Ryder System, Inc.
Ryder System, Inc.
3600 Northwest 82nd Avenue
Miami, Florida 33166
U.S.A.
(305) 593-3726
Public Company
Incorporated: 1955
Employees: 40,362
Sales: $5.16 billion
Stock Exchanges: New York Pacific Midwest
Ryder System, Inc. is a major transportation services provider with annual revenues in excess of $5 billion. Ryder operates the world’s largest full-service truck leasing and short-term rental company; North America’s largest new-automobile transport company; the largest independent jet-aircraft engine maintenance and overhaul company; a leading aircraft leasing and parts distribution company; and a leading provider of mass transit and school bus services throughout the United States. Ryder is the market leader in most of its operating areas.
In 1932 James A. Ryder gave up his job as a straw boss in a construction firm, and bought a Model A pickup truck with a down payment of $125. Ryder hauled trash from Miami beaches and delivered construction materials to Palm Beach. In 1934 he entered the truck-leasing business through a contract with a local beer distributor. At the age of 21, Ryder was the owner of the first truck-leasing firm in the United States, Ryder Truck Rental System, Inc.
In 1939 Ryder took on a partner, Roy N. Reedy, and the two men set out to build a trucking empire. Truck leasing was novel, and the company broke new ground. Highway trucking began to rival rail as a means of overland shipping, based partly on the vast network of better highways constructed during the 1930s. World War II boosted demand for trucking, as the war economy stretched the existing transportation system to capacity, and Ryder’s trucking and leasing operations grew.
The postwar era brought continued growth to the trucking industry as the interstate highway program further improved the efficiency of trucking. By 1952 Ryder was bringing in $3 million annually by renting 1,300 trucks. In the summer of that year news came that the Southeast’s largest, most profitable trucking outfit, the Great Southern Trucking Company, was up for sale. Ryder was familiar with Great Southern; his company leased its pickup and delivery trucks. Founded in 1933 by L.A. Raulerson, it had grown into the Southeast’s largest freight carrier with some routes as long as 1,100 miles. Ryder raised the $2 million asking price by December. His company’s revenues were then quadruple what they had been, and Ryder was a huge motor carrier, as well as a major truck-leasing concern.
The Great Southern acquisition put Ryder on the map. Ryder System, Inc., was created in 1955 to absorb Ryder Truck Rental and Great Southern, and the new company offered shares to the public. Shortly thereafter Ryder System bought more than 25 companies in five years. The larger companies included Baker Truck Rental, Inc., of Denver, Colorado; Barrett Truck Leasing Co. of Detroit; T.S.C. Motor Freight Lines, Inc.; the truck leasing business of Columbia Terminals Co.; Dixie Drive-It-Yourself System, of Alabama; the truck leasing business of Barrett Garages, Inc., of San Francisco; Morrison International Corporation; and International Railway Car Leasing Corporation.
This growth resulted in certain problems. The company had neglected proper financial controls. By 1960 Ryder System was forced to write off $2 million in bad debt, and profits dipped from $2.7 million in 1959 to about $1 million in 1960. A central accounting system was implemented to remedy the problems, and steady growth returned in the early 1960s.
In 1965 Ryder System sold the motor carrier division to International Utilities (IU), a diversified holding company. The trucking division grew under IU’s direction until its spinoff in 1982, keeping the Ryder name. Ryder System focused on the fast-growing truck-leasing business, and despite common misperceptions had not operated as a freight carrier since 1965.
The late 1960s saw the development of new services in truck leasing and rental. In 1967 Ryder began offering one-way truck rental service. This service had been introduced and popularized by the U-Haul Company several years earlier. Ryder started with 1,000 trucks and expanded the one-way fleet to 7,630 the first year. Competition in this field grew rapidly; Hertz Corporation and E-Z Haul, division of National Car Rental System, Inc., entered the field at the same time. As a result, the one-way market was oversupplied, and Ryder’s oneway unit got off to a slow start. Ryder was intent on capturing this market, however. In 1968 the company offered to buy U-Haul International Co., a subsidiary of Americo, Inc., but no deal was ever worked out. Ryder expanded its one-way dealership network through an agreement with Budget Rent-A-Car. While many competitors dropped out in the early 1970s, Ryder did not, selling surplus vehicles when necessary, and eventually surpassed U-Haul’s one-way rental in 1987.
