Chart of the Week: Van contract rate initial report – USA SONAR: VCRPM1.USA
Long-term or contract rates for the dry van truckload market (VCRPM1) have lost momentum this year compared to last, falling a marginal 0.3% y/y as of early September. While this is still slower than the ~2% drop from 2023 to 2024, contract rates had started to show signs of upward pressure in the second half of last year. Those gains now appear to have been completely erased. What does this mean for the upcoming late-year round of bids?
According to the American Transportation Research Institute (ATRI), the average cost of operating a truck rose about 33% from 2019 to 2024. By comparison, contract rates are up only 17% over the same period.
Combined with the current flatlining trend, this suggests carriers have largely found their floor on pricing. While some efficiency can still be gained by leveraging multiple networks against each other, shippers relying on a limited base of carriers have few long-term cost savings opportunities left.
Looking at the relationship between spot (NTIL12) and contract rates, spot rates continue to offer discounts for those willing to buy capacity on the fly. However, the divergence between the two is notable: spot rates are gradually increasing, while contract rates remain flat to slightly lower.
In this sense, the spot market represents the true floor of pricing — where all operational efficiencies have been realized — and that floor is rising.
The spot data is based on broker data who target smaller fleets and owner operators while the contract data is based on invoices between larger fleets and larger shipping operations. It is helpful to think about the white line as the rate situation when using 20-30 carriers, while the orange line represents leveraging 200,000 carrier networks. This is why the spot rate tends to be lower.
Spot data comes primarily from brokers targeting smaller fleets and owner-operators, while contract data is based on invoices between larger fleets and major shippers. Put another way: the white line reflects conditions when working with 20–30 carriers, while the orange line reflects leveraging a 200,000-carrier network. This explains why spot rates are typically lower.
FMCSA data shows the market has been losing 100–200 carriers per week over the past 18 months. Because this data lags — carriers take time to report or be recognized as inactive — the true figure is likely higher. This attrition also helps explain the gradual upward pressure on spot rates.