After hovering around the 400,000-unit mark all year, railcars in storage spiked 25% in May to 520,729. This was one of many takeaways from the Association of American Railroads' (AAR) June report.
As of June 1, 31.2% of the 1.67 million North American freight car fleet were in storage. The AAR considers a car in storage if it hasn't hauled a load in the past 60 days and has moved empty since carrying its last load.
A soft industrial economy, exacerbated by COVID-19-related manufacturing shutdowns, has driven rail carloads materially lower. Through the week ending May 30, second-quarter 2020 Class I North American rail traffic is down nearly 20% year-over-year, following an almost 6% decline in the first quarter. Add in structural demand headwinds for coal and to a lesser degree steel and near-term structural headwinds in intermodal, it's not hard to explain the spike in idled equipment.
Cars in storage up across all commodity types
In total, 102,610 railcars were moved into storage in May. The increase was primarily driven by increases in stored vehicle flat cars (+31,372 units), tank cars (+28,079 units), and covered hoppers (+20,286).
Chart: Association of American Railroads
The shutdown of the auto industry has resulted in 55% of the total vehicle railcar fleet being placed in storage. Thirty-nine percent of the refrigerator fleet (carrying food products, farm products, and chemicals) is in storage, with a similar percentage of the hopper fleet (moving coal, metallic ores, and nonmetallic minerals) being parked.
North American Railcars in Storage – Association of American Railroads
Covered hoppers (moving grain, chemicals, and nonmetallic minerals) remain the largest car type in storage, representing 31% of all cars in storage and 28% of the covered hopper fleet.
Depressed oil and gas prices essentially pressed pause on the crude-by-rail story while shutdown mandates have dramatically curbed consumption at the pump. Tank cars moving chemicals, petroleum, and food products accounted for the second-most cars in storage during May, representing one-third of the tank fleet. North American petroleum and petroleum products traffic moved 33% lower year-over-year during the month.
Declines in intermodal traffic, down 14% year-over-year so far in the second quarter and almost double the first-quarter decline, have resulted in 25% of that fleet now being idle. Intermodal demand has been plagued by weaker inbound container volumes, excess truck capacity, lower spot rates, and declines in diesel prices. Intermodal cars in storage increased 13% sequentially from April.
One highlight in recent weekly carload data is that the year-over-year decline in North American intermodal traffic eased in May, down 11.7% year-over-year compared to the 15.6% decline in April.
U.S. carloads fell 27.7% year-over-year in May, the biggest decline for any month on record dating back to 1989 and worse than the April decline of 25.2%. Excluding coal, U.S. carloads dropped 21.9% during May. All commodity types saw a decline during the month except for one: farm products excluding grain.
The report noted that "May was the worst month for U.S. coal carloads in history, breaking the record set in April."
In addition to volume declines, precision scheduled railroading (PSR) initiatives, which are designed to improve asset utilization and reduce the number of railcars and locomotives needed, have sent a significant number of railcars into storage.
This is evident in network fluidity improvements reported by the Class I railroads. Train speeds have improved nearly 15% year-over-year on average thus far in the second quarter after improving 9% during the first quarter of 2020. Terminal dwell times are materially lower as well. Average dwell times are down 9% year-over-year quarter-to-date through the end of May after improving 10% during the first quarter.
While some have suggested that the improvement in these metrics has more to do with the precipitous declines in rail volumes, the diminished need for railcars is not currently being debated.
Weekly carloads declines appear to be improving. In the last week of May, total U.S. traffic was down only 17% year-over-year, an improvement from the four-week average of 20%.
Click for more FreightWaves articles by Todd Maiden.
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