J.B. Hunt beats expectations, reviving hopes for a sustained recovery in US freight

JBHT

J.B. Hunt exceeded Q1 expectations, bolstered by a recovery in intermodal, brokerage, and truckload volumes, while cost-cutting initiatives supported margins. Shares rose 7.22% as the market interpreted the results as a constructive signal for the US trucking cycle.

Esteban Tesson

Published on 04/16/2026 at 04:27 pm EDT

J.B. Hunt Transport Services reported Q1 2026 results that surpassed expectations, with revenue of $3.06bn, up 5% y-o-y, and net income of $141.6m, or $1.49 per share, compared to $1.17 a year earlier. The consensus had targeted approximately $2.96bn in revenue and $1.44 per share. The group also generated operating income of $207m, a 16% increase, despite unfavorable weather conditions and rising purchased transportation costs.The release was primarily highlighted by a return to growth across several key business lines. Intermodal (rail-to-road transport), which accounts for nearly half of total revenue, grew 2% to $1.50bn, with volumes up 3% and record activity for a first quarter. Dedicated services gained 2% to $841m, while Integrated Capacity Solutions (brokerage and freight matching) revenue surged 20% and truckload revenue jumped 23%. Only the Final Mile segment remained in decline, with sales falling 6%.Beyond the figures, management's tone caught investors' attention. J.B. Hunt stated that the freight market has become "structurally" tighter due to regulatory tightening and capacity exiting the market after a prolonged period of oversupply. The group said it had eliminated over $30m in structural costs during the quarter and believes it is already on a trajectory toward margin recovery, even as pressure persists in brokerage and pricing has yet to fully offset cost inflation. This assessment aligns with that of Craig Fuller, CEO of FreightWaves, who views this release as one of the clearest signals of a potential new upcycle in the American trucking industry.