Skip to content
Chimera readability score 67 out of 100, Academic reading level.

Analysts have raised expectations for carriers heading into the second-quarter earnings season. While the trucking industry is still in the early stages of an upcycle, a tighter capacity backdrop has produced better pricing. Higher rates across leaner cost structures should generate more pronounced earnings growth moving forward.
Richa Harnain, Deutsche Bank (NYSE: DB) analyst, is “forecasting mainly beats” across her transportation coverage, with less-than-truckload carriers leading the charge. She expects median earnings-per-share growth of 15% (year-over-year) for the second quarter and 21% for the third quarter. That would mark a meaningful improvement from the 3% increase the group recorded in the first quarter and the 7% decline logged in the fourth quarter.
(The change comes as the sector is exiting a multiyear downturn, with some companies still comping to trough results.)
She raised numbers for both the truckload and LTL carriers she follows. Her LTL forecasts increased roughly 8% on average and sit above consensus expectations.
“We expect less-than-truckload (LTL) operators to lead the way, with our official earnings forecasts for the group 5% above consensus on average,” Harnain said. “Even that may prove conservative, given how these names have historically performed in the early stages of cyclical upturns.”
Less-than-truckload demand is starting to reflect six consecutive months of positive manufacturing data. Intraquarter updates provided by public carriers showed tonnage turned positive for the group in May (on a two-year-stacked comp) following an extended downturn. Tightness across the TL market and heavier shipments from the industrial complex are shaping LTL demand.
Large national carriers continue to garner mid-single-digit contractual rate increases despite a glut of excess door capacity. General rate increases are occurring at an accelerated pace and LTL fuel surcharge programs become more profitable as fuel prices increase. Higher pricing and cost takeouts (including AI-led optimization initiatives) should allow carriers to restore margins.
Harnain noted that the “sharp stock outperformance” (some trucking stocks are up 50% year-to-date) has valuation multiples stretched compared to historical levels. However, she believes improving industry fundamentals and carriers’ ability to generate significant cash flows (to fund dividends and stock buybacks) warrant ownership.
Ravi Shanker, Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS) analyst, also flagged valuation as a concern in his second-quarter preview.
“We believe stocks have priced in the easy early-cycle gains, with record valuations increasing the risk of greater volatility ahead, making us more selective,” Shanker said this week in a note to clients.
He raised EPS estimates by 5% on average for the transportation companies he follows, but downgraded his industry view to “in-line” from “attractive.” However, Shanker still expects the space to witness “the biggest upcycle ever” in the coming quarters.
“We are more convinced than ever on the strength of the upcycle, though the debate now moves on to how high the record upcycle will peak and how structural the gains are,” Shanker said. “However, it would be naive to ignore significant stock moves and relative valuation dislocations across the group.”
He downgraded Old Dominion Freight Line (NASDAQ: ODFL) to “equal-weight” and both J.B. Hunt Transport Services (NASDAQ: JBHT) and Landstar System (NASDAQ: LSTR) to “underweight.” All three stocks are up over 40% year-to-date. He continues to favor the TLs, select LTLs and the Canadian railroads.
The second-quarter earnings season begins on Wednesday when J.B. Hunt reports results after the market closes.
Supply Chain AI Symposium
Past the hype. Join operators, founders, and enterprise leaders figuring out how to deploy AI in supply chain.
F3: Future of Freight Festival
Industry-defining keynotes, rapid-fire technology demos, and industry leaders networking in experiences across Chattanooga - plus the inaugural F3 Awards Dinner featuring the FreightTech and Shipper of Choice reveals.
Past the hype. Join operators, founders, and enterprise leaders figuring out how to deploy AI in supply chain.
The Old Post • Chicago, IL Register NowIndustry-defining keynotes, rapid-fire technology demos, and industry leaders networking in experiences across Chattanooga - plus the inaugural F3 Awards Dinner featuring the FreightTech and Shipper of Choice reveals.
The Signal at Chattanooga Choo Choo • Chattanooga, TN Register Now

