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1. Economy - Stagflationary risks are becoming more pronounced as tariff impacts increasingly appear in the data, with inflation edging higher as the labor market softens further.
2. Medium Duty - July’s medium duty market performance was a hodge podge of gains and losses, but with some interesting twists.
3. Heavy Duty - With 2026 orderboards opening this month, the next three-to-four months of orders will be critical for 2026, but uncertainty abounds.
4. Trailer - Net order intake in July was 8.8k units, 43% lower than June’s high-side surprise, but more than 19% higher than the subdued level of orders accepted last July.
5. Used Truck - Same dealer used Class 8 retail truck sales decreased for a fourth straight month in July. The 6.0% m/m drop was counter to the small expected seasonal increase.
2. Aggregate the DAT contract rates of $2.14 per mile, net fuel, in August were unchanged from July, 1₵ above the seasonal pattern, and up 1.0% y/y.
3. DAT US dry van TL spot rates, net fuel, were down 2₵ m/m but up 1.3% y/y at $1.62 per mile in August.
4. Class 8 tractor orders fell slightly in August to about 6,600 units from 6,892 in July.
5. Intermodal spot rates remained in the same 10₵/mi range of the past 17 months in August.
Final North American Class 8 net orders totaled 12,844 units in August, down 21% y/y.
“August marks the eighth consecutive month of y/y Class 8 order declines,” according to Carter Vieth, Research Analyst at ACT Research. “Even with the caveat that August is a seasonally weak order month, just ahead of next year’s orderboards opening, this month’s tractor orders of 7,493 units, down 34% y/y, were notably weak, but in line with the trend since April. Current tariff and regulatory purgatory continue to sow industry uncertainty.”
Same dealer used Class 8 retail truck sales increased for the first time in five months in August.
“The 11% m/m gain was better than expected on a seasonally adjusted basis. August is typically the second best sales month of the year, running more than 8% above average,” said Steve Tam, Vice President at ACT Research. He continued, “The auction market turned in a respectable performance that was counter to its expected decline. Auction volumes floated 3.4% higher m/m in August. The wholesale channel saw its largest sequential gain since February 2024 in August, adding 35% m/m. Combined, total market same dealer sales volumes climbed 11% m/m in August.”
“With two-thirds of 2025 in the rearview mirror, the US trailer market has transitioned from ‘cautious optimism’ to ‘stay afloat,’ as the modus operandi of wait-and-see continues.”
“Carrier profits remain weak, freight rate traction is incremental, private fleets are pulling back on asset investments, and Class 8 indicators continue to deteriorate. Within this environment, trailer demand remains subpar,” said Jennifer McNealy, Director–CV Market Research & Publications at ACT Research. “At this point, muted intake continues to be expected until policies and pricing are more transparent, and carrier profitability sustainably increases.”