J.B. Hunt’s record intermodal loads came with higher costs in Q4

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J.B. Hunt intermodal containers double stacked on a well car
J.B. Hunt touts record customer satisfaction during the fourth quarter. (Photo: Jim Allen/FreightWaves)

J.B. Hunt Transport Services said peak season for its intermodal and highway services segments was strong and that it’s seeing some customers secure capacity earlier than normal, which is usually a harbinger of an improving environment.

The Lowell, Arkansas-based multimodal transportation provider reported earnings per share of $1.53 Thursday after the market closed. The result included a roughly 13-cent headwind, or $16 million, from intangible asset impairments. The consensus estimate for the period was $1.62 per share and in line with the company’s result excluding the charges.

Consolidated revenue fell 5% year over year to $3.15 billion. Adjusted operating income of $223 million (excluding the impairments) was 13% lower y/y.

The company guided to a 20% to 25% sequential decline in consolidated operating income (after consideration of the one-off charges) from the fourth to the first quarter, assuming normal seasonal trends. That is in line with its prior 10-year experience excluding two of the pandemic years.

The fourth-quarter result and guide sent shares of J.B. Hunt (NASDAQ: JBHT) 11.1% lower in after-hours trading on Thursday.

Operating income, margins and earnings per share in the following tables have been adjusted to exclude the one-off charges from the 2024 fourth quarter as well as $53.4 million in insurance-related items across various segments in the 2023 fourth quarter.

Table: J.B. Hunt’s key performance indicators – Consolidated
Table: J.B. Hunt’s key performance indicators – Consolidated

Intermodal volumes strong, waiting on pricing to turn

Intermodal revenue fell 2% y/y to $1.6 billion as loads increased 5%, but revenue per load was down 6% (down 3% excluding fuel surcharges). J.B. Hunt saw record volumes in the quarter with transcontinental moves up 4% and Eastern loads 6% higher even as the mode competed with low truck rates.

Total intermodal traffic on the U.S. Class I railroads was up 9% y/y in the quarter, according to the Association of American Railroads.

Chart: (<a href="https://gosonar.com/" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:ORAILDOML.USA;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">ORAILDOML.USA</a>). The daily volume of intermodal containers moving in the United States, Canada and Mexico. The index is a 7-day moving average using the date that containers were in-gated at a point of origin. Intermodal trailers (trailer-on-flatcar, or TOFC) are excluded. <em>To learn more about SONAR, <a href="https://gosonar.com/" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:click here;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">click here</a>.</em>
Chart: (ORAILDOML.USA). The daily volume of intermodal containers moving in the United States, Canada and Mexico. The index is a 7-day moving average using the date that containers were in-gated at a point of origin. Intermodal trailers (trailer-on-flatcar, or TOFC) are excluded. To learn more about SONAR, click here.

The unit recorded a 92.7% operating ratio (inverse of operating margin), which was 170 basis points worse y/y (70 bps worse excluding the prior-year insurance add-back). Costs associated with elevated volumes and repositioning equipment, as well as the addition of 800 intermodal drivers for peak season, were the headwinds.

Management said on a Thursday call that rail service at partner BNSF (NYSE: BRK.B) did decline for a couple of weeks early in the quarter, which weighed on margins. However, the recent service issues in the West are tied to record volumes and not structural in nature, management said.

Revenue per load stepped slightly higher sequentially for a second straight quarter, but pricing headwinds from recent bid negotiations will linger through the first half of 2025. The company said it has seen an improvement in customer bid compliance, and it is hoping to see rate increases on future bids to offset cost inflation.