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Schneider National Inc (SNDR 0.34%)
Q3 2021 Earnings Call
Oct 28, 2021, 10:30 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Greetings, and welcome to the Schneider National Inc. Third Quarter 2021 Earnings Call. [Operator Instructions]

It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Steve Bindas, Director of Investor Relations. Thank you, Steve. You may begin.

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Steve Bindas -- Director of Investor Relations

Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. Joining me on the call today are Mark Rourke, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Steve Bruffett, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Earlier today, the company issued an earnings press release, which is available on the Investor Relations section of our website at schneider.com.

Our call will include remarks about future expectations, forecasts, plans and prospects for Schneider, which constitute forward-looking statements for the purposes of the safe harbor provisions under applicable federal securities laws. Forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from current expectations. The company urges investors to review the risks and uncertainties discussed in our SEC filings, including, but not limited to, our most recent Form 10-K and those risks identified in today's earnings release. All forward-looking statements are made as of the date of this call, and Schneider disclaims any duty to update such statements, except as required by law.

In addition, pursuant to Regulation G, a reconciliation of any non-GAAP financial measures referenced during today's call can be found in our earnings release, which includes reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP measures. Now I'd like to turn the call over to our CFO, Steve Bruffett.

Stephen L Bruffett -- Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President

Thank you, Steve, and thanks to each of you who have joined us on the call this morning. We appreciate your time in this busy earnings season. I'll open with commentary on our third quarter results. And first, I want to complement our entire team for their performance, especially our professional drivers, field operations and customer service associates Operating conditions have lifted the tide for many players in the transportation space, but you have to crisply execute commercially and operationally every day to deliver results above and beyond what the tide brings.

And our team has done a nice job across the board of doing exactly that as we've successfully navigated the 2021 freight environment. In addition, our multimodal portfolio and platform operating at scale, enables us to compete effectively and to fulfill a growing portion of our customers' needs and profitably grow our business. Our third quarter EPS of $0.62 was the strongest in our history, exceeding the prior record of $0.60, which was established last quarter. Contained within our third quarter results was a pre-tax net loss of $3.1 million on our equity investments.

We took advantage of the robust used equipment market in the third quarter as we onboarded new equipment and then utilized our efficient maintenance and retail channels to profitably dispose of older equipment. Enterprise revenues, excluding fuel surcharge, of $1.3 billion or 25% above last year. Each reportable segment of our portfolio delivered record quarterly earnings and contributed meaningfully to the doubling of our year-over-year adjusted operating income. Truckload earnings were up 87%. Intermodal was up 99%, and Logistics was up 143%. Our asset-light offerings of Intermodal and Logistics comprised 44% of segment earnings, and that's up from 41% a year ago. I'll now provide some context for our updated EPS guidance.

As noted in this morning's earnings release, we have raised our full year 2021 adjusted EPS guidance to a range from $2.13 to $2.17 a share. Given that our year-to-date number is $1.53, this range inherently guides to a fourth quarter EPS of $0.60 to $0.64, which is in the vicinity of our third quarter EPS of $0.62. We do anticipate selling less equipment in the fourth quarter than we did in the third quarter and therefore, expect lower equipment gains.

At the same time, we expect all other elements of our operations to continue at or above the trajectory of the third quarter. On a full year basis, we expect revenue, excluding fuel surcharge, to exceed $5 billion and for operating income to top $500 million. Our tax rate guidance remains unchanged at about 25% for the full year. And our capex guidance is lowered to about $300 million. And the adjustment is due to higher proceeds on equipment sales and some delayed equipment deliveries are expected to spill over into early 2022. And so with that, I'll turn the call over to Mark.

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Thank you, Steve, and hello, everyone. Thank you for joining the Schneider call this morning. I'll offer a summary of our performance across our three primary reportable segments for the third quarter, how that aligns with our enterprise strategy and offer our context on what to expect going forward. As Steve mentioned, each of our three reportable segments were significant contributors to our record revenue and earnings performance in the quarter, demonstrating the value of our scaled and balanced portfolio of services and our strategy to aggregate multimodal capacity options on behalf of our shipper community.