In 1968 Ryder entered the new-automotive carriage business when it acquired M & G Convoy, Inc., and expanded it with the purchase of Complete Auto Transit, Inc., in January 1970. Ryder’s automotive carriage services were used by General Motors Corporation and Chrysler Corporation for the transport of new automobiles to dealerships. Also around this time, Ryder entered the dedicated contract carriage business, in which it provides transportation and distribution services customized for its clients.
In the late 1960s Ryder System diversified into services unrelated to transport leasing. In late 1969 Ryder made a foray into the growing temporary help industry, initially placing office and industrial personnel, later technical help. Ryder also acquired several trade schools in 1969 and 1970, offering courses in auto mechanics, truck driving, and a number of other technical fields. In 1970 Ryder purchased Mobile World Inc., a distributor of mobile homes and a mobile-home-park operator and franchiser. Also in 1970 an insurance firm, Southern Underwriters, Inc., was acquired, and later that year, a joint venture, Ryd-Air Inc., was formed to provide pickup and delivery service for 27 airlines in New York.
Ryder’s main line—full service truck leasing—remained strong in the early 1970s, but the company’s management was spread thin over a growing number of new service fields. In 1973 the oil crisis enticed Ryder to purchase Toro Petroleum Corporation of Louisiana to insure a steady fuel supply for its trucks, but the acquisition proved a somewhat rash move. The value of Toro’s oil reserves dropped as oil prices fell a few months after the purchase. Ryder had bought high and ended up with a $7 million operating loss.
Other problems caused a 13C per share adjustment after the company’s 1973 audit. They were adjustments in the calculation of receivables from the education unit, tax assessments on the mobile home subsidiary, and reserve assessments on the insurance subsidiary. The truck leasing and rental businesses continued to borrow in order to finance an expanded fleet. Ryder’s debts were more than $400 million, four times shareholders’ equity. Moody’s Investors Service downgraded Ryder’s rating on commercial paper in late 1974. Ryder System lost $20 million, and the company’s investors were deeply concerned. The board of directors began to question James Ryder’s ability to guide the future of the growing concern.
The recession of 1973-1974 had taken a heavy toll on Ryder’s vast contract carriage and automotive carriage operations, which were heavily dependent upon the welfare of the automotive industry. Although Ryder’s core business of truck leasing and rental was holding its own despite the hard times, company borrowing had gotten out of control. Stockholders displeased with the company’s troublesome acquisitions from the early 1970s demanded a refocusing of attention to Ryder’s basic businesses. In 1975 James Ryder, under pressure from the boardroom and his bankers, announced that he was seeking a “more professional manager” to run the still growing company. In the summer of 1975, after disposing of unprofitable subsidiaries like Toro Petroleum; Miller Trailers, Inc.; and the major portion of the technical schools, James Ryder stepped down as head of the company he had founded.
Ryder’s successor was Leslie O. Barnes, former head of Allegheny Airlines. Barnes inherited a company that was tattered after weathering a great storm, and the 59-year-old CEO was intent on whipping Ryder System back into shape. The debt-to-equity ratio was quickly pared from four-to-one to three-to-one. Ryder Liftlease Inc., a small but troublesome subsidiary was sold, as well as the remainder of the technical schools. Refocused on its primary businesses, Ryder rebounded. In 1977 the company acquired a major automobile carrier, Janesville Auto Transport Company, for $10 million in common stock. Ryder’s automotive carriage operations were profitable as a result of the industry’s rebound and tighter financial controls. During the 1979 downturn in the automotive markets, Ryder’s automotive contract carriage unit, representing 16% of Ryder System’s turnover, made a profit.
In the late 1970s Ryder continued to grow internally and through acquisitions in the full-service truck-leasing business, the company continued to lead the market, which continued to expand. According to Barnes, only 38% of the U.S. private truck fleets were wholly owned by 1980, down from 60% in 1970. The vast majority of fleets were at least partially leased. Encouraged by the basic business’s performance during the latter half of the 1970s, Ryder System once again began to seek acquisitions in new areas. Barnes, however, unlike James Ryder, was inclined to test out new ventures on a small scale before fully committing to them. In 1978 a parcel delivery service, Jack Rabbit Express, was acquired. A small property and casualty reinsurance company, Federal Assurance Co., was added to existing insurance operations.
