Roadrunner to Focus on 3PL, LTL After Net Losses in 2Q
From TTNews
Roadrunner Transportation Systems Inc. will narrow future operations
to logistics and less-than-truckload after a disappointing second
quarter, company officials said in an Aug. 7 news release.
Roadrunner reported a
net loss of $141.9 million for 2Q 2019, which ended June 30. That breaks
down to $3.77 on a per share basis. The results compare with a net loss
of $42 million, or $27.24 per share, in 2Q of 2018.
Revenue for 2Q 2019 declined 13.9% to $480.7 million, compared with
$558 million for 2Q 2018. Revenue declines were primarily driven by low
demand in air- and ground-expedited logistics, said Roadrunner CEO Curt
Stoelting.
“As we have stated in the past, active on-demand is a well-positioned
logistics business that can exhibit short-term volatility,” said
Stoelting. “Historically, these variations moderate over longer periods
and do not impact our ability to capture improved revenue and profits as
expedited demand improves.”
Downers Grove, Ill.-based Roadrunner said its LTL business showed improvement.
“We continued to make progress in our asset-light LTL segment in the
second quarter,” said Stoelting. “Excluding backhaul and fuel surcharge
revenue, LTL revenue grew by 3.4% in the second quarter.”
Going forward, Stoelting said Roadrunner will focus more on its
logistics and asset-light LTL segments and less on the truckload
segment.
He added, “In the second quarter, yield improvements and lower bad
debts were offset by increased equipment repair and personnel related
costs as we reduced deferred maintenance and built a stronger foundation
for future growth.”
The company’s 2Q operating loss was $137.8 million, compared with
$11.4 million in the year-ago quarter. Included in the 2019 operating
loss was $108.3 million of goodwill, intangible asset, software and
asset impairment charges.
Roadrunner ranks No. 17 on the Transport Topics Top 100 list of the largest for-hire carriers in North America.
Roadrunner has been sorting out its financial reports after alleged fraudulent filings by a former chief financial officer.
In April, the Securities and Exchange Commission formally charged
former CFO Peter Armbruster and two of his associates with accounting
fraud and misleading investors about the company’s financial results.
Armbruster was accused of hiding expenses by improperly deferring and
spreading them across multiple quarters to minimize the impact on net
earnings.
Armbruster was alleged to have arbitrarily reduced certain
liabilities, creating an income “cushion” that could be used in future
quarters to offset expenses, according to a complaint filed in U.S.
District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin in Milwaukee on
April 3.
Two of Armbruster’s associates, Bret Naggs and Mark Wogsland, who
worked as controllers in Roadrunner’s truckload business, failed to
write off millions of dollars in overvalued assets and overstated
receivables as part of the scheme, federal officials allege.
The trio also misled Roadrunner’s outside auditor, resulting in
financial reports that overstated the company’s profits, it is alleged
by SEC officials.
Roadrunner terminated Armbruster in 2017 and brought in Stoelting to head a new management team. The company also relocated its headquarters from Cudahy, Wis., to Downers Grove, Ill., and has restated its financial results dating to 2011.