I'm especially pleased with the performance of our strategic growth offerings of dedicated truck, intermodal and brokerage. First, in the quarter, dedicated average truck count is up roughly 300 units year-over-year to 4,240. Furthermore, we finished the quarter with 252 more dedicated trucks and 280 more dedicated drivers than we started the quarter with. Our new business start-ups are maturing as is our success in seeding the dedicated business awards that we have won recently. Secondly, Intermodal battled the challenging macro environment to grow order count 1% while improving revenue per order 20% year-over-year.

We continue to experience increased container dwell times at customer locations and at times, congestion at key intermodal gateway locations that impact our ability to turn trailing equipment timely, impacting overall volumes. Our differentiators in container and chassis asset control, effective network and revenue management technologies and the minimization of the impact of third-party dray costs through our company dray model overcame the volume challenges to deliver a solid 84.5% operating ratio in the quarter, representing 620 basis points of improvement year-over-year. Last quarter, we indicated that we expected to add between 1,500 and 3,000 containers in the second half of the year, which was dependent on overcoming supply chain delivery challenges.

We added 1,600 containers in the third quarter of 2021. And we expect to add at least that many in the fourth quarter, setting up additional growth opportunities as we head into 2022. We do not talk about our Asia operations very often, but their efforts in helping us secure dedicated vessel capacity for our Intermodal containers are making a real difference. Finally, our Logistics business set another top and bottom line record in the quarter as Logistics revenue was only $10 million less than our Truck segment revenues at $475 million. Overall volumes in net revenue per order expanded in the quarter, and operating ratio improved 150 basis points year-over-year and 80 basis points, sequentially.

An increasingly larger portion of our Truckload network volumes is being successfully executed in the power-only configuration of our brokerage business, leveraging the value of our extensive orange trailer pool network. We expect a further catalyst for our power-only offering from the conversion onto the Mastery Logistics, MasterMind platform. Power Only will be the first service to make the conversion beginning here in the fourth quarter.

Therefore, because of the growth and successful performance of our Power Only offering in serving the Truckload network business, our priorities for growth and company drivers are firmly centered on dedicated and Intermodal dray driving positions. We expect to carry strong momentum in these services into and likely through 2022. In closing, I would also like to thank our team, especially our professional drivers, for their commitment and hard work in these disruptive supply chain conditions. Your work is essential to the everyday lives of all Americans. Thank you. And with that, I'd like to return the call back to the operator for your questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Thank you. And our first question is from Ravi Shanker with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question.

Ravi Shanker -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Hi. Thank you. Good morning, gentlemen. Mark and Steve, how do we think about 2022 kind of going into it in terms of pricing dynamics, fleet count, wage inflation, et cetera? I mean, you set a good benchmark for us for 2021. How do we think about that flowing into 2022?

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Well, Ravi and good morning, I think we have a lot of good momentum on the price line as demonstrated in the quarter that obviously we'll bring into calendar year 2022. I feel good about the dedicated growth. We had a good deal of growth of assets and drivers in the third quarter that we didn't get the full benefit of. We had the cost more so then we had the revenue based upon timing.

So again, I think we'll take that momentum into the fourth -- into, excuse me, 2022 in addition to what we bring in, in the fourth quarter. And I'm also pleased as it relates to our ability to get our boxes on ground here, more so than I probably would have thought mid-part of the year, and we successfully executed. It might be a little bit ahead of the plan. So I think that gives us, as the networks become more fluid in the rail portion of our business that we have good growth prospects coming at us in 2022.

And then obviously, we've matured the use of our platform as it relates to third parties to include the recent addition of our Power Only capability. So I put all those things together, I certainly think we have some momentum as it relates to the top line. And I would expect that we continue to extract and improve price performance to cover the inflationary aspects of the business. So I feel we're well positioned as we head into the year.

Ravi Shanker -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

That's great color. Any way at all you can put some numbers to that, especially around pricing and fleet count? Do you think you will have the truck availability and the driver availability to grow the fleet next year in the trucking business? And also, do you think you can get a double-digit price on the contract side?

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Well, we'll probably refrain from giving you all the exact detail that you may be asking in those questions, Ravi. But I do believe we have some excellent carryover work, all the work that we've done this year and very cognizant of what it's going to take relative to the labor condition.

I'm pleased that all of our Truckload network business does not have to completely come from our assets based upon what we did with the Power Only growth. And so I think that combination together gives us growth opportunities within our network. So we're not backing away from that. But certainly, our strategic growth drivers we continue to lean in most heavily on is dedicated, Intermodal and our logistics brokerage business.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from Todd Fowler with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.