Facts Only

* Analysts have raised expectations for carriers entering the second-quarter earnings season.
* A tighter capacity backdrop has resulted in better pricing.
* Richa Harnain forecasts median earnings-per-share growth of 15% for Q2 and 21% for Q3 across her transportation coverage.
* This forecast is an improvement over the group's 3% increase in Q1 and 7% decline in Q4.
* Less-than-truckload (LTL) carriers are leading the upcycle.
* LTL forecasts increased roughly 8% on average and are above consensus expectations.
* Public carriers showed positive tonnage for the group in May following an extended downturn.
* Large national carriers received mid-single-digit contractual rate increases despite excess door capacity.
* Rate increases are accelerating, and LTL fuel surcharge programs are becoming more profitable.
* Higher pricing and cost takeouts allow carriers to restore margins.

Executive Summary

Analysts are raising expectations for transportation carriers heading into the second-quarter earnings season, driven by a tighter capacity backdrop that has resulted in better pricing. Less-than-truckload (LTL) carriers are leading this trend, with one analyst forecasting median earnings-per-share growth of 15% for the second quarter and 21% for the third quarter. This forecast represents a significant improvement compared to the prior quarters, which saw a 3% increase in the first quarter and a 7% decline in the fourth quarter.
LTL operators are expected to lead the upcycle, with forecasts averaging 5% above consensus expectations. This is supported by recent positive manufacturing data that reflects six consecutive months of positive tonnage for the group, especially following an extended downturn. While large national carriers continue to see mid-single-digit contractual rate increases, LTL fuel surcharge programs are becoming more profitable due to rising fuel prices and operational efficiencies like AI-led optimization. Despite some stock outperformance leading to stretched valuation multiples, analysts believe improving industry fundamentals warrant ownership.

Full Take

The narrative presents a tension between fundamental improvement and valuation concerns in the transportation sector. The shift in focus toward LTL operators, supported by positive manufacturing data, suggests a structural correction is underway, moving beyond the prior multiyear downturn. The expectation of substantial earnings growth signals that operational mechanics—specifically pricing power derived from capacity tightness and efficiency gains—are beginning to translate into financial results.
The pattern observed is the decoupling of market performance from historical valuation benchmarks; stocks are showing significant year-to-date appreciation while analysts simultaneously flag "record valuations" and stretched multiples, indicating that sentiment is chasing price gains rather than solely reflecting structural shifts. This creates a potential divergence where fundamental improvement is not fully reflected in current stock prices, which introduces volatility risk. The focus on the peak of the upcycle—how high it will go and how structural the gains are—highlights an essential uncertainty: whether the observed growth is cyclical noise or a sustainable shift in operational profitability.
What would it take for the market to properly price the newfound efficiency and LTL leadership? If carriers can sustain margin restoration through AI and increased rates, what historical benchmarks should anchor the valuation of these earnings rather than lagging historical multiples? How does the current divergence between strong operational momentum and high valuations influence investor behavior in a nascent upcycle?

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

This text appears to be professionally written financial journalism synthesizing analyst commentary on the trucking sector, characterized by structured presentation of data and named opinions.

Signals Detected
low severity: Moderate sentence length variance and use of direct analyst quotes suggests human editorial structure.
low severity: The text flows logically from macro trends (upcycle, capacity) to specific analyst forecasts, showing a coherent narrative thread.
low severity: Multiple named analysts providing distinct yet aligned viewpoints indicates source-based reporting rather than monolithic generation.
low severity: Specific data points (e.g., 15% EPS growth, May tonnage updates) require specific sourcing, suggesting human integration of facts, though the presentation is polished.
Human Indicators
The inclusion of specific analyst names, firm affiliations (Deutsche Bank, Morgan Stanley), and referencing specific company tickers (ODFL, JBHT) points to sourcing from financial news wires or research reports.
The framing shifts naturally between macro analysis and specific quantitative forecasts, which reflects typical expert reporting style.
Analysts raise TL, LTL estimates ahead of Q2 earnings season — Arc Codex