Maritime and Logistics News
  • Maritime & Ocean News
    • Container Shipping News
    • Dry Bulk Shipping News
    • Breakbulk Shipping News
    • Chemical Shipping News
    • Crude Oil Shipping News
    • Cruise Shipping News
    • Fishing News
    • Freight Forwarders News
    • LNG & LPG Shipping News
    • Multimodal Transport News
    • Railway News
    • Straits News
    • Trucking News
  • Global Ports News
    • Port Accidents News
    • Port Congestion News
    • Port Infrastructure News
    • Port Strike News
    • Schedules News
  • Air Cargo News
    • Air Cargo Carriers News
    • Air Freight Forwarder News
    • Airports News
  • Logistics News
    • Supply Chain News
    • Warehousing News
    • Cold Storage News
    • Logistics Parks News
  • Vessels News
    • Bunkering News
    • Incidents News
    • Offshore News
    • Pilotage News
    • Piracy News
    • Services News
    • Ship Breaking News
    • Shipbuilding News
  • Tech. & Sustainability News
    • Green Logistics News
    • Responsibility Projects News
    • Useful Maritime Associations News
  • Languages
Monday, January 12, 2026
Advertisement
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home Maritime & Logistics News

C.H. Robinson’s model increasingly validated with another solid quarter

October 31, 2024
in Maritime & Logistics News
C.H. Robinson’s model increasingly validated with another solid quarter
0
SHARES
4
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

(A summary of key financial numbers at C.H. Robinson in the third quarter can be found here.)

Third-quarter earnings at 3PL giant C.H. Robinson, in tandem with the analyst call that followed the release Wednesday, provided fresh signs that the “model” CEO Dave Bozeman talks about relentlessly is having a growing impact on fiscal performance and equity analyst acceptance.

When Bozeman took over as CEO in June 2023, his first earnings call was at the start of August. There was an undercurrent of skepticism from analysts about whether the former Ford executive could transform the brokerage company that had been struggling by virtually every metric and had fired its previous CEO at the start of the year.

One questioner on that August call referred to Bozeman’s “background in some of the other maybe more disruptive parts of the brokerage industry that have shown an ability to take quite a bit of share in very short periods of time.” That appeared to be a reference to Bozeman’s time with Amazon, where he was involved in freight operations.

And then the question that hung over that meeting: “What’s different about them versus what Robinson’s been doing recently?”

There was nothing like that on Wednesday’s earnings call. Virtually every analyst question was prefaced with congratulations for the third-quarter performance.

When questions arose about “the model,” Bozeman’s shorthand for the Lean system-based changes at C.H. Robinson (NASDAQ: CHRW), there was no sense of irony or skepticism. As Ken Hoexter of Bank of America Merrill Lynch asked Bozeman in reference to a market “inflection” when the freight recession turns bullish, “When it approaches, how do you think that impacts the business in the new operating model?”

Numbers supporting the model

If the model is being accepted by the analyst community, it’s because once again C.H. Robinson posted earnings that backed up the boasting.

The most significant number in the earnings to reflect how far C.H. Robinson has come may have been the adjusted gross profit margin for the company’s transportation operations. The North American Surface Transportation (NAST) segment is the bulk of that, but activities such as the Global Forwarding business are in there too.

Adjusted gross profit margin, a non-GAAP measurement, was 16.4% in transportation in the third quarter. It had not been that high since a 16.9% figure was posted in the third quarter of 2019. During that same year, the first two quarters came in at 18.6% and 18.3%.

But 2019 was a weak year in trucking. Brokerages benefited from that because contractual business they had secured in 2018, a strong market, could be supplied with spot capacity from the 2019 sliding truckload market.

The 16.4% figure for the third quarter of 2024 had no such benefit. Spot rates were mostly higher for the quarter, so to claw back to a 16.4% margin from 15.4% in the first quarter and 15.8% in the second took more than just the market breaking the right way for C.H. Robinson.

The bottom-line number for C.H. Robinson is that its non-GAAP earnings per share of $1.28 beat consensus forecasts by 13 cents, according to SeekingAlpha. Revenue of $4.64 billion beat consensus by $100 million.

Year-on-year gains starting to emerge

Improvements in the stock price at C.H. Robinson since the company’s surprising first-quarter report, which set off a sharp run-up, have come mostly on the strength of sequential improvements. For the first two quarters, the year-on-year comparisons were poor.

But the third-quarter figures began to show some notably better numbers compared to a year earlier, even as some of the sequential numbers were only modestly improved from the first two earnings reports of 2024.

For example, the adjusted operating margin for the company as a whole was 24.5% in the third quarter. That was better than a year earlier by 660 basis points but had actually slid from the 25.9% posted in the second quarter.

And while total revenue was down, “the model” was seen as driving improvements in gross profits across the company’s sectors. Truckload gross profit was up 12.2% from a year earlier; LTL was up 3.7%; ocean was up 36.25% – admittedly helped by “pull forward” business in anticipation of a port strike; and gains also came in the air and customs business.

Compared with the second quarter, truckload had only a small improvement sequentially, LTL had a slight decline, and ocean, air and customs posted solid gains in profitability.

Bozeman, in his opening remarks on the call, said the results “reflect continued improvement in our execution as we continue to deploy our new operating model. We are raising the bar even in an historically prolonged freight recession, with strong execution and disciplined volume growth across divisions while delivering exceptional service for our customers and carriers.”

The recent history of C.H. Robinson stock is that when the shockingly good first-quarter earnings were released at the end of April, shares added about $9 to a price near $72 pre-earnings. A subsequent earnings shock for the second quarter added about $11 to a stock that at the time had been near $89. The recent 52-week high was $113.10; C.H. Robinson closed Wednesday at $109.64 and was up about 30 cents in post-close trading, after the earnings came out.

