Accident claims weigh on Landstar’s fourth quarter

Accident claims weigh on Landstar’s fourth quarter
Accident claims weigh on Landstar’s fourth quarter

Freight broker Landstar System said strength in flatbed demand largely offset a still weak dry truck freight market during the fourth quarter. However, cargo revenue trends exceeded typical seasonality in December and so far in January.

Landstar (NASDAQ: LSTR) reported fourth-quarter adjusted earnings per share of 75 cents after the market closed Wednesday. The result was 56 cents worse year over year. The figure included $22 million (49 cents per share) in unfavorable claims activity from separate tragic vehicle accidents and $2.1 million (5 cents per share) in non-cash impairment charges arising from its sale of Landstar Metro. (The impairment charge was added back to adjusted EPS.)

The company disclosed the articles last week and said it plans to appeal a recent post-trial ruling.

Consolidated revenue of $1.17 billion was 3% lower year-over-year, largely due to a 40% decline in revenue in its shipping business.

Table: Landstar Key Performance Indicators
Table: Landstar Key Performance Indicators

Trucking revenue was flat year over year at $1.08 billion. The number of loads fell by 1%, but revenue per load increased by 1%. The strength of rigs was offset by softer trends in dry vans. Platform revenue increased 11% year over year to $401 million, as loads increased 3% and revenue per load increased 8%.

Total truckload revenue increased 6% from October to December, due to a reduction in truck capacity, Landstar said. The metric rose 1.5% sequentially in the fourth quarter, 50 basis points ahead of normal seasonality.

Landstar noted modest weakness in consumer durables revenue (down 2% YoY) along with continued weakness in the automotive (down 7%) and construction (down 3%) verticals. Platform demand benefited from data center construction and decent energy-related revenues (up 6%).

The company’s substitute liner transportation revenue decreased 15% year-over-year. Linehaul’s revenue typically increases markedly as the market tightens and truck capacity becomes harder to find.

Revenue generated by business capacity owners (BCOs) increased 2% year-on-year to $458 million, as loads increased 4% and cargo revenue fell 2%.

(Landstar BCOs are owner operators who transport almost exclusively for the company.)

Trucks provided by BCO decreased 4% year-on-year to 8,514 units. That was 104 units less than in the third quarter. The third quarter marked the first sequential increase in the number of BCO trucks since the first quarter of 2022. The number of BCO trucks previously reached a high of 11,935 units.

Retention among the group has improved and truck utilization was 8% higher year over year at nearly 24 loads per truck during the quarter.

The number of BCO trucks generally increases as the market experiences a sustained period of higher TL rates. Landstar expects BCO’s fleet to grow in 2026.

BCO revenue per mile (Landstar’s preferred metric for TL pricing as it excludes fluctuations in diesel fuel prices) decreased 1% year over year in the fourth quarter for both flatbed and dry van shipments. Dry truck revenue per mile decreased 1% sequentially in both October and November, but improved 3% sequentially in December, which was slightly better than normal seasonality.

Graphic: <em>SONAR: National Truck Load Index (Linear Transportation Only – NTIL.USA) <em>for 2026 (blue shaded area), 2025 (yellow line), 2024 (green line) and 2023 (pink line)</em>. The NTIL is based on an average of dry van loads booked across 250,000 lanes. The NTIL is a seven-day moving average of liner shipping spot rates excluding fuel. Spot rates increased during the peak season as new limitations were placed on the driver pool.</em> <em>Severe winter weather amid tighter capacity is keeping rates elevated in recent days.</em> <em>For more information about SONAR, <a href="https://gosonar.com/" rel="nofollow noopener" objetivo ="_blanco" ylk de datos ="slk:haga clic aquí;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" clase ="enlace ">Click here</a>.</em>” loading=”lazy” height=”330″ width=”960″ class=”yf-lglytj loader”/></div>
</div><figcaption class=Chart: SONAR: National Truck Load Index (Liner Transportation Only – NTIL.USA) for 2026 (blue shaded area), 2025 (yellow line), 2024 (green line) and 2023 (pink line). The NTIL is based on an average of dry van loads booked across 250,000 lanes. The NTIL is a seven-day moving average of liner shipping spot rates excluding fuel. Spot rates rose during the peak season as new limitations were placed on the driver pool. Severe winter weather amid tighter capacity is keeping rates elevated in recent days. For more information about SONAR, click here.

The company did not provide formal guidance but said revenue could only decline by a low-single-digit percentage between the fourth and first quarters. January truckloads were down 1% year over year, but in line with normal seasonal trends, and freight revenue is 4% higher sequentially (800 bps ahead of typical seasonality). Landstar typically sees a mid- to high-single-digit sequential revenue decline in the first quarter.

The variable contribution margin, or net income margin, improved 40 basis points year-on-year to 14.1%. (The metric measures the revenue remaining after paying for purchased transportation expenses and agent commissions.)

Adjusted operating margin (as a percentage of variable contribution) dropped sharply to 19%. Insurance and claims expenses (as a percentage of BCO revenue) increased 560 bps y/y to 12.3% due to recent claims activity.

LSTR shares fell 1% in after-hours trading on Wednesday. The stock closed up 1.2% on the day.

More FreightWaves articles by Todd Maiden:

The post Accident Claims Weigh Landstar’s Q4 Appeared first on FreightWaves.

Source link