Todd Fowler -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

Hey. Great. Thanks. Good morning and congratulations on the quarter. Mark, I guess just starting with the operating ratio on the Truckload segment, very strong here this quarter, better than kind of what your longer-term targets are. Do you think about that moving into next year, what would be some of the reasons why you can't sustain where the Truckload business is right now, over the next several quarters or longer for that matter? Thank you.

Stephen L Bruffett -- Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President

Yes. This is Steve, Todd. Good morning. And I think the margin range for our Truckload segment, in particular, is one that we are evaluating. And by that, I mean, if anything, it would be elevated from its current levels. But we haven't exactly landed on what that new range might be, and we'll likely provide an update on that as -- on our next call as we provide some perspective on our initial EPS guidance for 2022 and so on if that helps provide some context.

The other part of your question of what would prevent us from maintaining this type of level of performance as we go forward, I do think that we have made some step function progress as we've moved through 2021 in -- pertaining to our margin performance within the Truckload segment. And I think a substantial portion of that should remain intact as we contemplate what's ahead of us in 2022.

Todd Fowler -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

Yes. No, that makes sense. And I understand kind of the response there and then the directional comments. So for my follow-up, I know it's still early, but would you care to share just kind of your thoughts on pricing expectations for trucking and for Intermodal going into next year? It seems like the environment is strong. It seems like there's a lot of contracts that probably need to reset, that were priced earlier in the year that are probably still below market. So how are you thinking about pricing expectations for Truckload and Intermodal into 2022? Thanks.

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Yes, Todd, I think we're still building there. Certainly, as you look at contract renewals in the third quarter as compared to the second quarter in both our network, dedicated and Intermodal business, those are all continuing to go north and improving. We would expect similar results for the limited amount we have left here to do in the fourth quarter, which again gets back to my comments thinking that we have a very constructive setup as we head into 2022.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from Jon Chappell with Evercore ISI. Please proceed with your question.

Jon Chappell -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Thank you. Good morning. Steve or Mark, just going on the back of Todd's question there. In the second quarter call, you said that 80% of the Intermodal book had been renewed, and it was pricing up in the high single digits. And then you get the huge move in the third quarter revenue per load.

Do we think about as kind of marking to market the Intermodal book, is that a very heavy first half time frame? And then there is a big step-up then since the first half of this year was only kind of high single digits versus the momentum that you've seen in the third quarter and conceivably into the fourth?

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Yes, each year generally has its own nuances there. But generally speaking, the first half of the year is a more robust renewal period than the second half of the year. But as we -- we still had some work to do because of some renewals and going back and addressing some market issues, particularly around the inflationary costs with drivers and recruiting that we went back and had some additional discussions.

And what we really would suggest to you is the low double-digit range of increases early in the year became upper-teen double-digit increases as we progress through the year. And that is still where we see what's remaining to be executed against here in the fourth quarter.

Jon Chappell -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Okay. That's helpful. And then Power Only has obviously been a huge boom for you in the Logistics space. And you mentioned, Mark, at the very end there, you're transitioning now onto or converting into the Mastery Logistics platform.

When you think about the opportunity there and using that technology, is there any kind of line of sight on the long-term Logistics' 4% to 6% margin moving higher as you scale that platform?

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Yes, absolutely. And in fact, secondly -- the second part of our business that we expect to go beyond Power Only onto the platform will be our brokerage business. And we would expect, obviously, with more investment that we do in the capital and the Power Only that those perform at superior margins to what is considered traditional brokerage when the carriers bring both their power and their trailer assets.

So we expect to see a return for the trailer portion that we get on an incremental basis. And because I think what we're really excited about here is how we blend our solution to the customer so that we could take a larger share of wallet as it relates to bringing solutions well beyond what's necessarily just our power reach with our assets. And so this just gives us another avenue to do that. And certainly, this has been a terrific market to be able to demonstrate value to the customer to build that momentum.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from Bert Subin with Stifel. Please proceed with your question.

Bert Subin -- Stifel -- Analyst

Hey, good morning. Congratulations on the quarter. Following up to Ravi's question on the '22 momentum side of things, what gives you confidence on the demand side? Or is it purely that the supply situation is so challenged that rates just should continue to rise?

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Yes. It's difficult to have obviously a perfect view into that. But certainly, I think it's on both sides of the equation, supply and demand, that gives us a degree of confidence that we have a constructive market well into 2022.

