Transportation pricing index hovers near all-time high in June


Transportation rates rose again in June as capacity across the sector tightened further, according to data from a monthly survey of supply chain professionals.

The Logistics Managers’ Index—a diffusion index in which a reading above 50 indicates expansion, while one below 50 signals contraction—returned a 92.4 reading for transportation prices in June. That was only 3.6 percentage points off the record pace set in May.

Transportation capacity (30.8) declined 90 basis points during the month, while transportation utilization (74.7) increased 5.2 points. Transportation capacity has declined in seven consecutive months.

Utilization accelerated throughout the month, increasing from 69.2 in the first half to 78.8 in the back half—an eight-year high. Public truckload carriers have focused on improving utilization through better load planning and freight selection in recent quarters.

Truckload fleets appearing at an investor conference last month said stricter regulatory enforcement has resulted in a material drawdown in supply. The group noted that routing guides are crumbling. Contractual rates set earlier in the year aren’t holding and many shippers are being forced to reprice some or all of their books.

Logistics managers surveyed expect the transportation market to remain very tight over the next 12 months, returning future readings of 42.4 for capacity, 75.8 for utilization and 87 for pricing.

SONAR: Outbound Tender Rejection Index (OTRI.USA) for 2026 (blue shaded area), 2025 (yellow line), 2024 (green line) and 2023 (pink line). A proxy for truck capacity, the tender rejection index shows the number of loads being rejected by carriers. Current tender rejections show a tight truckload market. To learn more about SONAR, click here.
SONAR: National Truckload Index (linehaul only – NTIL.USA) for 2026 (blue shaded area), 2025 (yellow line), 2024 (green line) and 2023 (pink line). The NTIL is based on an average of booked spot dry van loads from 250,000 lanes. The NTIL is a seven-day moving average of linehaul spot rates excluding fuel. Rates remain significantly higher on a y/y comparison in July.

Retailers already building inventories ahead of peak season

The overall LMI registered a 71.1 reading in June, up 1.6 points from May, and the first time the dataset has crossed 70 (significant expansion) since March 2022.

Inventory levels (60.5) were up 5.7 points, driving the bulk of the increase in the LMI. Large companies (over 1,000 employees) and downstream retailers reported faster inventory growth rates. Restocking activity intensified as the month progressed, increasing from 55.4 in the first half to 66.3 in the back half.

“Retailers appear to be encouraged by the continued strength in consumer spending, rushing in goods for the back-to-school season,” the Tuesday report said. “This is a noted shift from the wait-and-see approach that retailers had been employing through most of the spring.”

Inventory costs (75.9) accelerated but at a pace that was 8.1 points slower than May. Responses showed inventory costs grew 12 points faster downstream than upstream (manufacturers and wholesalers).

The report said retailers were taking delivery of goods early this year to avoid potential tariffs. Ocean shipping companies also implemented new surcharges at the beginning of July.

Higher inventory levels led to some tightening in the warehousing metrics.

Warehousing capacity (47.5) declined 3 points, with warehouse utilization (69.4) increasing 6.5 points. Warehouse prices (73.8) were up 3 points, with large companies seeing significant growth (81.9) as they took delivery of inventory.

Aggregate logistics costs (inventory, warehousing and transportation) were down 8.7 points to 242.1 in June. May marked the fastest rate of expansion for the all-in cost dataset since March 2022.

The LMI is a collaboration among Arizona State University, Colorado State University, Florida Atlantic University, Rutgers University and the University of Nevada, Reno, conducted in conjunction with the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals.

More FreightWaves articles by Todd Maiden:

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