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Old Dominion's profits drop on lower shipment volumes but prices improve

Old Dominion Freight Line, a trucking company, reported a?decline?in its first-quarter profits on Wednesday. This was attributed to?lower shipment volumes. However, the firm highlighted an improvement in pricing.

U.S. trucking companies have been stuck in a lull for a long time as an excess of supply has driven down rates, while operating expenses continue to rise.

The challenges faced by these companies have intensified over the last year, as the uncertainty surrounding the Trump administration's changing trade policies has exacerbated the decline in volumes and the weakening of demand.

J.B. Hunt - a contract trucking company - had said earlier this month that it saw signs of a recovery of the?trucking rate, due to a tightening regulatory of truckload capacities by restricting commercial drivers licenses for non U.S. citizens.

Old Dominion is one of the biggest less-than truckload firms in the U.S. Its revenue per shipment, which is a measure for pricing, increased 5.9% in the last quarter.

LTL is the process of transporting multiple shipments for different customers in a single truck. These shipments are then transferred through a network?of service centers to other trucks that have similar destinations.

Its LTL shipments dropped 7.9% during ?the quarter. Nearly all of the company's?revenue comes from its LTL services division.

Old Dominion’s revenue for the quarter fell by 2.9%, to $1.33 Billion. Old Dominion's quarterly revenue fell 2.9% to $1.33 billion.

The operating ratio of the company, which is a measure of operating costs as a percentage of revenue, has increased from 75.4% to 76.2%.

The company's shares were up by 1.1% during premarket trading. (Reporting by Nandan Mandayam in Bengaluru; Editing by Shilpi Majumdar)

(source: Reuters)