Equipment is going to continue to be difficult to come by relative to new equipment based upon supply chain concerns. Inventory sales ratio still has plenty of room to go. And we still have, by all measures, a very healthy consumer.

And all of our channel checks relative to our customer base, for the most part, are still quite bullish as we head into next year. So we try to look at all of that and come to our assessment to think that we have some staying power here on both the supply constricted side as well as the demand equation.

Bert Subin -- Stifel -- Analyst

That's helpful. Just as a follow-up on the Logistics side. As that business continues to take off, how much of your growth do you attribute to market share capture versus just a growing addressable market? I assume it's probably a bit of both.

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Yes, I'm trying to think about how to frame that for you. Certainly, we have the benefit of all the things that are going on in the marketplace, and I think that does give benefit to multimodal platform companies like ourselves.

We can, through our technologies at the front end of the funnel, capture and provide more options to the customer on the front end. Which allows us then at that original point of tender to find a way to say yes more often and look across Intermodal, look across truck, look across our third-party offerings to now include Power Only. And so I think it's just leveraging those relationships and leveraging that initial point to capture as much volume as we can profitably.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from Brian Ossenbeck with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your question.

Brian Ossenbeck -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Hi. Good morning. Thank you for taking the question. Mark, maybe just a follow-up on that last comment you made there. I think you referred to as lending of the orange, this multimodal platform idea. What else do you feel like you need to add or maybe potentially get bigger in when it comes to the suite of services or capabilities that your customers are asking for now or you think they will look for more in the future? And if you could add some comments on the FreightPower platform as well within Logistics, that would be helpful.

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Yes, Brian, I would really tie my answer to your question, all of those pieces together. Traditionally, we've done a very good job as a company in our asset-centric services to include Intermodal on the large shipper community across the wide swath of the economy. What we've done really well on the brokerage and Logistics side is getting after the longer tail, smaller shipper.

And what I'm excited about with what we're seeing on FreightPower is how we can do that and find ways to grow with a smaller shipper across all of our services by making it easier for them via FreightPower to connect with us and easier for us to reach them because can't do that all with the salespeople on the street. And so that's where we're starting to see value.

Obviously, we started first with our brokerage offering. And now we've expanded into all the rest of our offerings, both on the carrier support side and now on the shipper side. So we're in the early innings of that. But early returns, and we're more mature on the carrier -- third-party carrier side of FreightPower and ramping up on the shipper side.

And so to us, it's just an extended reach into a market segment, particularly for our assets that traditionally has been a bit more challenging for us to reach economically. And that's what this whole blending, in our view, does. It just allows us to hit more of the addressable market more effectively.

Brian Ossenbeck -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

All right. Thanks for that. And then just a follow-up, if you can give some comments on potential vaccine mandate, which I guess depends on who you ask is coming out before too long. The industry, the LTL has been pretty vocal about an exemption. And I think it would be pretty counterproductive if trucking didn't get an exemption.

But we're not quite sure that's going to happen. So maybe you can just talk about your view on that and how you're preparing Schneider for potential mandate with all the associated testing they might have to go with that. Thank you.

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Yes. Great question, Brian. And certainly, start -- to start with, we are -- strongly encourage all of our associate base to get vaccinated and taken a series of steps over the last 18 months to make that as easy as possible and educate to the best that we can how that makes sense and helps both on the personal side but also on the business side. But that being said, we think and I'm pleased with how well the industry has responded to educate the policymakers.

And we really do caution the policymakers to be thoughtful here because we already have a very fragile supply chain and a volatile situation that we think would be very detrimental if we did not get an exemption. But again, I think the industry has responded well. The customers that we've gotten involved have responded well to make sure that at least those voices and understanding got into the process. And we don't know, obviously, yet what the ultimate decision will be there.

But it will be problematic, particularly as we would estimate between 40% and 55% of our drivers are vaccinated. And I think that is a number that we see pretty predominantly across the spectrum. So we're putting a series of steps together to kind of put some scenarios on how we would deal with various elements of what a rule could look like.

But all of it is going to be difficult to execute. It's going to be costly to execute, and I think it's going to be disruptive to execute. So we continue to lean into that and awaiting further guidance from the policymakers.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from Jason Seidl with Cowen. Please proceed with your question.

