C.H. Robinson (Nasdaq: CHRW), the largest trucking freight brokerage, is in a challenging spot that isn’t strictly due to the Great Freight Recession. Its stock is trading near the lows of the COVID lockdown (closing price on April 26 was $70.22; the COVID low was $63.91), with investors asking tough questions about the company’s long-term prospects.
For three and a half decades, C.H. Robinson’s position was uncontested. It was in an enviable position — it had information and access to fleets that no one else did. After all, with the largest number of offices around the country and the largest network of carriers, almost no one could compete with Robinson’s pulse on the market or connection to fleets.
Early on, this information and trading arbitrage became C.H. Robinson’s unfair advantage.
However, other freight brokers emerged, and the share of freight that brokers handled grew faster than C.H. Robinson’s business.
Less than a quarter-century ago — in 2000 — freight brokerages handled only 6% of all trucking freight. Today, FreightWaves estimates that 25%-30% of freight is handled by 3PLs; others have suggested that the figure is more than 50%. Regardless, it’s a huge number.
Brokerages gained market share by taking freight from the largest asset truckload carriers, playing the role previously reserved for companies with trucks.
Shippers used to be reluctant to give freight to companies that didn’t own their own trucks. Still, they eventually realized that freight brokerages provided unparalleled flexibility and could offer rates that shifted as the market did (freight costs are massively volatile).
Because brokerages were not constrained by fleet size, they could handle surges much easier than asset-based carriers. In that regard, a brokerage can provide a superior product compared to a single-source truckload provider.
Those circumstances have caused large over-the-road truckload providers to struggle for years. It is not just freight brokerages taking share; intermodal (railroads) are also eating their lunch.
A few companies like J.B. Hunt, Werner, and most recently, Covenant, saw these changes coming. They largely moved away from their dependence on the for-hire truckload market.
Others failed to pivot fast enough — Celadon, CFI, U.S. Xpress, Interstate, etc. — and each paid dearly.
In addition, shippers benefited from the fact that brokerages were faster than the fleets about investing in technology and customer success initiatives.
From 2000 to 2015, the industry saw the scale of startup or small brokerages explode (Brokerage 2.0): TQL, Echo, Coyote, Command, Access America, Nolan, GlobalTranz and many others grew exponentially.
This caught the attention of private equity (PE) firms, corporations, and even UPS — they all bought into the belief that the freight brokerage market was ripe for consolidation.
The Brokerage 2.0 players sold out, and middle management at those firms left and started their own versions of what we’ll call Brokerage 3.0.
Meanwhile, technologies emerged that eroded Robinson’s information and fleet access advantage.
Emerging firms like Arrive, Molo and Steam popped up, and hundreds of others were created, requiring little more than a computer, an MC, and a load board account. These firms grew very quickly — understanding that the secret to freight brokerage was recruiting new brokers and creating a dynamic sales culture — something that “stuffy” corporates, PE and UPS would never understand.
The new firms cleaned the clocks of the incumbents.
PE firms and strategic acquirers soon learned that there was little differentiation between the various freight brokerages, and it was hard to retain talent unless the management teams stayed intact (which is hard to do after they’ve sold out).
Then, the most damning part of the story took place: Silicon Valley discovered freight brokerage. Startups like Convoy and Uber Freight were funded — and all focused on blitzscaling. Even Amazon joined the party, leveraging its vast resources and huge freight spend to take an additional share.
In the U.S., Amazon moves more freight through its network than FedEx.
Early on, these startups tried to achieve critical mass, offering heavily discounted pricing to “buy share.”
And they did. The digital natives grew exponentially without concern for short-term profits. However, many of those same firms have found profit elusive or worse.
At the same time, tech vendors made it easier for new entrants to join the industry and existing players to scale quickly.
DAT Rateview, Truckstop Rate Insights, SONAR and FreightWaves removed Robinson’s information advantage — now, everyone understood what was happening in the market in near real time.
Public and private load boards (DAT, Truckstop, Loadboard123), digital matching apps (J.B. Hunt 360, Loadsmart, Emerge), Trucker Tools, and others took away Robinson’s capacity access advantages. At the same time, systems like Mercury Gate, Ascend TMS, Macropoint, P44, FourKites and Transflo destroyed Robinson’s advantages in system infrastructure that enabled the brokerage to scale so quickly.
Perhaps the biggest blow to C.H. Robinson’s business model is the emergence of payment networks like TriumphPay that make it seamless for brokerages to fund growth without needing large balance sheets.
Now, anyone can start or grow a freight brokerage with little upfront capital and play at the same level (or even better) as C.H. Robinson.
After successfully fending off the pressures of competition for three decades, C.H. Robinson finally gave in.
Bob Biesterfeld, the former CEO of C.H. Robinson, declared in 2019 that the company would protect its market share by investing $1 billion in new technology.
But it was too late. Robinson had been losing market share, but this was hard to see because of the growth of the underlying market. As long as the freight brokerage market grew, few would realize that C.H. Robinson’s business was under real stress.
