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DATE
Thursday, May 7, 2026 at 4:30 p.m. ET
CALL PARTICIPANTS
- President and Chief Executive Officer — Shawn Stewart
- Chief Financial Officer — Jamie G. Pierson
- Vice President of Investor Relations — Tony Carreño
TAKEAWAYS
- Anticipated Customer Transition -- Discussions are underway with one of the largest customers to transition a "significant portion" of business, potentially starting in early 2027 and continuing through the year.
- Customer Revenue Concentration -- The customer under discussion accounted for approximately $250 million in 2025 revenue, representing about 10% of total revenue.
- Strategic Review Outcome -- No actionable sale proposals for the company were received in the strategic alternatives review, and management is now pursuing a sale of non-core assets, including the intermodal segment and two smaller legacy Omni businesses (in total, approximately $394 million in 2025 revenue).
- Operating Income -- $20 million, up from $5 million in the same period last year.
- Consolidated EBITDA -- $70 million, compared to $73 million last year. Adjusted EBITDA was $70 million, versus $69 million last year.
- Expedited Freight Segment EBITDA -- $28 million (margin 10.4%), up from $26 million (margin 10.4%) last year and $25 million (margin 10.1%) in the previous quarter.
- OmniLogistics Segment EBITDA -- $25 million (margin 8.3%), versus $26 million (margin 7.9%) last year, with margin improvement driven by higher contract logistics volume and lower-margin air and ocean volume declines.
- Intermodal Segment EBITDA -- $5 million (margin 10.1%), down from $10 million (margin 16.4%) last year due to reduced port activity and international trade softness among core customers.
- Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities -- $46 million, increased by $18 million (over 60%) from last year's $28 million.
- Period-End Liquidity -- $402 million, comprised of $141 million in cash (the highest quarterly ending cash balance in eight quarters) and $261 million available under the revolver; this represents a $35 million increase from year-end 2025 and $10 million increase year over year.
- Segment Asset Sale Breakdown -- Sale targets: approximately $230 million revenue from intermodal and about $160 million from the two smaller legacy Omni businesses; details of Omni units not disclosed due to buyer confidentiality.
- Recent Industry Recognitions -- Forward Air Corporation named 2026 Surface Carrier of the Year by the Air Forwarders Association and included in Newsweek’s Most Trustworthy Companies in America 2026 list.
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RISKS
- The potential customer transition, involving about $250 million in annual revenue, creates future revenue concentration risk, which management acknowledges may impact results beginning in early 2027.
- Intermodal segment performance declined, with EBITDA falling to $5 million (10.1% margin) from $10 million (16.4% margin) due to reduced port activity and international customer softness.
- Geopolitical instability, especially in the Middle East, and recent spikes in fuel prices, are explicitly cited by management as sources of uncertainty that "could pressure manufacturers and consumers, raising input costs, compressing margins, and ultimately dampening demand."
SUMMARY
Forward Air (FWRD 35.82%) management reported active discussions regarding a significant customer initiating a supplier diversification strategy, signaling possible revenue loss beginning in early 2027, but confirmed no material impact for the current year. Strategic alternatives exploration concluded without company sale offers, prompting a pivot to divestiture of noncore assets, particularly the intermodal segment and select Omni businesses, as management seeks to delever and refocus the core business. Despite a challenging industry and ongoing integration efforts, the company improved operating income and cash generation, raised liquidity, and highlighted margin gains in key segments while also achieving external recognition for its logistics operations and corporate governance standards.
- CFO Jamie G. Pierson stressed that despite the customer transition discussions, "It will not be until early 2027 that we see anything meaningful and material, if at all."
- Management emphasized that the potential customer transition stems from client diversification needs, not concerns about service quality, stating service-related KPIs remain "incredible."
- Recent pricing trends were called out, with spot rates reportedly up 40% and tender rejections doubling in the past six months, which could signal improving market conditions but have not yet resulted in sustained demand recovery.
