Q&A: Abtin Hamidi, chief vice president and co-founder of CargoChief

Logistics Management Group News Editor Jeff Berman recently spoke with Abtin Hamidi, chief vice president and co-founder of Mountain View, Calif.-based CargoChief.


Logistics Management Group News Editor Jeff Berman recently spoke withAbtin Hamidi, chief vice president and co-founder of Mountain View, Calif.-basedCargoChief, a provider of transportation and logistics technology focused on providing shippers with securing over-the-road capacity and pricing, among other services. Berman and Hamidi discussed a wide range of topics, including the current state of truckload capacity, rates, and the spot market, among other topics. A transcript of their conversation follows below.

Logistics Management (LM):Given the uneven nature of the trucking market, how do you view the current environment for the sector?
Abtin Hamidi:Large shippers are deconsolidating their shipments, and small to medium sized carriers are struggling even more so now and are scrambling to find rates and stay busy and profitable.

LM:What does that mean for large carriers?
Hamidi:In a down economy or period, they are slashing prices in a down economy and are running tight. And brokers are being perceived to be doing poorly, because the rates have dropped so much, but I think in actuality are starting to gain more traction that will eventually start to show.

LM:How are things looking year-to-date in the market?
Hamidi:We are having an unusual year, part of that is due to the economic climate and seasonality. I expect Q3 and 4 to be stronger than years past. There are some global economic concerns that are keeping a lot of high volume moving. And there is an evolution in transportation and manufacturing and near shoring and buying behaviors are also changing. Nobody has really figured it out yet, as it is still in motion right now. As things move on in the coming cycles, we are in the first or second, people will develop a higher level of confidence and that will trigger buying and all of these other things to happen.

LM:What about from a freight level perspective?
Hamidi:
The way I look at it is freight levels have been fairly consistent year in and year out. People freak out about being up or down 3 or 4 percent, but generally speaking, things are still pretty consistent. And while the first half of 2016 was slow, it will pick up again at some point.

LM:Where do you see things on the pricing front when looking at how loose capacity translates into lower spot rates and less demand, too? And what about the differences in spot pricing compared to truckload contractual pricing?
Hamidi:Some people see it as same marketplace and not two separate ones. They are interchangeable and the way shippers are and the way these contracts are written there is really very little loyalty because the second pricing drops at one point, the spot market becomes significantly tighter or lower priced in the contractual truckload market. That prompts those contracted truckload carriers will go to the spot market

LM:what does all that mean from an IT perspective in terms of pricing and rates, as well as brokerages continuing to have a large piece of the market?
Hamidi:It means the world is becoming more and more transactional. What we are seeing and have seen is that larger shippers have always seen some percentage of transactional freight, and we are seeing more of their contractual freight enter the transactional side.

LM:In what ways is that happening?
Hamidi:They are doing that in kind of an experimental fashion. The way I look at it is technology is enabling brokers and carriers to be able to engage in a transactional manner using contractual pricing. If you look at some of the brokerage divisions of large carriers, they are outpacing the growth of non asset-based brokerages. Some have grown by $200 million in 3 or 4 years. That tells me they have been able to figure out a way to satisfy and serve the same exact customers as transactional spot carriers by leveraging tech and relationships.

LM:With sluggish volumes and low GDP in the background, some analysts say shippers are showing a lack of loyalty to carriers when it comes to negotiations on contracts. How do you view that?
Hamidi:有很多运动的时候to pricing. Carriers got beat up for years badly, especially small- and medium-sized ones. And they finally got their hands on some data, saying “enough is enough” and fired 50 percent of their lanes and are only going to use ones they can make money, essentially saying “take it or leave it.” That started at the top with the freight that the large truckload carriers did not want to take and fell to the bottom with small- and medium-sized brokerages for small- and medium-sized carriers. And then they are making sure they are in the right place at the right time to capture that freight and making sure it is profitable freight and not just taking volume and losing money on it at time of transaction. The shipper is really paying the cost of this, and when the market turns and the carriers have to slash their pricing and shippers are happy to pay the lower pricing what they are seeing is that it comes with an additional cost because the carrier has to make some sort of adjustment in order to be totally profitable. That adjustment comes in terms of services or quality of work or paying OT. What we are seeing now is shippers, although they are not always loyal, they are very committed to high-value solutions, and they don’t care about the lowest price, they care about the one that can do it the best and reasonably priced—that is where we see the market shifting the most.

LM:What is the current state of things as it related to the “Uberization” of trucking?
Hamidi:The response has been tremendous, with an initial focus on small and medium shipper and all types of companies like Fortune 500 companies being frustrated by their current solution and recognize need for a change and are sniffing around for that. That has been a good trend with the other trend being the deconsolidation of procurement from some of the Fortune 500 companies. It has really tied nicely into our hypothesis that the spot market is going to eventually win, and we can service folks in the spot market with the same level of service as a contractual carrier and that is what we are seeing. We center our business around making things easier for carriers and that has created an opportunity for us to learn more and get more data, and things are evolving to next phase of smart capacity.

LM:How do you view the currently regulatory environment, especially the pending ELD changes coming by the end of 2017?
Hamidi:这些都是不cessary changes. We have to make the roads safer and things more systemic. It is causing a lot of tension in the marketplace and taking drivers off the road, and we are probably not doing a great job of rolling out the changes. The ELD mandate is going to have a major effect on the industry with some predicting capacity will drop by 25-35 percent once the ELD mandates are out. It is going to be huge, I think.


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About the Author

Jeff Berman's avatar
Jeff Berman
Jeff Berman is Group News Editor for万博2.0app下载,Modern Materials Handling, andSupply Chain Management Reviewand is a contributor to Robotics 24/7. Jeff works and lives in Cape Elizabeth, Maine, where he covers all aspects of the supply chain, logistics, freight transportation, and materials handling sectors on a daily basis.
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May 2023 万博2.0app下载

May 30, 2023 · Following a year of record revenue for carriers, shipping analysts see the pendulum swinging in the other direction, as rates are decreasing, volumes are falling, and new capacity is coming online.

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