Posts Tagged ‘bankruptcy’

Number of Trucking Companies Declaring Bankruptcy Significantly Declines Last Quarter

Thursday, November 10th, 2011

bankruptcyAccording to Avondale Partners analyst Donald Broughton, the number of trucking companies who had no choice but to file bankruptcy last quarter has significantly decreased when compared to previous years, showing that the trucking industry is recovering.

Trucking took a hit from 2007 through 2010 due to the following:  Demand, fuel and price being extraordinarily volatile, as well as “credit becoming impossible to find for some fleets and difficult to afford when it was available to others” (http://insurancenewsnet.com/article.aspx?id=297906).

For these reasons, over 8,500 carriers went out of business, taking over 325,000 trucks off the road, a decrease of 12% availability according to the report.  This 12% decrease was in large part due to 12 specific carriers, who decreased their fleets by a combined total of 10,454 trucks.

Last year’s 3rd quarter led to 330 truck companies and 10,685 trucks filing bankruptcy while this year, only 85 companies and about 1,470 trucks were shut down, a near 90% decrease, Avondale Partners notes.

Looking further, the 3rd quarter proved significantly more successful than this year’s 2nd quarter, when 240 carriers and 3,955 trucks exited the industry.

So why the improvement in statistics all of a sudden?  Rising rates due to tighter capacity restraints play a large hand, proving to be of notable profit to carriers.

Since the start of 2010 through today, “truckload rates have increased about 11%, excluding fuel surcharges,” the report notes, with an estimated 3-5% truckload and up to 10% LTL rate increase per year.

Broughton explains that “shippers are willing to pay higher prices because they have recognized the increasing labor, fuel, depreciation, maintenance and insurance costs that fleets face” and offered hope in saying “If [fleets] made it this far through the tough times, then they can make it through the better times” (http://insurancenewsnet.com/article.aspx?id=297906).

Looking for a qualified, reputable LTL and Truckload carrier?  Then look no further road scholar transportthan Road Scholar Transport.  Don’t take our word for it, but customers like yourselves.  Here’s what one company had to say about us.

“It is so easy for someone to sit down and write a “canned” letter of appreciation and commend a company on a job well done. In the case of Road Scholar Transport, to just say thanks for your excellent, quality service would lead most people to think you’ve done an excellent job in the transportation industry, which in fact, you have. It is an area in which you excel and quite honestly, it’s the part of your business that comes easiest to you.”

Check out more testimonials from Road Scholar’s customers at http://www.roadscholar.com/freighthaulingtestimonials.php.

Would you risk shipping with a company on the verge of bankruptcy just to achieve a low rate or would you rather ship with a trustworthy, stable company?  List your comments below.

$100 Million Trucking Company Loses Funds, Declares Bankruptcy

Friday, January 14th, 2011

Last Wednesday, Cargo Transportation Services, a major trucking company located in Florida employing 140 people

produce

Truckloads of produce sit with no funds to move them

and earning $100 million annually in profits, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

According to The Tampa Tribune, CTS “defaulted on $7.9 million in nonmonetary outstanding loans,” leading Comerica Bank to stop funding.

A third of the transport that CTS does is for produce companies, who now fear that their products will be ruined since CTS cannot afford to pay for gas to move the already loaded 200 trucks (http://www2.tbo.com/content/2011/jan/13/131723/major-florida-trucking-company-files-for-bankruptc/news-money/).

When shipping produce with Road Scholar Transport, you will be granted access to tools such as satellite tracking and electronic door monitoring, knowing exactly when and where your truck is at any precise moment and whether it is motion or stopped, so that you can be assured that your product is being transported on time and not sitting at a dock or rest area somewhere, costing you money.

Until the case is solved, the trucking company has asked the court to grant access to its funds, the site notes.  They await a decision.

Don’t Know Which Way to Turn? Try the New Trucker Hotline

Wednesday, October 13th, 2010

We have all realized by now that several industries were hit hard by the economy, the trucking industry being one of them.  With no where to turn, logistics and trucking companies are considering bankruptcy to be the only way out…until now.

According to einnews.com, Ahern and Associates, “North America’s leading trucking and management consulting firm,” has set up a hotline for logistics and trucking companies to call in for help.

The hotline will offer suggestions such as selling the company (in which case Ahern and Associates have already helped 300 companies to do) or provide a solution to rebuild the company and put them in the green again, the site notes.

Ahern and Associates is offering a free one hour consultation from auditors of “ex-presidents and CEO’s of trucking and logistics companies” who can offer their experience and provide solutions to problems such as “cash flow management, receivable financing, too many empty miles, low revenue per mile, violations of bank covenants, 940 and 941 tax liabilities, and delinquent equipment payments” (http://www.einnews.com/pr-news/183855-ahern-and-associates-launches-new-trucking-company-crisis-hotline).

If you are not one of those fortunate companies like Road Scholar Transport, who fought through the economy, making an average per year of $18 million in receipts, then you can call the hotline between the hours of 8am-4pm Mon.-Fri. at 602-242-1030 ext. 201.

Road Scholar Transport

Trucking Company Owner Charged With Embezzlement

Friday, October 1st, 2010

Michael Molitor, owner of M.S. Molitor Trucking and MD Service, a freight company in Boulder, MT, pleaded not guilt on charges of embezzlement last week, nearly a month after he was indicted.

Molitor was charged on August 23rd for “failing to deposit funds withheld from employees’ paychecks into their retirement accounts,” Belgrade News states.

According to the article, Molitor is said to have taken $116,000 from his M.S. Molitor employees’ paychecks between September 2004 to March 2008, losing $18,800 worth the interest for not placing the funds in their IRA plan on time, while his MD Service employees lost more than $4,000 out of the $28,000 withheld.

Claiming Chapter 7 bankruptcy a few months ago, Molitor still has not compensated his employees the amount lost, which is being pursued through the U.S. Department of Labor’s lawsuit against him.

Not only does Molitor face two counts of embezzlement but his incapability of providing documentation as well as “failing to comply with agency subpoenas,” while “providing dilatory, false and misleading information throughout the investigation” is also being held against him (http://www.belgrade-news.com/news/article_387a4186-cd22-11df-a028-001cc4c002e0.html).

As Belgrade News notes, if guilty, Molitor could receive “five years in prison” and a quarter of a million dollar fine per indictment charge, as well as “three years supervised release.”

Wouldn’t you rather a carrier like Road Scholar Transport, who supervises your cargo during transport rather than have someone supervising the owner for corruption?

Road Scholar Transport