What the surge in empty container moves says about the freight market
Photo: Jim Allen - FreightWaves
Photo: Jim Allen - FreightWaves

Chart of the Week: Inbound Empty Rail Container Volume, Outbound Tender Volume Index, Outbound Loaded Rail Volume – Los Angeles SONAR: IRAILE.LAX, OTVI.LAX, ORAILL.LAX

The rails movement of empty international and domestic sized containers into the Los Angeles market have spiked over the past month. The implication is that demand is outpacing the supply of available containers both on the west coast and overseas. The transportation market appears to be able to handle it.

The dominant flow of consumer goods into the U.S. is from Asia to southern California. These are items like electronics, furniture and apparel. The primary consumption markets are in the eastern half of the country, which means most of the goods that come in through the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach get moved either by rail or truck to the east.

This trade route should not be confused with raw materials or routes associated with manufacturing and processing. Those are much more dispersed and less focused.

The route represents the American consumer with shipments of primarily finished goods. It has been formed over the past 30 years as companies recognized the cost effectiveness of producing their goods in Asia.

This mechanism is responsible for creating the largest imbalance in the flow of transportation capacity. The natural flow of goods continually puts pressure on Asian and Los Angeles market capacity.

The result is that container ships move back to Asia with empty — non revenue generating — containers. The same is true for truckload carriers and the railroads. Since there is no natural mechanism pushing capacity back to where it is needed most, capacity tightens rapidly at times.

Loaded domestic intermodal container volumes out of Los Angeles have grown significantly over the past year, with daily volumes averaging over 10% higher y/y throughout August. This was its fastest growth rate of the year.

Truckload tender volumes out of Los Angeles averaged over 20% higher in June, pushing tender rejection rates to multi-year highs over 8% before the Fourth of July. Tender volumes and rejections fell throughout July up until last week.

The data suggests intermodal had taken share from the truckload market and provided a way to relieve pressure on capacity.

Unlike June, last week’s spike in tender volumes out of Los Angeles did not have a strong impact on capacity as tender rejection rates did not increase meaningfully, moving from 5.1% to 5.45% in the past week. Spot rates from Los Angeles to Chicago were only up 0.4% week over week last Thursday.