Jason Seidl -- Cowen -- Analyst

Hey. Thank you [indecipherable]. Steve, wanted to talk about sort of use of proceeds going forward on the cash side. You ended the quarter with over $500 million in cash. Based upon your outlook for 4Q, it looks like you're going to generate some more. Talk about the potential usage as you guys are seeing between now and the end of the year.

Stephen L Bruffett -- Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President

Sure, Jason. Good morning. It's a pretty consistent messaging from us as far as use of cash goes. I think we are continuing to be interested in the inorganic opportunities that we might see in a dedicated or specialty configuration and continue to evaluate opportunities there. At the same time, primary focus is on organic growth in our strategic areas of dedicated and Intermodal, as well as the technology investments to grow our digital platform and capabilities, as Mark has mentioned.

I think it's really important for us to continue to look for those opportunities to create seamless customer experiences and remove and automate things as much as possible as we move forward. And I think that's an important part of what we're trying to accomplish here is standardization and automation capabilities.

So we continue to invest in those things. So that would be our primary use is to: one, grow our strategic areas organically; two, continue to improve the age of fleet in our Truckload segment; and three, look for inorganic growth opportunities that fit with our strategy and our portfolio.

Jason Seidl -- Cowen -- Analyst

Okay. Appreciate that. And my follow-up, you guys talked a little bit about really trying to get hiring on the dedicated and drayage side in terms of drivers. Can you compare and contrast sort of the different challenges in both markets? I mean, I'm sure they're both challenged like everyone else is on the Truckload side. However, is one far more difficult than the other right now?

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Well, certainly, as you look across our portfolio, the network businesses are the most challenged because of a little less certainty as it relates to the work and the time at home component. And that's why we've been had and continue to have more success in sourcing and seating and retaining in our dedicated configurations and Intermodal.

And one of the things that is probably not as evident in the public metrics is in those two configurations in particular, we have started to get back to some more of the efficiency measures around tractor sharing, particularly in our Intermodal business where we did successfully grow drivers in the third quarter. And we successfully took some units out because we got back to some of our more standard practices as it relates to how we can run efficiently multi shifts with the same power unit.

Not fully back to pre-COVID but starting in certain parts of the network to do that. So -- but clearly, Intermodal and dedicated are the most attractive options for drivers. And that's what -- fortunately, we have that as a key part of our strategy.

Jason Seidl -- Cowen -- Analyst

A quick follow-up. What percent of your own dray do you cover now? And what's the sort of longer-term goal?

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Yes, we have consistently been between 90% and 93% of our own dray. There will be certain times of the year based upon demands that, that could go a little bit north of that or a little bit south of that. But that's how we're performing and performing consistently today.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Bascome Majors with Susquehanna. Please proceed with your question.

Bascome Majors -- Susquehanna -- Analyst

Yes. Thanks for taking my questions. As you speak with your customers and work with them on their planning into next year, is anything changing in the nature of how Truckload and Intermodal services are being procured?

I'm just -- I'm curious if things like firmer volume commitments with penalties for both sides are being thrown out there, if you're just seeing shorter-term arrangements to get through some of this volatility or anything strange where multiyear capacity commitments -- just really anything that may have changed from the normal kind of cadence that would be interesting. Thank you.

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Yes. Terrific question. What we've continued to advocate for, which we believe is in the best interest of all parties, is to have less of this annual procurement event that puts everything out up to bid and changing carrier-to-carrier and the disruption for both parties that, that causes. And we're seeing more and more, particularly around their core carrier thought process, to do things just like that, to have those discussions in advance to plan for the forward periods and perhaps not have everything be in that kind of traditional annual process to make sure that incumbency can bring value and benefit to both sides of the equation.

And so I think on trend, that is continuing. And I would expect that to be more of the trend as people see the benefit of that, particularly in these type of environments.

Bascome Majors -- Susquehanna -- Analyst

From the outside looking in and trying to track and understand and model your business, I mean, is that meaningful enough to have any changes to the normal cadence of pricing hitting midyear? Just trying to think about if that's meaningful from a financial standpoint at this point.

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Yes. I think it's meaningful. It might be more as we think about networks and stability and planning that we can do. And so I think the events still occur, but there might be just less of the freight that finds itself in those type of events. So maybe the less dense lanes, maybe different strategies that changed because they had some changes in the network is what finds itself in those as opposed to the repetitive and the base business.