- The company holds $40 million in revolving credit "cushion," and, per Pierson, liquidity as a percent of assets and LTM revenue is "at the upper echelon" relative to peers.
- Management does not expect overlap between the planned asset sales ($390 million revenue total) and the revenue at risk from the large customer transition.
- CEO Shawn Stewart reiterated a disciplined approach to pricing and customer acquisition, stating, "we are not going to get into any kind of desperate situation. We have a great organization, great solutions, and a fantastic product, and we will continue to price aggressively but with profitability in mind."
INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
- Drayage: Short-haul trucking service that moves containers between ports, rail terminals, and warehouses, essential for efficient intermodal logistics.
- BCO: Beneficial Cargo Owner; typically, the party that owns the cargo being shipped, often a direct shipper rather than a freight forwarder or intermediary.
- Tender Rejection Rate: The frequency at which contracted carriers refuse to accept shipment requests at agreed rates, indicating changes in market supply-demand balance.
- PPI: Purchasing Managers' Index; an indicator of manufacturing and industrial activity, with readings above 50 typically signaling expansion.
Full Conference Call Transcript
Tony Carreño: Good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to Forward Air Corporation's first quarter earnings conference call. With us this afternoon are Shawn Stewart, President and Chief Executive Officer, and Jamie G. Pierson, Chief Financial Officer. By now, you should have received the press release announcing Forward Air Corporation's first quarter 2026 results, which was also furnished to the SEC on Form 8-K. We have also furnished a slide presentation outlining first quarter 2026 earnings highlights and a business update. The press release and slide presentation for this call are accessible on the Investor Relations section of Forward Air Corporation's website at forwardair.com.
Please be aware that certain statements in the company's earnings release announcement and on this conference call may be considered forward-looking statements. This includes statements which are based on expectations, intentions, and projections regarding the company's future performance, anticipated events or trends, and other matters that are not historical facts, including statements regarding our fiscal year 2026. These statements are not a guarantee of future performance and are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements.
For additional information concerning these risks and factors, please refer to our filings with the SEC and the press release and slide presentation relating to this earnings call. Listeners are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date of this call. The company undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise, unless required by law. During the call, there may also be discussion of metrics that do not conform to U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, or GAAP. Management uses non-GAAP measures internally to understand, manage, and evaluate our business and make operating decisions.
Definitions and reconciliations of these non-GAAP measures to their most directly comparable GAAP measures are included in today's press release and slide presentation. I will now turn the call over to Shawn.
Shawn Stewart: Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. I appreciate your interest in Forward Air Corporation. There are three main topics that I would like to cover on today's call. First, I will provide an update on the customer transition and our strategic alternatives review that we announced in our press release. Second, I will share some thoughts on our first quarter results and the logistics market in general. Third, I will comment on recent awards earned by our team before turning the call over to Jamie. Let me start with the customer transition.
While no formal notices have been delivered, we are in discussions with one of our largest customers to transition a significant portion of their business to other providers. How much of the business will be transitioned and the timing thereof are still being discussed, but we are currently anticipating that the majority of what will ultimately transition will start in early 2027 and take place throughout the balance of the year. It is important to note that we believe this has little, if anything, to do with the impeccable level of service that we provide them and more about their own internal diversification strategy.
We are still in active discussions to retain as much of the business as possible, and we are doing everything we can to minimize the impact to our company. I want to reiterate that we believe the customer's decision is entirely related to their own operation and supplier diversification initiatives and has nothing to do with the exceptional service we have provided them during our long-term partnership. This leads me to an update on our strategic review and the new actions we are now pursuing to enhance value and help offset this potential impact. As you know, in January 2025, the Board initiated a comprehensive review of strategic alternatives to maximize shareholder value.