Then, the freight market exploded during COVID. Robinson made a fortune during the peak COVID cycle, handily beating analyst estimates like everyone in the space. However, that peak cycle turned, followed by the Great Freight Recession — one of the biggest and most painful downturns in freight market history.
Although Robinson replaced its CEO, the new CEO can do little to fend off the inevitable decline of its core business.
In recent months, FreightWaves has received reports of many veteran brokers leaving the firm, something that was unfathomable just a few years ago. Sources told FreightWaves that the departures were caused by compensation restructuring initiatives and a change in the company’s operating culture.
Margins are under pressure from the Great Freight Recession, which is now in its third year, and the cutthroat competition of thousands of freight brokerages all bidding on the same loads.
Sources have told FreightWaves that Robinson’s new management wants to change the company’s cost structure and has pursued a series of changes to its compensation structures to change the unit economics of the business. These changes have been controversial and unpopular; some veteran reps with decades of tenure have left Robinson to protest the company’s new operating culture.
However, the company must reduce operating expenses to offset the impact of declining brokerage margins.
There are few good short-term answers for C.H. Robinson.
Competition is only going to increase. Robinson’s one-time advantages are largely gone, killed by innovation and direct competition. Its leadership has little choice but to address compensation packages representing the largest operating cost at freight brokerages. But, as noted above, as those changes occur, the company will continue to lose some of its most successful sales and carrier reps. Shippers are likely to leave as a result, as often, the personal relationship with the sales and customer service teams is what keeps the shipper from moving to a competing broker.
Worse still, as a public company, all of Robinson’s challenges are visible to everyone, including competitors, employees, and customers.
A huge business model reset with some long-term thinking is required, but that may be difficult for a publicly traded company to satisfy investor expectations every quarter.
Shrek
The access to information is what hurt them. Realtors used to enjoy a comfortable living by managing the access to real estate listings, all it took was an innovative company to provide the public access to real estate listings. Once you lose the control over that critical information it’s a paradigm shift. How you handle this shift determines your future in this case it seems the answer is not very well.
Sebastian P
Sebastian with PLS Logistics, contact me for freight quotes: spetanceski@plslogistics.com
Dont give in to big-freight.
Ontheroadagain
CH Robinson has a new rule imposed on small fleets that if you don’t haul at least 10 crappy loads in a year we won’t give you a good paying one.
Our company chose to not haul any for them. In the past we have occasionally pulled a load or two for them and never had an issue. We were always on time and no claims but that doesn’t matter to them.
One of my biggest complaints is the constant interaction with the driver. They require tracking on their app then call to see where you are. If the app is good why keep bothering drivers while they’re working.
Scott Patry
CH Robinson often had heavy freight like paper rolls or ad inserts, and paid next to nothing to get it on a truck and then demand white glove service in return. I absolutely hated having to haul any of their loads. Plus they’d haul loads of cardboard or plastic (pretty much literal garbage) that were often 46,000 pounds or more, and it would leave the trailer smelly and absolutely ruined. Not that the shipper’s and consignees of the garbage were pleasant to drive in and out of. Often muddy, pot hole riddled, with garbage everywhere on the ground causing flat tires on the tractor or trailer. I absolutely hated dealing with CH Robinson 💯 Their demise is their own fault and I’m thrilled to see them suffer 💯
Current Employee
This company’s main concern is to cut costs at all accounts. They don’t care about their employees. During the last year, they have hired Teleperformance from Mexico to handle a large chunk of the business with very little training. Then they forced a new program which creates a very slow response time to customers. We used to have a 30 minute turn around time. Now it can be up to 3 hrs or more. This program is instituting AI technology which is likely to take away jobs. Then there are bots that create the Loads with lots of bad information which will result in massive invoicing problems. No one got raises last year. The CEO gets a 1.5x salary bonus but then he only gives everyone a 1.5% bonus which barely covers a tank of gas. What’s next? Are they going to stop contributing to our 401K and health insurance?
Buy CHRW now, while you can still afford it
CHRW is and will always be the world’s leader in transportation expertise and innovation. Every customer and carrier savvy enough to distinguish a Peterbilt from a minivan has CHRW playing a pivotal role in their daily processes, and for good reason. No one keeps a better pulse on transportation markets globally, and their decision making is a testament to that. The difference that separates them from the next best service provider will be crystal clear whenever the supply of capacity finally dips low enough to meet the humble supply of freight presently available in the marketplace. That will be when the industry witnesses CHRW’s ability to scale thru cutting edge tech, confirm experience and talent still reside confidently within the walls, and the company’s stock price will hit new heights as a result. This article and most of these comments remind me of LeBron fans.
Gary
Stop out sourcing to other countries trying to bank on paying them nothing and lacing your pockets with more liquidity . Hire Americans . Remember something . We truckers move this country . Pay us what we deserve . Hypocrites !
Dan stidman
I try to never use Cheap and Heavy Robinson.