So from an operating standpoint, from an efficiency standpoint, from where you want to have your drivers and your equipment, there's great benefit, I think, for both sides to do that. I don't think it will ever get to 100% that way because of how much change does go on with an individual sourcing and networks. But I think we can get smarter collectively than traditionally has been the approach of the industry.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from Scott Group with Wolfe Research. Please proceed with your question.

Scott Group -- Wolfe Research -- Analyst

Hey. Thanks. Good morning, guys. Steve, can you share with us what's in the guidance for gains in the fourth quarter? And then if I look excluding gains, Truckload segment earnings were down a bit from the second quarter. It sounds like maybe there's a good amount of start-up costs or inefficiencies in dedicated. Is there any way to quantify that?

Stephen L Bruffett -- Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President

Sure. I'll tackle the first part of that. Maybe Mark can weigh in on the last part. But regarding -- this is equipment gains that we're talking about here. And in our fourth quarter guidance, I mentioned in the opening comments that we expected to sell less equipment, and that amount is probably less than half of the equipment that we sold in the third quarter. We'll have to see. It's -- a lot of what drives our dispositions is the receipt of new equipment coming in. And that's not always completely predictable.

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

It's certainly been lumpy in 2021.

Stephen L Bruffett -- Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President

That's kind of what's driving some of the gain behavior that you see working through our income statement. So again, to repeat what I said earlier, we expect quite a bit less gains in the fourth quarter, but still expect to put as much operating income on the board as we did in the third. So that's an indication that we think everything else is working really well.

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

And Scott, maybe just -- you hit on one of the major elements of kind of the cost drag in the third quarter on truck was certainly a very robust start-up period within dedicated and more back-end loaded relative to when we had the revenue that we got a chance to book much more of the cost in the earlier part of the quarter as we were preparing for that. And probably the second area that we've -- I think we've gotten to some level of maturity now is that the five apprenticeship academies that we've opened from a new driver CDL standpoint. We started that in the second quarter.

We got those fully ramped up through the third quarter and are now starting to see some of the benefit of that channel to address some of the capacity gap that we're all chasing right now in the marketplace. So I think those two from a cost standpoint were probably the biggest contributors that we didn't get the full benefit in the quarter, but we expect to see in some of the out periods, obviously.

Scott Group -- Wolfe Research -- Analyst

Okay. And then just my last question, Mark, maybe just some thoughts. What are you seeing in terms of the spread between Intermodal and trucking rates? Is it oil is high, inventory is tight, intermodal has got a lot of accessorial charges right now. Where is the spread? And heading into '22, what are shippers telling you in terms of are they looking to favor one versus the other?

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Yes, Scott, I would tell you today, we're still seeing more conversion that things that should go on the train are being pushed onto the road just because of some of the difficulty and the fluidity issues and the congestion issues on the rail. I think the good news there is that we've seen much less of that here to start in October. But -- so frustratingly, we have much more we could do relative to Intermodal based upon what we have available and how we believe we can execute across the network than we've been able to seize.

Certainly, the increased container count will help with that, but so will just getting some of these heart attack events that we've been dealing with on a kind of a reoccurring basis. I don't know if heart attack and reoccurring is the right way to frame that. But it -- that if we can get that behind us, we can get some more confidence in the customer and convert more, which should be moving on the train.

As far as price movement, there has been some compression. I think we've moved a little bit faster in the third quarter on some catch-up in Intermodal on the contract pricing range. But there's still a good economic value for the customer between over-the-road and Intermodal, particularly depending on where they place environmental concerns as part of that equation.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Chris Wetherbee with Citi. Please proceed with your question.

Chris Wetherbee -- Citi -- Analyst

Hey. Thanks. Good morning, guys. Maybe if you could talk a little bit about what your for the fleet, both combined for-hire and dedicated in the fourth quarter? And then maybe taking a step back and thinking more conceptually. Obviously, it's been a very, very challenging driver environment. And certainly that's led, I'm sure, at least in part to the contraction in the fleet over the course of the last several years.

I guess if you were to look out a few years down the road, do you think there is a point where you'd like to pivot back into sort of market share growth within the broader over-the-road truck fleet? Maybe that's more of a dedicated comment than it is a for-hire comment, but I wanted to get your perspective on that bigger picture dynamic of where you think Schneider should be in terms of fleet and the broader sort of nationwide industry.

