In recent months, the pace of growth in intermodal domestic container loadings has been slowing. But the top-line figure has masked a significant divergence in the performance of the two sectors that make up the fleet. Simply put, privately owned domestic containers are outperforming rail-owned units.
At the end of 2018, rail-owned domestic containers comprised just about one-third of the total US domestic container population. The vast bulk of these are contained in two fleets: EMP (Union Pacific Railroad and Norfolk Southern Railway) and UMAX (UP and CSX Transportation). The other two-thirds of the US fleet are privately owned units, operated by such companies as J.B. Hunt, Hub Group, and the like. The rail-owned fleets cater to non-asset carriers, while the private fleets are typically operated by integrated intermodal carriers.
In 2018, total domestic container loadings grew 4.9 percent, according to data from the Intermodal Association of North America’s (IANA’s) ETSO system. This performance, while favorable, was less impressive given that tight trucking capacity was pushing more shipments into the intermodal rail system during most of the year. Peeling back the domestic container onion, loadings in private domestic containers grew more impressively at 6.9 percent year over year, while rail-owned domestic container shipments ticked up just 0.5 percent.