We have had extensive negotiations and discussions with multiple parties. However, due to a variety of factors, including the developments that I just mentioned, no actionable proposals for sale of the company were received. We continue to consider all opportunities to enhance shareholder value, and we are now pivoting our focus to pursue a sale of non-core assets, including our intermodal segment and two of our smaller legacy Omni businesses, which in aggregate represent approximately $394 million of our 2025 revenue.
These targeted sales are intended to advance our efforts to delever the balance sheet and further focus our services around the core of what we do every single day, which is providing service-sensitive logistics to our customers around the world in air, ocean, ground, and contract logistics markets. With that, let us turn to the second topic, our quarterly results. In the midst of an incredibly complex integration, a fairly weak industry backdrop, changing tariff regulations, and the disruption in the Middle East, our team continues to make progress executing our transformation plan, overhauling operations, and improving the quality of our earnings results, which is reflected in our results.
For the first quarter, we reported operating income of $20 million compared to $5 million last year, and consolidated EBITDA, which is calculated pursuant to our credit agreement, was $70 million compared to $73 million a year ago. Regarding the overall logistics market, domestic transportation supply has continued to tighten, driven in large part by increased regulatory and enforcement actions over the past year. These dynamics have accelerated carrier exits, particularly among smaller operators, while limiting capacity additions. A tightening supply environment is a component in rebalancing the freight market and supporting a return to more favorable market dynamics after years of prolonged freight recession. However, supply is only one side of the equation.
Improvement in demand will ultimately determine the pace and sustainability of a recovery. Encouragingly, early indicators suggest that the industrial economy, which has weighed on freight demand, may be approaching an inflection point. Manufacturing PMIs have now remained in expansion territory for four consecutive months. Readings above 50 have historically served as a leading indicator for increased freight volumes, as rising manufacturing activity typically drives higher shipment of raw materials and finished goods. Additionally, the ratio of inventory to sales continues to decline. Outside of the post-COVID destocking, the current levels are at or slightly below the 10-year average, with shippers operating with conservative inventory levels amid ongoing tariff uncertainty and evolving trade policy.
Depressed freight demand in the most recent past also creates the potential for a restocking cycle, which could serve as a meaningful tailwind for freight volumes when demand improves. Also, do not lose sight of the recent increase in truckload spot rates and corresponding spike in tender rejection rates. That said, while the VIX may have settled, macroeconomic risks remain. Ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and the associated rise in fuel prices introduce a key source of uncertainty. Sustained increases in energy costs could pressure manufacturers and consumers, raising input costs, compressing margins, and ultimately dampening demand.
Outside of this week's announcement and subsequent sell-off in oil, if elevated fuel prices persist, they could lead to tempered demand, offsetting some of the positive momentum emerging in the industrial economy and delaying a recovery in the freight markets. While we are optimistic about the improving freight dynamics, we remain focused on prioritizing customer service and thoughtful cost management. We have been operating as one company for over two years now, and I am proud of what our team has accomplished and even more excited about our future. Finally, it gives me a great deal of pride for our team of dedicated logistics professionals to be recognized for their hard work, diligence, and commitment to our customers.
Forward Air Corporation was recently named the 2026 Surface Carrier of the Year by the Air Forwarders Association, whose members are freight forwarders that rely on our expedited ground network to maintain the integrity of their airfreight schedules. This recognition reflects the strength of our network, our team's performance, and our commitment to delivering exceptional service on a consistent basis. Forward Air Corporation was also recently named to Newsweek's list of the Most Trustworthy Companies in America 2026. The annual ranking recognizes companies across industries that have earned strong trust among customers, employees, and investors. This award follows the company's selection to Newsweek's list of Most Responsible Companies in 2025.
This recognition underscores the significant transformation our team has achieved over the past two years in optimizing operations, improving performance, and enhancing customer relationships. Both of these honors are a reminder of the high service standards that we are known for. They reflect the dedication of our people whose efforts continue to drive our reputation for excellence. With that, I will now turn the call over to Jamie to go through the detailed results of the first quarter.
