CPGs, retailers collaborate to balance volume and unit revenue

Pricing strategies advance as companies model changes in consumer behavior

General Mills leverages newfound strategic revenue management capability to effectively balance pricing and volume 

Chart: Barchart.com Inc.

General Mills on Wednesday reported its fiscal first-quarter results and the shares didn’t do much with little variance from expectations and management reiterating full-year guidance. But the company highlighted a number of CPG industry trends. 

Rail intermodal contract rates under pressure


(Chart: SONAR – IMCRPM1.USA Seasonality)

Despite the recent comment from J.B. Hunt, the largest truckload-based domestic intermodal provider, that we are coming out of the freight recession, domestic rail intermodal is one segment where rates are still falling. The SONAR chart above shows that intermodal rates (not including fuel surcharges) rose double-digit percentages first from 2020 to 2021 and again from 2021 to 2022. This year, rates have fallen throughout the year by double-digit percentages and have stairstepped down from the first quarter as more contracts have come up for renewal.

This week, we heard an anecdote from a major CPG company that intermodal volume it recently put out to bid resulted in rates that declined double-digit percentages. Asset-based intermodal carriers appear to be chasing volume more aggressively than non-asset-based carriers. That difference likely reflects the heavy investment that the asset-based intermodal carriers made in containers, which, so far, has exceeded demand. 

GXO Direct leverages its tech and scale to deliver flexible warehousing solutions


(Image: FWTV)

Grace Sharkey and I interviewed Steve Lewis, division president at GXO Direct, on Monday.  GXO’s warehousing and fulfillment solutions for shippers range from handling a specific node to handling the client’s entire supply chain. Clients include many small and midsize shippers that are looking to expand sales quickly (often from direct to consumer only to also selling through retailers) while also serving large enterprise shippers. 

Fulfillment has grown in complexity with the expansion in e-commerce and the demand for omnichannel fulfillment. GXO offers warehousing space on a flexible basis so shippers only purchase what they need; its scale and location density within key freight markets, such as having six facilities in the LA area, are key enablers of that flexibility. 
See the full interview here.

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