RXO issues updated Curve forecast from Charlotte
Charlotte, N.C.-based full truckload brokerage RXO released the latest edition of its proprietary "Curve" truckload forecast this week. The report noted that spot truckload rates rose both year-over-year and sequentially in the fourth quarter — the first time rates have shown sequential growth in four quarters — and projects further annual and sequential increases in 2026 as carrier capacity tightens relative to shipper demand.
History and structure of the Curve model
The Curve was originally introduced by Coyote Logistics in 2018. Coyote was later acquired by UPS in August 2015 and then sold to RXO in September 2024. RXO describes the Curve as a proprietary forecasting tool that assists shippers and carriers in positioning for varying market conditions.
How the Curve analyzes market cycles
RXO’s model evaluates three overlapping cycles to reveal recurring patterns that can guide logistics decisions:
- Seasonal demand cycles
- Annual procurement cycles
- Market capacity dynamics, which are often harder to quantify
Principal findings highlighted in the report
The Curve’s recent edition emphasized several core observations that underpin its outlook for late 2025 and 2026.
- Spot rates showed both year-over-year and sequential gains in Q4 after a period of sequential softness.
- The jump in spot rates between Q3 and Q4 was substantial — moving from a 1.8% annual gain in Q3 to a 5.2% annual gain in Q4.
- RXO expects 2026 to produce further annual and sequential gains as carrier capacity tightens against shipper demand.
- Volatility may ease somewhat later in the first quarter, but the market is likely to remain in inflationary territory with Q1 ending higher than Q4.
- The report flagged continued carrier exits tied to enforcement of new government rules as a potential upward pressure on rates, while also noting upside signs such as stronger industrial production data and government stimulus.
Insights from RXO’s Corey Klujsza
In an interview with LM, Corey Klujsza, RXO’s vice president of pricing and procurement strategy, said the report’s biggest takeaway is the widening split in rate behavior across the market amid what most view as a soft demand backdrop. He noted that demand remains the primary catalyst for meaningful changes in rate volatility.
Shippers’ forecasts versus carrier signals
Klujsza pointed out a growing disconnect between shipper forecasts and carrier commentary. Many shippers are budgeting and planning for largely flat volumes in 2026, while carriers are signaling conditions that look materially different than a year earlier. He said aligning shipper and carrier perspectives is crucial to keeping freight moving efficiently.
Comparisons to prior cycles and inventory dynamics
Unlike easily explained shifts during the pandemic, when annual changes in goods consumption clarified rate moves, Klujsza said current drivers are more nuanced. He observed potential signs of restocking: inventories were generally lower into 2025, and December showed different inventory behavior. Those inventory adjustments, along with modest changes in consumer behavior and manufacturing orders, could be influencing the observed rate volatility and suggest structural shifts on the supply side.
Causes of the Q4 spot rate surge
The report and Klujsza attributed the near threefold sequential increase in spot rates — from 1.8% in Q3 to 5.2% in Q4 — to a string of capacity-constrained events across 2025. Typical seasonal peaks, short demand surges and episodic supply shocks such as DOT’s Road Check Week combined to tighten available capacity.
Klujsza added that some capacity elected to sit out of the market during those events, and that during constrained periods RXO observed outperformance relative to the prior three years. He described how the market rebounded quickly back to baseline behavior, but that September through November showed upward momentum in annual rates, with December acting as the catalyst that pushed spot rates to the Q4 result.
First quarter outlook and market balance
Looking ahead, the Curve’s first-quarter forecast expects volatility to ease somewhat later in the quarter while remaining inflationary overall, meaning Q1 should finish higher than Q4. The report also warned that additional carrier exits — whether from regulatory enforcement or shifts in demand — could keep upward pressure on rates.
Reasons for cautious optimism
Despite inflationary pressures and structural supply-side changes, RXO identified positives that could temper the market: improving industrial production readings and certain government stimulus measures. These factors provide some optimism even as the industry braces for tighter capacity and evolving demand patterns in 2026.
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