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2014/15 Top 50 Global & Domestic U.S. Third-Party Logistics Providers

By Patrick Burnson / www.supplychain247.com / June 10th, 2015

 

In the wake of the recent acquisition of Norbert Dentressangle by XPO Logistics, the logistics community is bracing for even more major consolidation deals, and the third-party logistics provider (3PL) community is loving it, especially as their margins continue to widen - particularly throughout North America.

According to the latest figures compiled by the third-party logistics consultancy Armstrong & Associates, major domestic 3PL players posted double-digit growth in 2014, with more of the same in this year’s forecast.

In the meantime, analysts at research giant Gartner have published their annual Magic Quadrant report that provides market intelligence on its premier list of lead logistics providers.

All in all, it appears to be a good time to be a third-party logistics provider - and according to both Armstrong and Gartner, it looks like the party is going to keep roaring along.

For example, thanks to its prominence in the Asia Pacific region, DHL Supply Chain and Global Forwarding reported gross logistics revenue earnings of more than $32 billon last year - more than a billon over 2013 numbers. The company’s concentration on controlled-atmosphere shipping in the Americas also contributed to record profits.

On the domestic side, it was all C.H. Robinson Worldwide, which garnered slightly less than $14 billon in gross logistics revenue last year.

A distant, but significant, second place was held by Expeditors International with earnings of nearly $7 billion. Expeditors value-added warehousing continues to attract new business, and analysts note that there’s more growth potential in 2015 for the cluster of 3PLs that can differentiate their services in this manner.

“At this time last year, we noted that shippers were going to hedge their bets by working with several domestic and international 3PLs,” says Dick Armstrong, the consultancy’s chairman. “That trend hasn’t changed, and in fact, it may become even stronger in 2015.”

Armstrong & Associates Top 50 U.S. Domestic 3PLs

  • 2014 Gross Logistics Revenue (USD Millions)*
    Third-Party Logistics Provider 
  1. $13,470 C.H. Robinson Worldwide 
  2. $6,565 Expeditors 
  3. $5,799 J.B. Hunt (JBI, DCS & ICS) 
  4. $5,758 UPS Supply Chain Solutions 
  5. $5,157 Kuehne + Nagel (The Americas) 
  6. $4,180 UTi Worldwide 
  7. $3,571 Hub Group 
  8. $3,506 Burris Logistics 
  9. $3,390 Schneider Logistics & Dedicated 
  10. $3,300 Exel 
  11. $2,618 CEVA Logistics (The Americas) 
  12. $2,615 DB Schenker Logistics 
  13. $2,463 Panalpina (The Americas) 
  14. $2,461 Ryder Supply Chain Solutions 
  15. $2,357 XPO Logistics 
  16. $2,142 Total Quality Logistics 
  17. $1,950 Coyote Logistics 
  18. $1,900 BDP International 
  19. $1,717 Menlo Logistics 
  20. $1,696 Americold 
  21. $1,624 Landstar 
  22. $1,605 Transplace 
  23. $1,500 GENCO 
  24. $1,462 FedEx Trade Networks/FedEx Supply Chain Services 
  25. $1,430 Cardinal Logistics Management 
  26. $1,394 Swift Transportation 
  27. $1,305 OHL 
  28. $1,182 Werner Enterprises Dedicated & Logistics 
  29. $1,173 Echo Global Logistics 
  30. $1,160 NFI 
  31. $1,137 Penske Logistics 
  32. $1,030 APL Logistics (The Americas) 
  33. $1,007 Damco (The Americas) 
  34. $1,000 syncreon 
  35. $895 Nippon Express (The Americas) 
  36. $891 Yusen Logistics (Americas) 
  37. $850 Transportation Insight 
  38. $849 Ruan 
  39. $800 Neovia Logistics Services** 
  40. $800 Ingram Micro Logistics** 
  41. $781 Norbert Dentressangle US 
  42. $774 Agility (The Americas) 
  43. $723 ModusLink Global Solutions 
  44. $715 GEODIS (The Americas) 
  45. $693 DSV (The Americas) 
  46. $689 Crane Worldwide Logistics 
  47. $688 Hellmann Worldwide Logistics (The Americas) 
  48. $623 Freightquote 
  49. $615 U.S. Xpress Enterprises 
  50. $610 BNSF Logistics

*Revenues are company reported or Armstrong & Associates, Inc. estimates and have been converted to USD using the average exchange rate in order to make non-currency related growth comparisons. **39 & 40 Tied.


Adrian Gonzalez, the founder and president of Adelante SCM, a peer-to-peer networking community for logistics professionals and 3PL watchdog, concurs, saying that the 3PL industry is perhaps becoming more “barbell shaped.”

Adrian Gonzalez, the founder and president of Adelante SCM

“At one end of the barbell we see small, niche providers thriving, and at the other end are the very large players retaining market share” Adrian Gonzalez, the founder and president of Adelante SCM

“At one end of the barbell we see small, niche providers thriving, and at the other end are the very large players retaining market share,” says Gonzalez. “And everybody else is getting squeezed out in the middle.” He adds that “gaining scale” is driving a lot of merger and acquisition activity in the 3PL industry today - and that will keep fueling it in the months ahead.

