EI
EXPEDITORS INTERNATIONAL OF WASHINGTON INC (EXPD)·Q1 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2024 EPS was $1.17 (down 19% YoY) on $2.21B revenue (down 15% YoY); operating income fell 22% to $214.8M, while air tonnage rose 4% and ocean FEU rose 2% YoY .
- Sequentially, management cited improved profit-per-container in ocean and higher profit-per-kilo in air as buy rates fell faster than sell rates in certain markets; both air and ocean volumes increased vs Q4’23 despite continued rate pressure from expanding carrier capacity .
- Cash from operations was $256.9M and the company repurchased $360.5M of stock in Q1 (CFO also referenced ~$257M CFO and ~$361M buybacks) .
- No formal quantitative guidance was provided; management emphasized cost control (salaries down 8%, headcount down 7% largely via attrition) and targeted tech/security investments amid volatile demand and geopolitical disruptions (Red Sea, Baltimore bridge, Panama Canal) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Air and ocean volumes improved YoY and sequentially; CEO: “air tonnage increased year-over-year… profit-per-kilo increased sequentially, as buy rates fell faster than sell rates in certain markets” .
- Ocean profit-per-container improved sequentially versus Q4’23 on increases in average buy and sell rates; volumes rose YoY and sequentially .
- Variable compensation and cost actions: salaries/related costs fell 8%; headcount reduced 7% via attrition; CFO: “again demonstrating how our variable compensation structure aligns with performance” .
What Went Wrong
- Top-line and profitability pressure persisted: revenues -15% YoY to $2.2067B, operating income -22% to $214.8M, EPS -19% to $1.17 as normalized supply chains and rising capacity continue to weigh on rates .
- Customs brokerage and other services declined YoY amidst “ongoing softness” in many markets, despite sequential improvement from Q4’23 and fewer shipments .
- Rate environment remains challenging: “air cargo rates… negatively impacted…; ocean capacity continues to grow… out of sync with demand,” constraining profit-per-kilo and rate stability .
Financial Results
Segment/Product Revenue Breakdown
KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Note: EXPD does not host a traditional earnings call; the company invites written questions and later files “Responses to Selected Questions” via 8-K. The press release and management commentary are used to track themes .
Management Commentary
- CEO Jeffrey S. Musser: “Air tonnage and ocean volumes increased… breaking from a general downward slide… [yet] both air and ocean carrier capacity continue to grow, further pressuring rates… We have adapted… by keeping headcount and other costs in check” .
- On ocean: “Volumes increased year-over-year and sequentially and profit-per-container… improved… Ocean capacity continues to grow… out of sync with demand” .
- On air: “Profit-per-kilo increased sequentially, as buy rates fell faster than sell rates in certain markets” .
- CFO Bradley S. Powell: “Salaries and related costs fell by 8%… We reduced headcount by 7%… The only area of increased headcount… was in information systems, as we continue to enhance… network security” .
- Cash and returns: “generated $257 million in cash flow from operations… returned $361 million to shareholders via repurchases” ; cash flow statement shows $256.9M CFO and $360.5M repurchases .
Q&A Highlights
- Format: Investors invited to submit written questions by May 10 for an 8-K “Responses to Selected Questions”; no live earnings call .
- Clarifications typically focus on rate dynamics, capacity, cost structure, and geopolitical impacts (based on release themes) .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus EPS and revenue for Q1 2024 were unavailable at the time of retrieval due to system limit (Daily Request Limit exceeded). As a result, we cannot formally assess beat/miss versus consensus for Q1 2024 [GetEstimates error: “Daily Request Limit of 250000 Exceeded”].
- Given management’s commentary on sequential profit-per-container and profit-per-kilo improvements amid persistent rate pressure, estimates may need to balance improving volumes with continued pricing headwinds and cost controls .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Volume stabilization with sequential improvements is a constructive signal, but expanding carrier capacity keeps rates soft; near-term catalysts include further sequential gains in profit-per-container and profit-per-kilo .
- Cost discipline is tangible (salaries -8%, headcount -7%); variable compensation and attrition-based reductions are cushioning margin compression while IS/security spend continues .
- Ocean and air profitability showed sequential improvement despite rate pressure—watch modal mix and buy/sell rate spreads as drivers of margin recovery .
- Geopolitical/logistics events (Red Sea, Baltimore bridge, Panama Canal) sustain operational volatility; risk management and customer service responsiveness remain differentiators .
- Strong cash generation ($256.9M CFO) and sizable buybacks ($360.5M) support capital return narratives; monitor sustainability if rate pressure persists .
- No formal guidance increases uncertainty; focus on trajectory (volumes, unit economics, cost efficiency) rather than point estimates for near-term positioning .
- For traders: stock narrative likely hinges on signs of sustained sequential margin improvement and additional cost actions vs rate dynamics; headline risk from geopolitical events remains elevated .