Jamie G. Pierson: Thanks, Shawn, and good afternoon, everyone. As you heard from Shawn, we reported consolidated EBITDA of $70 million in the first quarter compared to $73 million in 2025. As a reminder, the comparable results a year ago were favorably impacted by $4 million of annualized cost reduction initiatives that were actioned in 2025. The credit agreement allows for the inclusion of the unrealized and pro forma savings from these actions to be included in our historical consolidated EBITDA and requires that they be spread back in time to the period in which the expense would have occurred. On an LTM basis, consolidated EBITDA was $3[inaudible] million.
Like we normally do, we have detailed the information used to reconcile the adjusted and consolidated EBITDA results on Slide 30 of the presentation. On an adjusted EBITDA basis, we reported $70 million in the first quarter compared to $69 million in the first quarter of last year. Turning to the segments. Expedited Freight reported EBITDA improved to $28 million compared to $26 million a year ago, with the exact same margin of 10.4%. The Expedited Freight segment's first quarter results also improved sequentially compared to the $25 million of reported EBITDA and a margin of 10.1% in 2025.
At the OmniLogistics segment, reported EBITDA of $25 million in the first quarter of this year was in line with the $26 million we reported a year ago. The margin improved from 7.9% to 8.3% year-over-year, driven by an increase in contract logistics volume with a higher margin compared to a decrease in air and ocean volumes that have lower margin. At the Intermodal segment, we continue to see a challenging market, especially from reduced port activity. International trade-related softness among several core customers contributed to declines in shipments and revenue per shipment compared to a year ago.
In the first quarter, the Intermodal segment reported EBITDA and margin were $5 million and 10.1%, respectively, compared to $10 million and 16.4% a year ago. Externally, and going back into the back half of the year, we expect to see capacity tighten as JIT supply chains for our BCO customer base loosen as tariffs stabilize, and as additional capacity exits the market due to financial difficulties and bankruptcies of smaller drayage carriers. Internally, we have a strong pipeline and have recently enacted strategic rate increases to several key accounts. Turning to cash flow and liquidity.
Net cash provided by operating activities in the first quarter was $46 million, an improvement of $18 million, or more than 60%, compared to $28 million in the first quarter of last year. As for liquidity, we ended the first quarter with $402 million, which is an increase of $35 million compared to the end of 2025 and about a $10 million increase from last year's comparable $393 million. The $402 million is comprised of $141 million in cash and $261 million in availability under the revolver. And as usual, I would like to leave you with a couple of additional thoughts. The first of which is liquidity and how we manage the business, especially in uncertain times.
As you heard earlier, our ending liquidity included $141 million in cash, which is the highest ending cash balance in the past eight quarters. When compared to our publicly traded peers, we are at the upper end of the spectrum when calculating liquidity as a percent of both total assets and LTM revenue. And on Slide 22 of the earnings presentation, you will also see, on a non-GAAP basis, we generated $58 million in operating cash flow in the first quarter, which is approximately $12 million better than last year's comparable result. Secondarily, as you heard from Shawn, we are cautiously optimistic about improvements in freight demand, especially in the most recent past.
However, there are numerous crosscurrents, including potential continued improvement in the freight demand counterbalanced by ongoing headwinds from inflation, subject to consumer confidence, and macroeconomic risks. We will need these to play out to see if the improvement in demand is sustainable. Regardless of when we see the market fully turn in a positive direction, we plan to continue focusing on the customer, increasing sales, and tightly managing expenses. I will now turn the call over to the operator to take questions. Operator?
Operator: We will now open the call for questions. The floor is now open for questions. To provide optimal sound quality. Thank you. Our first question is coming from J. Bruce Chan with Stifel. Your line is now open.
Andrew Cox: Hey, good afternoon, team. This is Andrew Cox on for Bruce. I just wanted to touch on the customer loss or customer transition here. We understand that nothing is set in stone, but we are talking about 10% of total revenue. Would just like to get some more details on what segment it is in and what the margin profile is, and how much fixed or structural costs are associated with this customer, and how fast you expect to be able to flex down either the cost or backfill the revenues? Thank you.