Among other freight-related discussions from the earnings call:

  • Michael Castagnetto, the president of NAST, was asked about reports of a shift in the market away from brokers and toward asset-based carriers. “Traditionally, you see movement in the low end of the cycle toward the asset-based, but we feel really good about how we’re competing in the marketplace,” Castagnetto said. C.H. Robinson “feels really good” about gains in what Castagnetto called “wallet share gains in the contractual space,” a concept discussed during the call that boils down to not chasing volume for the sake of volume. “I think we’ve been pretty honest about how we’re attacking the transactional space and being disciplined,” he said. Castagnetto said during the call that “routing guides are performing incredibly well,” which would mean contract freight is likely to stick with the carrier that signed it up in the first place. “There’s not a lot of freight that’s flowing out of that into the transactional spot market, and in that spot market, it’s incredibly competitive.” C.H. Robinson is focused on “winning the right freight for us,” Castagnetto said.
  • Arun Rajan, chief strategy officer, reprised his comments from previous conference calls about C.H. Robinson’s increasing use of technology and generative AI. He ascribed the improved average gross profit performance in part to “the rigor and discipline in our pricing and procurement efforts,” which now feature annual generation of more than 2 million “algorithm-driven spot rates across truckload and LTL. We’re performing more frequent price discovery and enhancing the quality of the pricing that we deliver.” Generative AI at C.H. Robinson is being used, according to Rajan, to “automate customer coding, order entry, low tenders, appointment scheduling or other manual tasks.”

More articles by John Kingston

Werner CEO stands out for optimistic trucking market outlook

Trucking and marijuana testing find their way to the Supreme Court

Report: Driver shortage claim ‘spurious,’ fixation on efficiency causes turnover

The post C.H. Robinson’s model increasingly validated with another solid quarter appeared first on FreightWaves.

Tags: AndC.h. RobinsonThatTheWas

Related Posts

BNSF and CN want UP, NS to produce more merger documents
Air Cargo Carriers News

BNSF and CN want UP, NS to produce more merger documents

January 12, 2026
STG Logistics files Chapter 11, charts path forward
Maritime & Logistics News

STG Logistics files Chapter 11, charts path forward

January 12, 2026
Mexican National Arrested at Border After Alleged Kidnapping Spree Fits Pattern FBI Has Tracked for Decades
Air Cargo Carriers News

Mexican National Arrested at Border After Alleged Kidnapping Spree Fits Pattern FBI Has Tracked for Decades

January 11, 2026
Texas carrier ordered to pay more than $100K to fired driver 
Air Cargo Carriers News

Texas carrier ordered to pay more than $100K to fired driver 

January 9, 2026
German company joins push to replace traditional truck mirrors
Air Cargo Carriers News

German company joins push to replace traditional truck mirrors

January 9, 2026
Truck transportation jobs flat in December, lowest since 2021
Air Cargo Carriers News

Truck transportation jobs flat in December, lowest since 2021

January 9, 2026
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Trump to name Fox TV host Sean Duffy to head DOT

Trump to name Fox TV host Sean Duffy to head DOT

November 19, 2024
FedEx sends specialists to streamline European operations

FedEx sends specialists to streamline European operations

August 21, 2025
Vintage VLCC prices firm up

Vintage VLCC prices firm up

February 25, 2025
At RailTrends, CPKC and UP CEOs talk about higher levels of rail service

At RailTrends, CPKC and UP CEOs talk about higher levels of rail service

November 18, 2024
PUMA Chooses Maersk Warehouse,

PUMA Chooses Maersk Warehouse

0
Cape Rates Soar to $40,000 Per Day, Surging Twofold Within One Week

Cape Rates Soar to $40,000 Per Day, Surging Twofold Within One Week

0
Allelys Successfully Navigates Challenges in Transporting Cargo to Rothienorman Substation

Allelys Successfully Navigates Challenges in Transporting Cargo to Rothienorman Substation

0
Hanwha Ocean secures a contract for an ultra-large ammonia carrier

Hanwha Ocean secures a contract for an ultra-large ammonia carrier

0
Allegiant to absorb Sun Country’s Amazon cargo business

Allegiant to absorb Sun Country’s Amazon cargo business

January 12, 2026
BNSF and CN want UP, NS to produce more merger documents

BNSF and CN want UP, NS to produce more merger documents

January 12, 2026

Konecranes secures four-crane order for TerraPower Natrium Plant

January 12, 2026
STG Logistics files Chapter 11, charts path forward

STG Logistics files Chapter 11, charts path forward

January 12, 2026

Recent News

Allegiant to absorb Sun Country’s Amazon cargo business

Allegiant to absorb Sun Country’s Amazon cargo business

January 12, 2026
BNSF and CN want UP, NS to produce more merger documents

BNSF and CN want UP, NS to produce more merger documents

January 12, 2026

Konecranes secures four-crane order for TerraPower Natrium Plant

January 12, 2026
STG Logistics files Chapter 11, charts path forward

STG Logistics files Chapter 11, charts path forward

January 12, 2026

Stay ahead in the dynamic world of maritime and logistics with our comprehensive news coverage. Explore the latest industry trends, breaking news, and insightful analyses. Your gateway to informed decision-making in shipping, trade, and logistics awaits.

Follow Us

Our Partners

shipstrack.com
E-tracking
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2020-2024 SeasNews - Shipping News & Magazine.

No Result
View All Result

© 2020-2024 SeasNews - Shipping News & Magazine.