By the late 1970s the one-way rental market was well-established. Ryder trailed U-Haul in this field, and in 1978, a third major competitor, Jartran Inc., joined the field. Jartran was an acronym for James A. Ryder Transportation. James Ryder gave up a $100,000 annual stipend to get out of his noncompetition agreement with Ryder System. The upstart company established by Ryder System’s founder and former head made a smashing entry into the field, building a 30,000 vehicle fleet in less than 18 months. James Ryder’s new company became a thorn in the side of his former company. The feisty Ryder appeared in Jartran ads as “the man who invented truck rental,” and his new vehicles resembled Ryder System’s enough to spark a lawsuit.
Nevertheless, Jartran had trouble making a profit. Once again, it appeared that James Ryder had grown too big too fast. A downturn in the economy in 1979 killed the short-term rental market. Jartran cumulatively lost $30 million in 1979 and 1980. In July 1981 Jartran dumped its commercial leasing division, and the company was foundering.
Ryder System, on the other hand, grew under the balanced leadership of Barnes and his new executive vice president, M. Anthony Burns. In the early 1980s, new tax laws encouraged diversification into new areas. Ryder began shopping for a financial services company in order to take full advantage of available tax credits. Insurance was the obvious choice because of Ryder’s existing insurance business. In September 1981 Ryder System announced its desire to purchase the third largest insurance broker in the United States, Frank B. Hall and Co. Hall, however, was not interested in being acquired, and maneuvered to avert a takeover. In October 1981 Hall announced its intentions to purchase Jartran, Ryder System’s troubled competitor, opening up potential antitrust obstacles for a takeover. Hall also filed a number of suits against Ryder.
Ryder System’s pursuit of Hall continued through 1982. By August Ryder System had boosted its holdings in Hall to 9.5%. Jartran was on its way to bankruptcy, but Hall had bought enough time to discourage Ryder System from acquiring any more Hall stock. In 1983 Ryder sold its interest in the insurance broker for $33 million.
In 1982 a severe recession shook the North American economy. Ryder System was well prepared with a $70 million cash surplus, and a very low debt-to-equity ratio. While the majority of transportation companies were devastated, Ryder System’s profits increased. Burns moved up to CEO, and soon proclaimed Ryder’s intention to “be more forward-thinking, more risk-taking.” By slashing prices in half on one-way rentals, Ryder usurped a huge chunk of the market. By acquiring two new strategically located automobile carriage firms, Ryder improved its efficiency by reducing the number of trailers sent back empty.
Ryder System’s long-standing desire to enter financial services was satisfied in 1983 when the company became an 80% partner in a pension fund specialist, Forstmann, Leff, Kim-berly. The joint venture set up long-term trusts for pension fund investors. Ryder also decided to revise its in-house business information systems and offer them for sale to other transportation companies, and contemplated a computer-services company acquisition to assist.
In its core transportation businesses, Ryder continued to make strides. Deregulation had been the industry trend since 1980. In 1983 new rules concerning single-source leasing allowed private fleet operators to get drivers through Ryder as a part of the leasing agreement. Private shippers were also allowed to solicit outside freight business, effectively allowing direct competition with independent truckers. Ryder set up a new division to handle single-source leasing, and bought three new freight packaging companies to book return loads for private shippers leasing from Ryder. In 1984, Ryder sold its Truckstops Corporation of America unit for $85 million to free managerial resources for more profitable businesses.
In the early 1980s Ryder System began to delve into another expanding transportation field—aviation leasing. In 1983 the Aviation Sales Co. Inc. and its subsidiary General Hydraulics Corporation, of Florida, an aircraft leasing and spare parts firm was acquired. In 1985 Ryder bought Aviall, Inc., a turbine engine repair and overhaul firm located in Dallas. Aviall was also a parts distributor. A number of smaller leasing and repair companies were acquired. By late 1986 aviation services made up about one-fifth of Ryder System’s revenues, and in 1987 the division branched out overseas with the purchase of Caledonian Airmotive, Ltd. The Scottish subsidiary serviced the big engines on British Caledonian Airways’ DC-10s and 747s, among others. Caledonian Airmotive complemented Aviall’s operation both geographically and in services offered.
By 1988 just six years after entering the field, Ryder System was the world’s largest jet engine overhaul and rebuilding company, the largest aviation parts distributor, and one of the largest aircraft and jet-engine leasing companies. Ryder’s aviation division counted 300 commercial airlines among its clients, and dozens of private operators. In 1988 revenues from aviation neared $1 billion.
Ryder’s truck leasing continued to surge ahead. In 1986 a major federal tax law revision made it desirable for private fleet operators to lease their fleets rather than buy. Ryder had been determinedly expanding its truck fleet; between 1984 and 1988 it nearly doubled. More and more fleet operators turned over the hassles of fleet purchase, maintenance, and insurance to Ryder, allowing them to concentrate on manufacture and sale of their products.
