The result marked:
For a market that spent much of the last year dealing with weak freight fundamentals, excess capacity, and cautious fleet spending, the latest order activity suggests conditions may finally be shifting toward a more stable footing.
While the improvement is notable, the current environment still appears selective rather than broad-based. Fleets remain disciplined, and much of the activity continues to center around replacement cycles instead of aggressive expansion.
According to Dan Moyer, senior analyst, commercial vehicles at FTR: “Overall, the U.S. trailer market appears to be moving from deterioration toward stabilization and modest improvement.”
FTR noted that stronger fleets, normalization in dry van demand, and aging equipment replacement remain the primary drivers behind recent order strength. Trailer demand is still expected to lag the Class 8 market in the near term as carriers continue managing utilization levels and margin pressure.
U.S. trailer builds in April were essentially flat month over month at 17,576 units and were only slightly higher year over year. Calendar year-to-date production has also remained relatively stable, signaling that OEMs continue to manage output carefully despite improving order activity.
That production discipline could become increasingly important if demand continues recovering gradually through the second half of the year.
Even with improving demand trends, uncertainty remains elevated across the trailer market.
FTR highlighted several ongoing risks that continue to influence purchasing decisions, including:
These factors are creating an environment where fleets may remain hesitant to accelerate purchases until visibility improves further.
As fleets navigate changing freight conditions, tariff uncertainty, and evolving equipment economics, the pace and durability of the next trailer cycle will remain closely watched across the industry.
To view the chart accompanying this release, visit:
https://www.ftrintel.com/trailer-orders
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