Brooks Bentz, a former supply chain management practice partner with Accenture who now serves as president of Transplace’s supply chain consulting business, agrees with both Armstrong and Gonzalez, observing that no slowdown in merger and acquisition activity is in sight.

“When you look at the Armstrong list, and see that C.H. Robinson is up at the top in the U.S., it’s clear that there’s quite a gap between their annual revenue and those that follow. I think you will find that some - if not most - will see closing that gap as an attainable goal for themselves, and they’ll choose to do that through deals,” he says.

For other 3PLs, adds Bentz, they’ll choose to go the route of organic growth, which is a long, slow process compared to the current practice of buying up revenue. At the same time, he adds, the over-arching trend in logistics management will be to drive improved supply chain performance. He maintains that few 3PLs - if any - have it right. In large part, that’s due to the growth of very large-scale multi-national companies.

“Because so many 3PLs have generally grown through multiple acquisitions, they’ve created a hydra-headed monster for logistics managers” says Bentz. “These include cultural and geographic differences, varying regulations and rules, and they’re reliant upon a large array of service providers.”

Armstrong & Associates Top 50 Global 3PLs

  • 2014 Gross Logistics Revenue (USD Millions)*
    Third-Party Logistics Provider
  1. $32,193 DHL Supply Chain & Global Forwarding
  2. $23,293 Kuehne + Nagel 
  3. $19,861 DB Schenker Logistics 
  4. $17,916 Nippon Express
  5. $13,470 C.H. Robinson Worldwide 
  6. $8,661 DSV
  7. $7,864 CEVA Logistics
  8. $7,483 SDV (Bolloré Group)
  9. $7,463 Sinotrans
  10. $7,338 Panalpina 
  11. $7,043 DACHSER 
  12. $6,565 Expeditors 
  13. $5,960 GEODIS 
  14. $5,920 Hitachi Transport System 
  15. $5,822 Toll Holdings 
  16. $5,799 J.B. Hunt Dedicated Contract Services & Integrated Capacity Solutions 
  17. $5,758 UPS Supply Chain Solutions 
  18. $5,387 GEFCO 
  19. $4,300 Agility 
  20. $4,180 UTi Worldwide 
  21. $4,080 IMPERIAL Logistics 
  22. $3,945 Yusen Logistics 
  23. $3,800 Hellmann Worldwide Logistics 
  24. $3,571 Hub Group 
  25. $3,506 Burris Logistics
  26. $3,409 Norbert Dentressangle
  27. $3,390 Schneider Logistics & Dedicated
  28. $3,212 Damco
  29. $2,942 Kintetsu World Express
  30. $2,842 CJ korea express
  31. $2,723 Kerry Logistics
  32. $2,461 Ryder Supply Chain Solutions
  33. $2,357 XPO Logistics
  34. $2,293 Sankyu
  35. $2,142 Total Quality Logistics
  36. $1,950 Coyote Logistics
  37. $1,900 BDP International
  38. $1,816 Wincanton
  39. $1,797 arvato
  40. $1,745 NNR Global Logistics
  41. $1,717 Menlo Logistics
  42. $1,696 Americold
  43. $1,659 APL Logistics
  44. $1,640 Mainfreight
  45. $1,624 Landstar
  46. $1,605 Transplace
  47. $1,514 JSL Logistica
  48. $1,501 Logwin
  49. $1,500 GENCO
  50. $1,462 FedEx SupplyChain/FedEx Trade Networks

*Revenues are company reported or Armstrong & Associates, Inc. estimates and have been converted to USD using the average exchange rate in order to make non-currency related growth comparisons.

Analysts also continue to track what has been coined “The Amazon Effect” on the third-party logistics industry. The Seattle-based e-commerce giant has hired 50,000 full-time workers to staff its distribution centers across the U.S. in order to speed up delivery times. It’s $99 annual “Prime Membership Service” comes with a free two-day delivery on many items. Further complicating this scenario is Walmart, which plans to introduce an unlimited shipping service for online shoppers this summer.

Bentz notes that the torrid pace of the growth of internet sales and the resulting fulfillment and logistics requirements will bode very well for 3PLs. “The ‘I-want-it-now, if-not-sooner’ consumer demand is being served - and in some cases created or amplified - by companies like Amazon and Walmart,” he says.

Impact of “Near-Shoring”
The domestic battle being waged by these retail behemoths is not likely to be confined to the U.S., however. Indeed, many analysts see the trend sweeping through all of North America before long.

John Langley Jr., Ph.D., Center for Supply Chain Research at the Smeal College of Business at the Pennsylvania State University

“U.S. shippers are concentrating more on hemispheric services this year” John Langley Jr., Ph.D., Center for Supply Chain Research at the Smeal College of Business at the Penn State University

John Langley Jr., Ph.D., who serves as a director of development at the Center for Supply Chain Research at the Smeal College of Business at the Pennsylvania State University, observes that U.S. shippers are concentrating more on hemispheric services this year. This trend, he says, is in response to “less-than-exciting” global economic activity.

