Rusty Rush
Analyst · Credit Suisse
Visibility, just like I said, I know that, yes, visibility, to me, is going to be, as I said, I got to get to November. I'll be honest, if you wanted a truck right now, I could probably move some stuff around and get it for you before we pop off some fireworks on New Year's, okay, or open some champagne bottles. So I could probably figure out a way to get it to you. Now it's mostly full, but don't think you couldn't get a truck because you could, okay? Don't buy that. So I'd tell you, is it a little bit softer than what we thought it would be? Yes, probably so, but it's still pretty solid, but I can still work in the fourth quarter and do some stuff, as I said. And what I will, like I said, fourth quarter might be a little weaker. Well, I could admit it in another way, they would say the same thing to me, which doesn't mean it's going to be bad. This means we're back to more normalized times, finishing work and filling out, finishing out the year. That's why I said there might be, I said I could build you a truck, okay? That doesn't mean that there's nothing in the quarter. That just means there's a little opportunity still out there, which is a whole lot different than 6 months ago when everybody told you, you couldn't get anything until 2020, right? Okay. And that's just the nature of the beast. And I mean it hasn't, in over-the-road stuff, I don't have to, I'm sure everybody knows where the freight market is. Yes, freight tonnage is up, got it. 4% or something for the year before or whatever, but it's not, it's in a different price, okay? Spot markers we know have been off most of the year. Contracts, I mean, read them and I read them all, all week long. Everybody's putting out new contracts and people are coming in flat to down after a huge, after the shippers got hammered in 2018. Therefore, I will give them a little piece back. That's just the way it works. The push and the pull. The consumer is doing a great job of keeping the economy going. Right now, our GDP is still solid. I don't know, I don't think we would love the rates we have run. So you can get, there's things out there. You normally don't get 3 years in a row like this. I told somebody the other day, I was, go back and see, '14 and '15, U.S. retail was like 2, it was like 485 or something, something like that between the 2 years, okay? Then we got '16 and '17 back to 200, 190-something. And then we got '18 and '19. Well, '18 and '19 right now, we'll probably get to 535. So if you do that and take a 20% out like you did before, it gets you to about 420,000 over a 2-year period looking at 2-year cycles. And that's probably we're somewhere around that number is where I'm going to like because you don't see 3 years strung together like what we got in '18 and '19. You just normally, unless you go back and find it. I can't. It's hard to find in history as you run 3 years like that. So you're going to have a little softness, doesn't mean it's bad. Most people would tell you that 200,000 U.S. retail is a norm, right? Okay. So let's hope that's what we are. I don't want to go lower than that. It's an election year, too. You're going to have, I think people will be a little indecisive regardless of what you know. And obviously, you can't get anything through Washington to do it. We can't get much done right now. We can't even talk. So there's just things out there to me that they're going to make it around that 200 number, okay?