December shipments fell to a cycle low while truckload rates again stepped higher, according to monthly data from Cass Information Systems.
Cass’ multimodal shipments index dropped 7.5% year over year in December. The decline was on top of a similar move in December 2024, producing a two-year-stacked decline of 13.5%. The shipments dataset was down 7.2% from November (3.2% lower seasonally adjusted).
December 2025
y/y
2-year
m/m
m/m (SA)ShipmentsExpendituresTL Linehaul Index
The Friday report blamed winter storms for the slowdown in volumes but noted that inventories have been drawn down.
“The three winter storms which hit the Midwest in the first two weeks of December slowed the highway network and created some pent-up demand that was still evident in the spot market in the first half of January,” the report said. “Holiday consumer spending data suggest retail inventories destocked in recent months as freight shipments across modes were below spending trends.”
Weather has been relatively mild so far in January. The report said volumes could come in above the normal seasonal trend for the month (down 5%) if the patterns hold.
J.B. Hunt Transport Services (NASDAQ: JBHT) stated during a quarterly call with analysts on Thursday that the market began to tighten the week before Thanksgiving with improvement continuing through the end of the year. Management from the company didn’t provide a firm outlook for 2026 given the numerous head fakes already seen in this cycle. However, it was encouraged that seasonal strength to start the year has occurred without inclement weather as a catalyst. It also said that customer inventories are lean.
Cass’ expenditures index, which measures total freight spend including fuel, slid 0.6% y/y. Compared to two years ago, the dataset was off 4%, which was the smallest two-year-stacked decline since July 2023.
The expenditures subcomponent was off just 0.5% in 2025 while shipments were off 6% on average, implying freight rates were on the move higher throughout the year. Netting the change in volumes from the change in expenditures implies rates were likely up 7% y/y in December.
(However, Cass is assessing the impact of a changing freight mix from LTL to TL and has paused the release of its inferred rate data.)
The TL linehaul index, which tracks rates excluding fuel and accessorial surcharges, increased 1% from November, a fourth straight sequential increase. The rate index was up 2.1% y/y and stayed in positive territory in every month of 2025.


