Either the Teamsters or ABF Freight System is Lying. Maybe Both.
November 23, 2009
ABF, Teamsters May -- Or May Not -- Be in Concession Talks | www.dcvelocity.com
ABF Freight System, the nation's fifth-largest LTL carrier, is seeking wage concessions from the Teamsters union to match the 15 percent givebacks obtained by YRC Worldwide, the nation's largest LTL carrier. But the Teamsters union is publicly denying that any concession talks are taking place.
"Cadillac" of Trucking Terminals to be Closed by YRCW
November 17, 2009
YRC Closes Big Richfield, Ohio, Terminal | www.tdu.org
Financially troubled YRC Worldwide is closing its 202-door Richfield, Ohio, breakbulk terminal, one of the largest in its system. The move is part of YRCW's downsizing, and affects about 1,000 Teamsters at three Ohio terminals. About 400 of those 1,000 Teamsters already are laid off.
Flavor of the Month is Railroads, But Freight Eventually Will Move Back to Truck
November 12, 2009
Trucking 101--This Analyst is Half Right | www.forexyard.com
How solid is the case for intermodal rail? Is it merely the flavor of the month, or can be be an honest-to-goodness, legitimate alternative to all-truck movements of surface freight? Analysts are touting intermodal rail, but how important and encompassing can rail transport be to U.S. shippers?
Is the Web Going to Save These Two Freight Behemoths?
November 11, 2009
For FedEx, Holidays May Bring an Upturn | online.wsj.com
FedEx Corp. is predicting an 8 percent rise in its "busiest day shipments" on Dec. 14, compared with last year's busiest day total. FedEx expects to ship more than 13 million packages on that day. Arch-rival UPS, which is about 35 percent larger than FedEx, says it will issue its own, separate "busiest day shipments" forecast next year, after eschewing such forecasts last year.
Mr. Buffet, buying a real railroad is not like in the board game.
November 6, 2009
Buffett: Railroad business is 'in tune with the future' | www.usatoday.com
Hardly anyone can resist the temptation to by a railroad in the game of “Monopoly.” They are reasonably priced, have OK earnings potential, and if all four are owned, they have outsized rental rates and the payment rates with sites on all four sides of the board. In real life however, railroads are rarely cheap compared to their earnings and the STB will keep anyone from owning more than one. So why would such an astute investor as Warren Buffet purchase one?
Big-Foot YRC Drops the Other Shoe on Shareholders
November 3, 2009
YRC is Seeking Big Concession by Shareholders | www.google.com
Embattled trucking giant YRC Worldwide is asking its shareholders to give up 95 percent ownership in the trucking company to lenders in what it calls a "final step" in its recovery plan. One analyst called the deal a "train wreck hitting the school bus full of kids and nuns" for shareholders, who caused a massive selloff in the stock in one day of more than 60 percent to $1.32 a share.
YRC's Spin May Be Positive, But the Operating Numbers Are Not
October 30, 2009
YRC Worldwide Reports Significant Sequential Improvement in 3Q 2009 Results | www.google.com
YRC Worldwide, the nation's largest trucking company by volume, reported a $158.7 million loss in the third quarter on sharply declining revenue of $1.3 billion, compared with a net loss of $720 million on $2.38 billion revenue in the year-ago quarter. Despite the huge losses, YRC Chairman and CEO Bill Zollars says the company "gained significant momentum" in the third quarter and some progress in new credit agreements with its consortium of lenders.
Don't Panic. This Trucking Recovery May Be Two Steps Ahead, One Step Back
October 23, 2009
ATA Truck Tonnage Index Slipped 0.3 Percent in September | www.reuters.com
The American Trucking Associations' closely watched advanced seasonally adjusted for-hire Truck Tonnage Index fell 0.3 percent in September. This came after it increased 2.1 percent in both July and August.
Best is Yet to Come for C.H. Robinson
October 21, 2009
Weak Demand Hurts Shipper C.H. Robinson | www.google.com
C.H. Robinson, the leading third-party logistics provider at nearly $8 billion in revenue, posted $95.5 million in third-quarter net profit despite a 15.6 percent decline in revenue to $1.95 billion. Its core trucking business rose 2.1 percent as the nation's industrial base began its economic recovery, although its ocean shipping business was off nearly 22 percent and its intermodal revenue decline 30 percent, although it was a small percentage of its overall business.
FedEx is Not Alone in Fighting Independent Contractor Battles.
October 19, 2009
'Contractor' Lable Provokes Legal Disputes | online.wsj.com
The Internal Revenue Service, several states and the courts are stepping up their pursuit of legal remedies and penalties for companies that misclassify company employees as independent contractors. FedEx has been at the center of these legal battles for more than a decade as unions, states and some courts seek financial enhancement if independent owner-operators are reclassified as employees.
Shale gas abundance provides new options for energy companies
February 13, 2012
Chesapeake Energy bites the natural gas bullet
January 25, 2012
Flurry of newbuild drilling rig deliveries in 2012 may dampen rig rates
January 20, 2012
Talisman joins the ranks of cautious E&P companies
January 12, 2012
Early signs of caution begin to cloud frontier exploration and production
January 4, 2012