YRC says it’s making progress …
but is it enough?
YRC Worldwide CEO Mike Smid knows his customers and
competitors are wondering whether the nation’s largest LTL
carrier will survive. There’s no question in his mind that it
will, he told DC VELOCITY at NASSTRAC’s 2009 Logistics
Conference and Expo in late April.
YRC has made substantial changes in its operations while
aggressively managing cash, liquidity, and fixed and variable costs, Smid said. “We have not gone to a bank and
asked for any additional money—not a dime,” he said. (Two
weeks after the interview, however, YRC Worldwide
Chairman, President, and CEO Bill Zollars told The Wall
Street Journal that the company would ask the federal government for $1 billion in Troubled Asset Relief Program
(TARP) funds to help it meet pension obligations.)
Smid believes the recently completed integration of Yellow
Transportation and Roadway Express—the integrated unit
now goes by the name YRC National—will improve the carrier’s outlook. The integration included a network restructuring to eliminate terminals in some areas and expand in
others—YRC now operates about 100 more service centers
than either Yellow or Roadway did individually, with direct
service to an additional 21,000 locations. The carrier also
says it has cut average transit times by half a day and boosted on-time delivery rates by several points. Meanwhile, it
continues to reduce operating and personnel costs.
Smid acknowledged that the road to integration was not
easy. Customer service was overwhelmed for the first two
weeks, and there were some visibility gaps during the transition to a single IT platform, he said. Those problems were
resolved, and performance measurements indicate that
productivity and customer service are better than either
carrier had achieved before, he said.
YRC had anticipated losing about 10 percent of its volume because some customers would want to “wait out the
short takes
The Port of Virginia will be the first U.S. East Coast stop for
a new service by the CKYH steamship alliance. The port
rotation on the eight-vessel service is Shanghai, Chiwan,
Yantian, Hong Kong, Virginia, and New York. ... Integrated
Warehouse Systems, a material handling company that
specializes in racks and rack products, has moved its corporate offices and warehouse to a newly expanded complex in Romeoville, Ill. … Kardex AG, the Switzerland-based parent company of automated storage systems
maker Kardex Remstar International, has purchased the
go figure …
98%
The percentage of respondents to a Georgia Tech survey who said their supply chains were secure.
Proactive reporting of shipment exceptions was rated
as the area most in need of improvement.
SOURCE: GEORGIA TECH
transition and see how it goes.” Smid estimated the actual
integration-related loss at 10 to 12 percent. YRC has
regained some of the lost customers and has signed up new
ones in the past two months, he said.
But YRC is far from out of the woods. The weak economy,
coupled with customers’ concerns about the Yellow-Roadway integration, dragged down first-quarter volumes.
David Ross, an analyst for Stifel Nicolaus Transportation
Research, estimated that YRC National’s April volumes were
down 35 to 40 percent year on year. Furthermore, YRC must
contend with pricing pressures triggered by excess capacity
and demands for lower rates from customers that are economically stressed themselves. In mid-May, the carrier said
it could not meet all of its second-quarter debt obligations
and had arranged with its bankers to amend its credit facilities to eliminate the second-quarter earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA)
covenant. YRC’s other financial covenants, including those
affecting cash and liquidity, remain in force.
Whatever happens, Smid says, YRC will not just sit back
and take it. “There are two ways you can approach the economic situation,” he said. “You can work harder and longer,
or you can re-create yourself, adding new services that
bring short- and long-term value to your customers. We
chose to do the latter.”
—Toby Gooley
assets of its U.S. competitor, Kardex Systems. The deal
includes a production facility in Lewistown, Pa., and the
acquisition of the Kardex brands and sales network. ... As
part of the company’s reorganization in the Americas, DHL
Express U.S. is being combined with DHL Express
International Americas to form a division called DHL
Express Americas. The official change will take place mid
summer. At that time, Roger Crook, who is currently CEO
of International Americas, will become CEO of the newly
formed division.