Doug Col
Analyst · Wolfe Research.
You know, we go back and look at some examples. So, I mean, you know, I guess, it just -- from a very high level, it's going to depend on really what where there's economy goes and what volumes look like. But I mean, we've got examples in the past improving margins in the down year. I mean, if we go back to couple of years like 2014 into ‘15, things were down in ‘15, kind of, energy rolled over, our shipments and revenue were both down about 4% that year. Fuel expense was down a lot, so fuel surcharge revenue would have been down. But that year we actually improved our margins by 70 bps. And we look at the following year and it was still pretty sluggish environment. Fuel was down again; I think our revenue was flattish o down tonnage and that year the OR went backwards a little bit. So there's a lot of moving pieces out there, but I think if shipments are going to be down like they are kind of in January, if we had to run that through the full-year, we really got to hang on to this rate increases at this GRI level. And then I think we could hold on to margins. I think if volumes are going to run negative all year in this low to mid-single-digit range, I think it would be hard to improve margins. But again, like Fritz mentioned in his opening comments, we've got 18 terminal opened in the past couple of years. I mean, they were certainly -- although we're pleased with how they're doing and as they mature, they do better every quarter, but those were a drag essentially on the overall OR we reported. So again, while you're building out a network like this, which is something we're going to have to manage through. But I think be reasonable, think ORs within 100 basis points plus or minus. So what we just exited would be reasonable.