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1. Economy - Trade uncertainty grows as fiscal challenges mount. After a short period of relative calm, a wave of policy development has reignited uncertainty across trade, tax, and credit markets. A federal court ruling has disputed the administration’s tariff authority, new protectionist threats are escalating tensions with major trade partners, a sweeping tax package inches forward in Congress, and the US credit rating has taken another hit.
2. Medium Duty - At a preliminary 8,300 net orders for MD trucks (+/- 5.0%), the current forecast decline is materializing.
3. Heavy Duty - Government policy decisions and uncertainty have been the drivers of the newfound weakness in vocational market demand.
4. Trailer - Net order intake in April was just below 9.4k units, down more than 57% from March and about 32% lower than the subdued level of orders accepted in April 2024. This puts the ytd order tally at 70.5k units, 13% higher than the 62.2k bookings for the first four months of 2024.
5. Used Truck - Same dealer used Class 8 retail truck sales decreased in April. The 3.3% m/m slide was directly consistent with, but not as large as, the expected nearly 11% seasonal pullback indicated by history.
1. The shipments component of the Cass Freight Index® was down 0.4% m/m in May.
2. Aggregate DAT contract rates of $2.15 per mile, net fuel, in May, were up 1₵ from April.
3. US dry van TL spot rates, net fuel, rose 5₵ m/m to $1.62 per mile in May, up 3₵ in SA terms.
4. The long-distance LTL Producer Price Index (PPI) rose 5.4% y/y in May, up from 4.9% y/y in April.
5. Intermodal spot rates were unchanged m/m in May at $1.47 per mile, including fuel, in line with the normal seasonal pattern and near the cycle low.
Final North American Class 8 net orders totaled 13k units in May, down 45% y/y.
“Entering the weakest period seasonally for new business, Class 8 orders continued to decline in May, as weak fundamentals and broad uncertainty pressure demand,” according to Carter Vieth, Research Analyst at ACT Research. “Unsurprisingly, tractor orders fell 43% y/y, to 8,439 units. Vocational truck orders fell 48% y/y, totaling 4,584 units,” he continued.
The Class 8 average retail sale price slipped 2.3% lower m/m in May. On a year-over-year basis, prices were down 3.1%.
“Compared to April, miles increased 2.8% m/m, contributing to weaker pricing,” said Steve Tam, Vice President at ACT Research. He continued, “May is usually the third weakest sales month of the year, running nearly 5% below average. Combined, total used sales lagged the first five months of last year by 6.7%, leaving our outlook for 2025 unchanged.”
Net order intake in May was just above 6.6k units, down more than 26% from April but about 12% higher than the subdued level of orders accepted last May.
“This puts the year-to-date order tally at 76.6k units, 13% higher than the 68.1k bookings for the first five months of 2024,” said Jennifer McNealy, Director–CV Market Research & Publications at ACT Research. “Worth noting, the industry’s annual period of seasonally stronger order months is in the rearview mirror, and weaker intake is expected from now through mid-Q3.”