Shawn Stewart: Hey, Andrew, thank you for the question. Yes, it is quite diverse and dynamic in terms of the service offerings we provide them. It is mainly in contract logistics and some transportation. So margins are different depending on what segment of that business it sits in. We are still in conversations, so it is very fluid. Obviously, we do not want to be overly transparent today. But we are still in heavy conversations, and it is a very good relationship. So it is not a situation of anything other than what we understand and believe to be diversifying their overall supply chain portfolio between providers.
Jamie G. Pierson: Yes, if I can add on there, Andrew. We are positioning ourselves to hold on to as much of this business as possible. Shawn said it perfectly, which is our belief that this is about their growth and their concentration with us. It is a simple diversification play. It is important to note that we do not see any meaningful impacts to the current year, and as you noted, it is ongoing. To date, the conversations have been positive.
Stephanie Moore: Hi, good afternoon. I guess maybe going back to the situation with the customer, maybe I will ask this a little more directly than the prior question. I am trying to understand how much leeway or time you saw this coming. Has this been a conversation that has been going on for some time? It is hard to believe for a customer of this size to make these changes quickly. If you could give a little bit of color on what services this customer provides or end market, just to get some color there, maybe a little history on other customer losses.
If it is not due to service and it is just diversification, that is obviously having a really large impact this year. If you could touch a little bit more about when this started happening, and then at the same time, what can be done on your end to hopefully try to retain this as much as possible?
Jamie G. Pierson: Hey, Stephanie, Jamie here. In terms of the timing, it is still happening. The dialogue to date is active and constructive. We are putting ourselves in the best possible spot to hold on to as much of the business as we can. If it were a service-related issue, I might feel differently, but if we look at our service KPIs with this customer, they are incredible, in my opinion. These are my words, Stephanie, not anybody else’s. We are incredible. So it is more about their concentration with us. They have grown with us. They have been a long-term partner with us. I think it is more about a risk management perspective on their behalf than anything else.
In terms of how quickly, it is May. It is going to take some time. The best that we can tell is there is not going to be any impact to 2026. It will not be until early 2027 that we see anything meaningful and material, if at all. We are not throwing in the towel, but we felt that it was the right thing to do to let you know that we are in these discussions as quickly as we possibly could.
Stephanie Moore: I worded it today, and then in the release, that part of the strategic alternative review process was impacted by this development with this customer. As we think about this, how much does this weigh on the strategic process? And then once there is some definitive decision—whether it is bad or if this customer does decide to walk away—what does that mean in terms of ongoing strategic processes once this is cleared up?
Jamie G. Pierson: I cannot answer that second question about what will happen after it is cleared up. In terms of the impact, anytime you have a large customer concentration like this, it is going to weigh either positively or negatively. In terms of its impact on the strategic alternatives process, the fact that you look at a customer that is approximately $250 million, plus or minus, in revenue is going to have an impact.
Stephanie Moore: Absolutely. I guess one last one for me—just on the core business itself, we wanted to get a sense of the ongoing pricing environment. There are certainly some green shoots and some positives in the freight environment. If you could talk a little bit about pricing across your business and your level of comfort given we are seeing what appears to be a bit of an uptick in the underlying freight market?
Shawn Stewart: Hi, Stephanie, it is Shawn. We feel really strong about pricing. We had the hiccups in a prior period, and I feel strongly that we are extremely solid in all of our revenue streams, whether it be in the global freight forwarding market, the ground LTL business, or in truckload. I am extremely confident in what we are doing both on a cost management basis and on a revenue generation basis. And as you can see, the consistency in our margins and profitability is proof that we learned a lot and have continued to enhance our sales from there going forward.