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Yes, Chris, it's a lot there to unwind in many ways. So we strongly believe that a healthy and vibrant network business in truck is very good for our enterprise. It gives us great optionality as we go to market to bring multiple services together, and that's always a key attraction element for our customer base. We've said all of these difficulties that we've had, but we're still putting 5,000 trucks a day out there in the network, which is still a very, very sizable comparatively in this industry. And so we still have a great offering. We like to have more certainly.

But we also have to be cognizant of the labor condition and the driver desires and the driver experience and some of the other configurations right now are more attractive. And fortunately, they match up well with what the customer value proposition is getting out as well. So -- but we're not strategically stepping back we're -- from the network side of the business, but we also don't want to just blindly chase it from an overall cost standpoint to achieve kind of that outcome.

And so we're trying to use the leverage of our portfolio, which is great. One of our advantages is all the optionality that we have. And certainly, from a customer standpoint, the Power Only capability that we've developed has stepped into that vacuum in the short term here to help us serve customers and grow our third-party business by using that orange trailer.

And so as your question gets to the fourth quarter, I think that is probably more of what we'll see continuing into the fourth quarter. I think you'll see growth in those key strategic areas of dedicated and Intermodal dray. And we're going to work like heck to get stability into that network portion of the fleet. But over time, absolutely, I could see us looking to grow both of those, network and dedicated side. We just want to do it when it makes more sense for us to do it.

Chris Wetherbee -- Citi -- Analyst

Okay. That's really helpful color. I appreciate that perspective. And then maybe just a quick follow-up on the Intermodal side. Can you just talk a little bit about container additions next couple of quarters and then maybe a little bit about how we should think about utilization from a rail service perspective in 4Q?

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Yes. I mentioned that I believe we'll get at least another 1,500, 1,600 containers delivered here in the fourth quarter. We may not get a chance to use them a great deal because of -- kind of when they hit, but I think that puts us in a solid position next year. And we're solidifying, and we'll give you more guidance as we get to the next call. But we will anticipate another year of growth of our container and chassis fleet based upon the opportunities that we see in front of us in 2022 as well.

And right now, as you try to think about volumes in this business, we're about evenly split between just the dwell time that's impacting our volumes at the customer location and some of the gateway congestion and fluid issues that we've had with the rail network. I don't want to, obviously, declare victory here, but we're seeing a little bit of better improvement in the fluidity of the rail network.

We have not yet seen any material movement or improvement as it relates to the customer side as they're dealing with not only increased volumes, but also their own labor challenges to get those things turned rapidly. So I think that one is still going to be with us for a while. And we would expect we're going to carry some of those burdens into 2022.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Tom Wadewitz with UBS. Please proceed with your question.

Tom Wadewitz -- UBS -- Analyst

Yes. Good morning. Maybe continuing on that topic just a little bit more. Mark, are you -- do you feel like you have visibility or are you optimistic that some of those constraints you just mentioned are likely to improve? It seems like there's a lot of appetite for Intermodal volume growth in 2022, but capacity is a constraint.

I mean, do you think that you have visibility to the labor side with customers and warehouses or with rails or, I guess, drayage in general that, that would really allow you to have substantial Intermodal volume growth as you look to '22?

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Yes, Tom. So where I feel confident is in our dray performance, our dray opportunities to continue to put more productive driver jobs in the market to support our dray business. I feel good about our container build. I feel really good about our execution. Certain parts of our network, particularly the east where dray matters more and our execution is where we're seeing the growth.

And we've had good solid fluidity there from the rail side. And so we really haven't taken a back seat at all in the eastern part of the network. It's been more of those intermediate routes in the western side through the ports that is so well documented. And so I think that portion is going to be here a while.

And the customer issues have not subsided. There's a lot of -- obviously, they've leaned into that quite heavily. They've tried to do a number of things differently, but we just haven't seen collectively enough of a move there. So what we have is just more a delay on the customer side than certainly I would have anticipated as we're this far into this cycle, but it's going to be with us, I believe.

Tom Wadewitz -- UBS -- Analyst

So does that imply we got to look for growth maybe in kind of gradually ramping up? Obviously, there's seasonality in the business. I don't know if comps are a lot different, but is that the right way to look at it that your Intermodal volume growth would kind of gradually ramp up through '22? Or are you more optimistic in kind of a step up?

