Domestic, International Intermodal Volumes Excel During Q2 2010

International up 20.9 percent; domestic containers increase 16.4 percent year-over-year.

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Calverton, MD: Intermodal volumes continued to accelerate through 2010, posting an overall 17.2 percent year-over-year increase during Q2 2010, according to a report released Aug. 12 by the Intermodal Association of North America (IANA). The Intermodal Market Trends & Statistics Report showed do¬mestic containers rising 16.4 percent during the quarter and setting a new record high, while international container volume increased an impressive 20.9 percent. This was the first time in nearly four years that domestic container growth was surpassed by an increase in interna¬tional container volume.

Although domestic container volume grew at a somewhat slower pace than international for the first time in recent years, it was the twentieth-consecutive quarter of growth for domestic containers. Trailers also recorded a 5 percent gain during the quarter, but are expected to continue their long-term downward trend later this year. Overall domestic intermodal volume rose 13.2 percent, a gain strong enough to erase 2008/2009 volume losses and set a new record for the highest domestic intermodal loadings in a quarter.

Inventory restocking likely played a major role in driving the large increase in intermodal volume re¬corded this quarter. During last year’s downturn, retailers aggressively cut inventories to the point where they were so low at the beginning of 2010 that they could not support even a modest rise in consumer spending. As a result, inventory replenishment has resumed and has become a key driver of intermodal growth. Although total intermodal shipments are still below pre-recession levels, they have significantly recovered.

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