Logistics stock selloff Thursday brings assurances of calm


C.H. Robinson did two unusual things Thursday.

First, its high-flying stock, driven in part by investor enthusiasm over the 3PL’s embrace of AI, was one of the logistics companies that fell the hardest that day in a sea of red arrows that sucked in trucking firms as well. C.H. Robinson stock was down 14.54% on the day.

(For perspective, C.H. Robinson hit its 52-week high on February 6 at $203.34. Its 52-week low was April 9 at $84.68. It closed Thursday at $179.48.)

The second unusual thing it did was talk about it…sort of.

Companies across the spectrum are generally reluctant to say anything publicly about why their stock is doing well or doing poorly. There are plenty of regulations on “forward looking statements” that company managements strive to ensure they are in compliance.

The statement released by C.H. Robinson (NASDAQ: CHRW) did not specifically address the size of the stock price decline. But it defended its use of AI and looked to the future, saying the company believes continued adoption of AI “will only continue to strengthen our performance and widen our competitive moat.”

But in what could be seen as a subtle boost to the owners of its stock, the C.H. Robinson statement said “we remain confident in our strategy and continue to execute on our disciplined share repurchases from the past year.”

The enormous selloff also hit two other publicly-traded 3PL companies RXO (NYSE: RXO), whose stock already had been falling for a year unlike C.H. Robinson, fell more than C.H. Robinson, down 20.45%. Landstar (NASDAQ: LSTR) declined 15.6%.

Expeditors International (NYSE: EXPD) fell a whopping 13.18%. While it is not an over the road freight broker like RXO or C.H. Robinson, its business is an asset-light company that works to get freight from shipper/manufacturer to an end customer via an ocean or air carrier on assets owned by others.

Although the selloff across markets appeared to be directed at companies whose business can be even further disrupted by AI than what was expected already, both logistics and trucking companies felt the sting of the decline.

Among the trucking companies whose stocks took a big hit Thursday, TFI International (NYSE: TFII) was down 8.11%; Forward Air (NASDAQ: FWRD) fell 8.75%; Werner Enterprises (NASDAQ: WERN) declined 5.34%; Heartland Express (NASDAQ: HTLD) fell 5.75%.

Among the bigger trucking companies, Old Dominion (NASDAQ: ODFL) fell 4.6%, J.B. Hunt (NASDAQ: JBHT) declined 5.06% and Knight Swift (NYSE: KNX) declined just 0.6%.

The S&P 500 fell 1.57% for the day.

Just before 11 a.m. Friday, some of those stocks had rebounded but only a fraction of the prior day’s decline. C.H. Robinson was up 3.42%; RXO was up 2.77%; and Landstar rose 0.81%.



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