Less-than-Truckload Offers a Full Payload of Opportunities

By  David SchaarMiles Mattson Alex WrightAnita Zhang, and Jake Levey
Article 5 MIN read

Key Takeaways

Less-than-truckload freight benefits from higher barriers to entry and other structural advantages over full-truckload freight, giving it solid pricing power and margin stability.
  • Structural advantages include a complex hub-and-spoke operating model, as well as capacity and pricing discipline among a relatively small group of leading carriers.
  • Carriers can continue to drive revenue and margin growth by strengthening the customer value proposition, investing in dynamic pricing, targeting attractive new verticals, and using analytics to enhance safety.
  • Investors can tap into this stable, high-margin business by targeting niche subsegments, pursuing consolidation opportunities to create new at-scale players, or entering less-than-truckload brokerage.
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In a freight market clouded by economic uncertainty and rising costs of labor, equipment, insurance, and technology, less-than-truckload (LTL) freight has emerged as a beacon of resilience. This segment, benefiting from higher barriers to entry and other structural advantages, has retained solid pricing power and margin stability. Operators can continue to harness their advantage, and investors can benefit by tapping into a business that is less cyclical and more protected than other freight segments.

LTL’s Structural Advantages and Challenges

LTL moves smaller shipments for customers by combining freight from multiple shippers onto a single truck. This small but in-demand segment accounts for just 1% of domestic freight tonnage but 6% of revenue. (See Exhibit 1.) Several structural advantages have been driving this performance.

LTL operators must keep pushing forward to ensure that their business remains strong and grows. Beyond following underlying economic activity, they should pay close attention to changes in the domestic manufacturing base and near-shoring activities , the trend toward more just-in-time supply chains, retail consolidation plays, and e-commerce . (See Exhibit 4.)

Although growth during the past three to five years has been solid thanks to LTL’s structural advantages, we expect that future growth will require investment in tools and technologies that increase the efficiency of existing networks to better serve customers. This is particularly necessary for regional carriers that don’t win on scale, but serve their geography through LTL services and thoughtful asset management .

Implications for Operators

LTL players can continue to drive revenue and margin growth—even in a challenging freight environment—by pursuing several initiatives:

Opportunities for Investors

LTL is a stable, high-margin business with promising potential for margin expansion and revenue growth. Investors have several options to gain exposure to LTL, depending on their risk appetite and strategic intent:


LTL’s significant structural advantages offer opportunities for operators to continue to press their advantage on several fronts—by strengthening the customer value proposition, investing in dynamic pricing, and targeting new verticals. The segment offers investors a range of possibilities, depending on their risk appetite, from tapping into niche subsegments to more aggressively rolling up regional and small players in order to create a new operator with greater scale.

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Authors

Managing Director & Partner

David Schaar

Managing Director & Partner
Philadelphia

Partner

Miles Mattson

Partner
Philadelphia

Managing Director & Partner

Alex Wright

Managing Director & Partner
Boston

Lead Data Scientist

Anita Zhang

Lead Data Scientist
New York

Project Leader

Jake Levey

Project Leader
New Jersey

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