Jamie G. Pierson: If I can jump in. If you look at the spot rate over the last six months, it is up about 40% since late last year. Tender rejections are up almost 2x, so up 100%. Inventory-to-sales ratios continue to lean out. PMIs have been positive for four months in a row. I think the macro indicators are pointing in our direction. My experience in this space is it generally takes three to six months for it to really take effect, and we are coming into that third to sixth month now. We are not pricing for yield, and we are not pricing for volume. We are pricing for profitability.
Scott Group: Hey, thanks. Good afternoon, guys. Just to follow up on the business trends. Tonnage was down about 2% and yields ex-fuel down about 1%. What are you seeing as the quarter progresses so far in Q2? Are things accelerating? I know you said you feel good about price, but yield ex-fuel down a little bit—just a little more color would be great. Thank you. And then, Jamie, I want to clarify that you said the business that you are selling is $390 million of revenue. That is intermodal plus the two smaller Omni businesses, right? What are the two smaller Omni businesses? Any sense of profitability there? And then your intermodal business—are there containers here, or is it all asset-light?
What exactly is your intermodal business? I do not think it is like a J.B. Hunt intermodal business, but maybe I am wrong. And do you own trucks, or do you have owner-operators? Lastly, with this customer loss, I know the leverage thresholds as the year plays out start to get a little bit harder. Maybe this customer is more 2027, but any conversations with the lending group at all? How should we be thinking about this?
Shawn Stewart: Hey, Scott. I am going to let Jamie go because I know he wants to say he is not going to give you guidance, but great question. Let us see if he is nicer today.
Jamie G. Pierson: At the risk of not giving guidance, I would say over the last two weeks of the quarter and going into April, we have seen a fairly strong volume environment from our perspective. I do not want to preordain that the recovery is here. I stick by what I said about the spot, the tender, the inventory-to-sales ratio, and the PMI—there is a lag. But I would say the last couple of weeks of the quarter and going into April, we have seen a fairly strong volume environment. On the asset sales, that is exactly right—about $390 million of revenue across intermodal plus the two smaller legacy Omni businesses.
I am not going to disclose which those two are; there is confidentiality with buyers. You can see the $390 million, with roughly $230 million intermodal, so you are talking about approximately $160 million that is remaining for the two Omni businesses; it is not that much. On intermodal, it is mainly port and railhead drayage with what we call C/Y or container yard management—storage of containers on chassis—and mainly port and railhead drayage to final customers. We utilize owner-operators and we have owned and leased chassis. On leverage and the lending group, it is the right question. We ended the quarter with $40 million in cushion.
This is a small step down from where we ended the year, but we ended the quarter with the highest cash balance we have had in two years and over $400 million in liquidity. If you look at liquidity as a percent of total assets or liquidity as a percent of LTM total revenue, we are at the upper echelon of that spectrum of our publicly traded peers. So $40 million in cushion is a position I can live in, and $400 million-plus in liquidity is a very good place to be.
Harrison Bauer: Hey, thanks for taking my question. One quick follow-up on the Omni businesses that you are selling—about $160 million. Is there any crossover of the potential lost business of the $250 million? And then taking a step back—general competitive dynamics. With the announcement of Amazon Supply Chain Services this week, is there any relation to that and the loss of this business at all? Are there other areas of your business that are potentially exposed to what Amazon is trying to lay out and some aggressive pricing actions they may take?
Lastly, in the remaining Omni business and in Expedited LTL, now that you have a handful of capacity that you may need to backfill, how are you thinking about pricing for that going forward—the trade-off of volume and price?
Jamie G. Pierson: Not that I can think of, Harrison. If there is any crossover, it is certainly not material.
Shawn Stewart: I will take the Amazon question. There is no correlation between Amazon and our customer. The news of Amazon is fairly new, but we know them extremely well over the years. We are not surprised by their announcement, but we also need to let things evolve a bit and see where it goes. Ultimately, we are not particularly susceptible to this announcement by our volumes, etc. We respect what they are doing and respect Amazon a lot. We will keep an eye on it and not be naive, but we are not overly concerned today as we sit here about the impact to us from this announcement.
