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ACT Research: U.S. Trailer Production Remains Robust, Orders Down 43% YTD

August 22, 2019, 07:10 AM
Filed Under: Trucking

According to this quarter’s issue of ACT Research’s Trailer Components Report, trailer industry net orders continued the year-over-year slide that begin at the end of 2018, now negative for seven consecutive months, with preliminary July data showing that trend continuing. However, the report also notes that manufacturers continue to produce trailers at near-record levels.

“Through June, trailer net orders are down more than 43 percent year-over-year, and the orderboard horizon has remained in the November/December timeframe this entire year,” said Frank Maly, Director–CV Transportation Analysis and Research at ACT Research. “Additionally, fleets were clamoring to order additional trailers earlier this year for 2019 delivery, frustrated by a lack of available production slots and OEMs’ unwillingness to accept orders for 2020.”

Additionally, Maly said, “After the early-year enthusiasm, the recent opening of OEM orderboards has been met with a dramatically lackluster response by fleets, catching most OEMs by surprise. And, high cancellations have also churned industry backlogs for the latter part of the year, indicating that 2019 may well close weakly and provide little support for the beginning of 2020.”

Maly also noted, “Despite the dramatic order weakness, OEMs continue to produce at near-record levels, and lacking any turnaround in order volume as the year closes, OEMs could reduce those rates further, attempting to stretch existing backlogs until the fleet order pace rebounds.”

Regarding trailer components specifically, the report stated that while some component issues have caused higher red-tag/incomplete issues in late 2018 and early 2019, there has been less mention of component challenges as this year has progressed. Maly said, “The potential impact of tariffs is the only possible headwind to relatively benign component constraints occurring mid-year.”







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