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Old Dominion's cost control helps it beat quarterly profits

By Aishwarya Jain

Oct 29 - Old Dominion Freight Line surpassed third-quarter profit expectations on Wednesday. The company was able to do so due to tight cost control as it operated in a long freight recession.

The U.S. trucking sector is struggling with low volumes, overcapacity and a persistent recession.

Experts predict that the current downturn will continue through the first quarter of next year. This is despite the fact that extra capacity has been gradually removed from the market. The sector faces challenges due to a changing global macroeconomic climate.

Old Dominion’s operating costs were $1.05 billion in the third quarter. This is down 2.1% compared to $1.07 billion from a year earlier.

The operating ratio of the company, which is a key metric indicating operating expenses as percentages of revenue, dropped 30 basis points sequentially to 74.3% during the third quarter.

A lower operating rate indicates that an organization spends less per unit of revenue.

Stephanie Moore, an analyst at Jefferies, said: "The sequential improvement in the operating ratio, despite the expected softness of tonnage per day and revenue, came as a big surprise."

Early morning trading saw shares of the company rise by nearly 5%.

Less-than truckload (LTL), or less-than-truckload, companies operate by transporting multiple shipments for different customers in a single truck. These shipments are then transferred through a network service centers to other trucks that have similar destinations.

LSEG data shows that the revenue of Thomasville, North Carolina based company fell by 4.3% during the third quarter to $1.41billion, compared to analysts' expectations of $1.40billion.

The company's profit per share fell 10.5%, to $1.28. This was higher than Wall Street expectations of $1.22. Reporting by Aishwarya Jain in Bengaluru and Abhinav Paramar; editing by Shreya biswas

(source: Reuters)