On pricing and backfilling, we are not going to get into any kind of desperate situation. We have a great organization, great solutions, and a fantastic product, and we will continue to price aggressively but with profitability in mind. We will get strategic where it makes sense in a given customer or a given origin-destination pair, but not at the detriment of the company and our overall margin. You have seen us pick up new logos and new business, and we will continue with that mantra. We are not going to overreact—we will stick to what we do well and move forward with replacing any potential loss in different areas as we see fit.
Christopher Glen Kuhn: Hey, guys. Good afternoon. Thanks for the question. I just wanted to clarify. So that customer loss is $250 million—that is the total amount of the customer's business with you, and you may or may not lose all of it. You are in negotiations for that right now. Is that the case? And if you do lose some of this, would that change the margin profile—within the Omni business—or is it relatively similar to where your EBITDA margins are? And is the negotiation on price? Because the service seems pretty solid there. What would be the issue aside from just diversification? Lastly, if you lost any of it, is there a way to backfill it with another customer?
Is there a plan for that?
Shawn Stewart: It is a total 2025 revenue of $250 million. We are giving you a holistic view of what the revenue is. That does not, by any means, state that we are losing $250 million. That was the total spend in 2025.
Jamie G. Pierson: It will be less than that.
Shawn Stewart: On the nature of the discussion, it is diversification. You have to think about what we do for some of our customers—we handle an incredible amount of their supply chain. It is wise from a risk management perspective for them not to put too much of a percentage in any one particular supplier’s hands. Throughout the years, we have grown with them and provided that level of service. In our opinion, it is simply a diversification play, and that is understandable.
Jamie G. Pierson: We do not talk about margins on any one particular customer. We will see how this shakes out here in the near future. The takeaway is threefold. One, the conversations have been both active and constructive. Two, we see no impact occurring in 2026 given the complexity of what we do for our customers. And three, the discussions have been fairly positive to date, and we will continue them.
Shawn Stewart: On backfilling, that is the plan every day, whether we are losing customers or seeing down-trading customers. Growth is the number one strategy of our combined organization. It has been a tough market, but at the same time, you have seen us be very sustainable over the last two years. We need this market to turn, but we are not changing anything because of this announcement. We may just run a little faster, with an already sprinting organization.
Jamie G. Pierson: The only thing I would add, Chris, is that, as best as I can tell going back and looking at history, we are a fairly high-beta performer. We do better in times of volatility and especially when capacity gets tight. We all do well when capacity gets tight; we seem to do better than our peers when that occurs. That is certainly part of the plan.
Christopher Glen Kuhn: You have talked about this in the past, but have you seen any truckload-to-LTL conversions in your business?
Shawn Stewart: We have heard “yes” because of rising truckload rates, and I do not want to get too far ahead of ourselves—back to Scott’s question, we are seeing volumes—so it could be, but we do not have enough information to say that definitively. As you have probably been watching in the true domestic intermodal market, you are seeing a lot of diversions from over-the-road onto the domestic intermodal. You are also seeing, slowly, an influx of the ocean containers coming back in. There is going to be a point of inflection where a lot of things are going to shift as the demand comes through.
It could be the early stages, but do not quote me on that; we are watching it. We have heard from certain customers that the transition is starting because of the overall price of truckload.
Operator: At this time, there are no further questions in queue. Let me turn it over to Mr. Stewart for any final remarks.
Shawn Stewart: Thank you so much for your time, attention, and interest in our organization. In closing, in recent quarters, we have navigated a challenging environment with discipline and focus while taking actions to strengthen our company and our overall business. We are extremely confident in the foundation we are building and the steps we are taking to improve our performance. We really appreciate your time today. As usual, if you have any follow-up questions, please reach out to Tony directly. Thank you.
Operator: This concludes Forward Air Corporation's first quarter 2026 earnings conference call. Please disconnect your line at this time and have a wonderful evening.