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Yes, I'd like to be more optimistic. I think because we know how much more could convert than has converted. So it's great to be in the position that the market has had more desire than the providers can provide right now. And so I think ultimately, things will start to get more fluid.

Things will start to work its way through. And that should bode well, and it's just a matter of when. I just don't think that's going to be a real short-term issue here in the fourth quarter, Tom. But I think certainly, as 2022 progresses, I think that's a very reasonable expectation. And we're confident that, that will continue to improve.

Tom Wadewitz -- UBS -- Analyst

Okay. Just a quick second one if I can. I wanted to see if you could provide a little more color on brokerage. I mean, you had great results in brokerage, continue to have just tons of momentum there. How much of the mix was Power Only? And how -- maybe if you could give a little more perspective on how important that capability is to the growth that you're seeing in that business? Thank you.

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Yes. It's -- I look at -- what I can try to ascertain is industry statistics on this. I don't think anybody is moving more Power Only than we are. I think we're kind of leading the charge on that from an overall volume standpoint, but we're also growing our volumes across the more traditional lanes -- or excuse me, the traditional channels of live, live within our brokerage offering.

And that is still the dominant portion of what we do there and the dominant portion of even the growth of what we do there, Tom. But increasingly, Power Only is gaining share, but it's still the smallest portion of it.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from Ken Hoexter with Bank of America. Please proceed with your question.

Ken Hoexter -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Hey. Good morning. Mark and Steve, hi. So just you've hit on a lot of stuff in terms of kind of what's going on with the market. So I guess just to clarify, Steve or Mark, on your thoughts on fourth quarter just given your large outlook.

So if you've got less gains, we've got similar momentum on pricing, does that mean we're not seeing additional wage ramp-up needed to sustain kind of the labor in this market given the battle that's going on? I just want to understand how you were talking about labor wage rates before, but maybe just talk about kind of what you're seeing in terms of as -- on the cost side as we move into the fourth quarter.

Stephen L Bruffett -- Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President

Sure. I think we would anticipate full quarter effects of actions that have been taken across the recent past in the fourth quarter. So some -- a bit of continued cost inflation in there, and it's not just in rate per mile. It's in work configurations and driver-friendly steps that we're taking outside of the rate per mile itself.

So there is some of that inherent in what we see happening in the fourth quarter. At the same time, the price momentum, we believe, should more than adequately cover that dynamic as we move through the fourth quarter. Thus, our statement about we -- setting gains aside, we expect to make more money in the fourth quarter than in the third, particularly in truck and Intermodal.

Ken Hoexter -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Yes. Thanks. I guess what I was asking is you don't see another wave of rate increases given the tug in of labor in this environment where just the demand on the drivers. That's what it sounds like you're saying you've got that built in.

Stephen L Bruffett -- Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President

Nothing new, particularly in the fourth quarter as planned if that's your specific question.

Ken Hoexter -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Yes. Yes.

Stephen L Bruffett -- Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President

We get into 2022, that's a different dynamic and thought process probably. But for the fourth quarter, I think it's just more about full quarter effects of things that have already been done.

Ken Hoexter -- Bank of America -- Analyst

And Mark, just a follow-up on the brokerage side you were just referring about in terms of the ramp-up. Is the scaling of the relationship with Mastery, is that something that's going to kind of accelerate that deployment and capabilities? Or is that more gradual? Just trying to understand the cadence of what we should expect out of brokerage.

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Yes. We have a very specific onboarding plan and a sequence from which we will do that, Power Only being the first thing that starts. And that starts to ramp, as I mentioned, kind of like in the fourth quarter. But we would expect as we come out of next year, the timing would, at this juncture, suggest that we'll be in the conversion of our larger segment of our entire Logistics offering, namely the brokerage business in calendar 2022.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 50 minutes

Call participants:

Steve Bindas -- Director of Investor Relations

Stephen L Bruffett -- Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President

Mark B Rourke -- President, Chief Executive Officer, and Director

Ravi Shanker -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Todd Fowler -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

Jon Chappell -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Bert Subin -- Stifel -- Analyst

Brian Ossenbeck -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Jason Seidl -- Cowen -- Analyst

Bascome Majors -- Susquehanna -- Analyst

Scott Group -- Wolfe Research -- Analyst

Chris Wetherbee -- Citi -- Analyst

Tom Wadewitz -- UBS -- Analyst

Ken Hoexter -- Bank of America -- Analyst

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