“The manufacturing industry in Mexico is improving, which is creating opportunities for 3PLs as logistics services play a crucial role in rendering Mexico as cost competitive,” says Langley. “Mexico has more free-trade agreements than any other country, a strategic geographic location, and is renowned as a low-cost manufacturing and export destination.”

However, Langley cautions that a lack of quality infrastructure and certain regulatory aspects continue to challenge Mexico. Analysts with The Hackett Group, an intellectual property research firm, share this view, observing that many mid-size U.S. cities now make attractive alternatives to Mexico and other offshore locations for companies considering consolidating finance, IT, and related business services operations.

“Many companies are realizing that the U.S. is becoming an increasingly viable option for elements of their service delivery organization,” says Jim O’Connor, The Hackett Group’s principal and global finance practice leader. “We’re seeing real growth in this sector, with nearly 700 U.S. centers of excellence, shared service centers, and global business services operations now up and running.”

According to O’Connor, labor and operating costs are still high in the U.S. compared to Eastern Europe, Latin America, and Asia. But the gap is shrinking, while there are significant other benefits. “In more and more cases, those benefits outweigh the additional cost. In addition, the public response to offshoring has made keeping jobs at home a attractive option for U.S. companies,” he says.

At the same time, says analysts at Gartner, the 3PL industry is “progressing along a maturity spectrum in accordance with customer requirements through a combination of acquisition and organic growth strategies.” The research firm’s annual Magic Quadrant rankings chart the growth of the top global logistics services companies as they work to improve their ability to improve and expand value-added services.

The report notes that, increasingly, 3PLs have extended their services beyond the basics - providing opportunities to increase their value and resolve additional customer supply chain challenges. For example, these services include returns and repair processing, assembly and kitting, packaging, postponement, freight payment and audit, network modeling, shipment consolidation, cross-docking, and logistics and supply chain consulting.

Greg Aimi, Gartner’s director of supply chain research

“Logistics managers are looking and hoping to gain leverage through specialized expertise and capabilities beyond what they have themselves” Greg Aimi, Gartner’s director of supply chain research

According to Greg Aimi, Gartner’s director of supply chain research and Magic Quadrant co-author, there’s a transformation underway across today’s logistics industry, and perceptions of logistics service providers are changing.

“In an industry that had been commoditized into transactional warehousing and transportation activities, the idea of specialized services, joint-value creation, and supply chain integration would have seemed nonsensical,” says Aimi. “Relationships have been historically transactional, pragmatic, and physical activity-oriented. Third party providers responded in kind by competing head-to-head in low-margin pricing wars and assumed the role of an interchangeable commodity - a low-value part.”

Ami maintains that most of the 3PLs today in North America - if not across the globe - started the transformation by providing deep capabilities in one of three major logistics service roots: transportation services, warehousing and fulfillment services, or international freight forwarding and customs brokerage.

Furthermore, this pattern will probably not change in the coming years. “In fact, many providers today still predominantly offer services from just one of these roots,” says Aimi. “Other providers, especially the larger ones, have expanded their offerings to include services from one or both of the other roots.”

Gartner Defines a “Good” Player
Magic Quadrants are made up of two major axes, “ability to execute” and the “completeness of vision.” According to Aimi, to create a Magic Quadrant that would be valuable to logistics customers, it was important to develop a definition of what good outsourced logistics is in the context of the criteria of the two axes.

According to Aimi, the first critical factor is that a provider offers a broad set of services that match shipper demand trends. “As shippers refine their logistics management capabilities, they normally want to consolidate the portfolio of logistics providers they work with,” notes Aimi. “This means shippers would like the opportunity to use more services from the same or smaller set of providers, and that’s a huge, critical factor.”

The second major factor is that a 3PL must offer more than just a “large menu” of services. “Today’s logistic managers are looking to have seamless access to an integrated portfolio of services, and they expect them to be supported globally by unified technology platforms,” says Aimi.

Fair and competitive pricing represents the third critical factor, says Aimi, who notes that the best logistics providers know how to segment customers’ needs and deliver the right offering and the right pricing when needed. “This shows a bit more vision for the providers that master this and directly influences their ability to execute.”

Finally, as shippers continue to mature, they look to their logistics providers to be able to tailor their services to the idiosyncrasies of their industry - and to have retained and developed highly-seasoned competency in top industry-specific practices.

This is the fourth critical factor, according to Aimi. “Logistics managers are looking and hoping to gain leverage through specialized expertise and capabilities beyond what they have themselves,” he says. “Providers with more depth and tailored support for industry variants tend to move right on the ‘completeness of vision’ axis.”

Beyond these four basic factors, other influences on the “completeness of vision” may still affect the “ability to execute.” According to Aimi, the execution scale had a multiplying factor that considered the difficulty of managing top performance based on customer base size, organization scale, and process complexity.

With this contextual backdrop, Gartner says that companies can now more fully understand how the various 3PL providers were evaluated, what was deemed important and what might be differentiated, and, consequently, why the dots for each 3PL appear where they do on the Magic Quadrant.

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