C.H. Robinson Posts Record Q1 Profits

C.H. Robinson
C.H. Robinson containers. (C.H. Robinson Worldwide)

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Strong freight demand across its network powered C.H. Robinson Worldwide to record first-quarter profits.

The Eden Prairie, Minn.-based logistics and shipping company said Q1 net income rose 56% to $270.3 million compared with $173.3 million in the same period a year earlier. Diluted earnings per share increased to $2.05 from $1.28. Revenue grew 41.9% to $6.8 billion from $4.8 billion in the same period a year earlier, and the company’s operating profit rose 54.7% to $345.5 million.

“We improved the health of our contractual truckload business, continued to grow our truckload volume, and improved the profitability of our [less-than-truckload],” CEO Bob Biesterfeld said during an April 27 conference call with industry analysts and investors.



For the quarter, C.H. Robinson’s North American Surface Transportation segment posted gains in revenue and operating profits. The segment’s revenue grew 28.1% to $4.1 billion compared with $3.2 billion in the same period a year earlier. Operating profit jumped 33.3% to $182.4 million from $136.8 million.

C.H. Robinson benefited from higher pricing and an increase in truckload shipments. The company has repriced much of its contractual portfolio and continued to focus on profitable market share, Biesterfeld said.

 

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Still, it is seeing some changes in the market. Load-to-truck ratios declined in February and March as more capacity entered the market and demand started to soften at the end of the quarter. The logistics firm’s truckload linehaul rate per mile jumped 20.5% in the quarter, excluding fuel surcharges.

In the global forwarding segment, Q1 revenue almost doubled, rising 89.8% to $2.2 billion from $1.2 billion in Q1 a year earlier. Higher pricing and freight volume for both ocean and airfreight helped the segment. Market share growth and robust demand added to the results. The segment’s operating profit jumped 85.1% to $167.6 million compared with $90.6 million in the prior year’s quarter.

The company is seeing changes in the routes freight is taking.

“Ocean carriers have also shifted vessel capacity from the West Coast to the East Coast ports, partly due to continuing congestion issues and concerns surrounding potential labor disputes,” Biesterfeld said. Union contracts are up for renewal at the giant port complex in Los Angeles and Long Beach, Calif.

C.H. Robinson’s smaller business units — Robinson Fresh, managed services and other surface transportation — also reported improved financial performance. Operating profits rose 22.3% to $30.5 million at Robinson Fresh, 9.9% to $28.1 million at its managed services business and 19.4% to $19.7 million at its other surface transportation segment.

Robert Biesterfeld

Biesterfeld

Biesterfeld said that while the global economic situation, inflation and the Russian invasion of Ukraine are concerns, C.H. Robinson’s multimodal network and flexible non-asset-based business model can still deliver “strong financial results.”

He is also keeping a close eye on how COVID-19 lockdowns are affecting exports from China. The country is “one of the biggest unknowns in a long list of unknowns of what’s going to happen in our market,” Biesterfeld said. “Clearly, China and the lockdown there is something that we’re watching keenly.”

For now, the COVID surge in China will depress exports, but at some point, there will be a surge that can reverse the improvements made at U.S. ports to work through big supply chain backlogs, he said.

C.H. Robinson continues to focus on investments to create digital tools for pricing and booking. Its capital expenditures totaled $26.2 million in the quarter. They will hit $90 million to $100 million this year, primarily driven by technology investments, said Mike Zechmeister, the company’s chief financial officer.

The company ended Q1 with $243 million in cash, an increase of $25 million compared to Q1 of 2021, Zechmeister said.

C.H. Robinson ranks No. 1 on the Transport Topics Top 100 list of the largest logistics companies in North America.

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