prove to be an interesting one for shippers, depending on economic growth levels and expected significant impact of industry regulations like electronic logging devices, and the possible resumption of motor carriers hours of service rules, among others.