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J.B. Hunt's shares rise as cost-cutting lifts trucking firm’s quarterly profit

J.B. Hunt shares rose 16% on early Thursday trading after a $100-million cost-cutting programme helped the company overcome a long-lasting freight downturn to increase its third-quarter profits.

Since 2022 the trucking industry has been struggling with overcapacity, falling freight rates and only modest growth of shipment volumes.

J.B. Hunt was able to protect its margins in the third quarter, thanks to a cost-saving program that aimed to save $100 million a year. This included route optimization, lower overhead, and administrative expenses.

Analysts at Evercore ISI applauded this performance and called it a J.B. Hunt specific outcome, which establishes an increased margin benchmark.

The Arkansas-based firm reported net earnings for the third quarter of $170.9 million, or 1.76 cents per share. This is up from $1.49 cents per share a year earlier.

According to data compiled and analyzed by LSEG, analysts had on average expected a profit per share of $1.46.

Despite soft demand, J.B. Hunt's strong execution and tangible progress towards cost savings drove stronger-than-anticipated results, analysts at BMO Capital Markets said.

The earnings trajectory could improve significantly in 2026, if the cyclical background does not worsen.

The expectation of a U.S. market turnaround for trucking in 2026 is gaining momentum. This is due in part to federal regulations that restrict the commercial driving licenses granted to non-U.S. citizen drivers, thereby reducing truckload capacity.

Experts warn, however, that the freight volume must increase to see a real recovery.

J.B. Hunt's shares are trading at a price-to earnings ratio of 21,71 for the 12-month period ahead, compared to an industry median of 16,15. (Reporting from Abhinav Paramar in Chandigarh, Editing by Sahal Muhammad)

(source: Reuters)