In one-way rental, Ryder excelled. The longtime leader in the field—U-Haul—was distracted as family members battled amongst themselves for control of the business. U-Haul started renting all kinds of equipment, from rototillers to hoists, and its truck fleet quietly grew old. In 1987 the average age of a U-Haul truck was ten years. Ryder’s, on the other hand, averaged two years, and had all kinds of features not found at U-Haul, like power steering, air-conditioning, AM-FM radios, fuel efficient engines, and radial tires. Ryder’s market share was 45%, equal to U-Haul’s in 1987, and surging forward.
Between 1983 and 1987 Ryder System spent $1.1 billion on 65 acquisitions. This time the company’s rapid expansion was readily digested. In 1985 Ryder entered the school-bus leasing business, and quickly grew to be the second-largest private student-transport company in the United States. Ryder also entered into public transportation system consulting and leasing at about the same time. Dedicated contract carriage received greater attention in the late 1980s. Ryder provided trucks, drivers, and management system design to speciality freight companies like Emery Air Freight, retailers like Montgomery Ward, Sears, and J.C. Penney, and newspaper publishers like Dow Jones and the Miami Herald.
In 1989 Ryder’s growth flattened out, but its potential in its existing areas of operation remained strong. Late in the year the company sold its insurance operations, and, anticipating the coming recession, trimmed its fleet to better match demand. Ryder had proven its ability to manage well in tough times during the 1982 recession. As the automotive carriage and commercial truck operations were in the downside of the cycle, Ryder focused on improving market share while awaiting a general economic recovery. Its success was demonstrated in 1990 when Ryder moved 39% of the automobiles shipped in the United States and Canada.
As Ryder System entered the 1990s, its full-service truck leasing, contract carriage, jet turbine aircraft overhaul and maintenance, and new aviation parts-distribution were performing well; and other units would eventually rebound alongside the manufacturing economy. Ryder had grown from a one-truck outfit to a massive concern leasing or renting more than 130,000 trucks and nearly 50 jet airplanes. It remained the leader in most of its business segments, and was well-positioned to take advantage of further sophistication of the transportation industry in the future.
Principal Subsidiaries
Ryder Truck Rental, Inc.; Ryder Truck Rental Canada Ltd.; Ryder Truck Rental, Ltd. (U.K.); Ryder Transport Services, GmbH (Germany); Ryder Distribution Resources, Inc.; Ryder Driver Leasing, Inc.; Ryder Student Transportation Services, Inc.; ATE Management and Service Company, Inc.; Ryder Temperature Controlled Carriage, Inc.; A.T.G. Automotive Transport Group Ltd. (Canada); Blazer Truck Lines, Inc.; Commercial Carriers, Inc.; Complete Auto Transit Inc.; Convoy Company; Delavan Industries, Inc.; Fleet Carrier Corporation; Janesville Auto Transport Co.; M&G Convoy Inc.; Aviall, Inc.; Caledonian Airmotive Ltd. (U.K.); Aviation Sales Company, Inc.; General Hydraulics Corporation; Inventory Locator Services, Inc.
Further Reading
Ryder, James A., “Shooting for the Big Time—and Making It,” Nation’s Business, January 1970; Wax, Alan, “Institutions Grill Ryder over Earnings Change,” The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, April 8, 1974; “From Wings To Wheels,” Forbes, September 18, 1978; Engardio, Pete, “Tony Burns Has Ryder’s Rivals Eating Dust,” Business Week, April 6, 1987; Cook, James, “Repetition Compulsion,” Forbes, March 21, 1988.
—Thomas M. Tucker
Ryder System, Inc.
Ryder System, Inc.
3600 Northwest 82nd Avenue
Miami, Florida 33166
U.S.A.
(305) 500-3726
Fax: (305) 500-4129
Web site: http://www.ryder.com
Public Company
Incorporated: 1934 as Ryder Truck Rental System, Inc.
Employees: 42,000
Sales: $4.89 billion (1997)
Stock Exchanges: New York Chicago Pacific Berlin
Ticker Symbol: R
SICs: 7510 Automotive Rentals, No Drivers
The largest provider of transportation services in the world, Ryder System, Inc. designs and manages logistics and transportation solutions, focusing on three service areas: global logistics, truck leasing, and public transportation services. After restructuring in the mid-1990s, Ryder stood poised as a market leader in several business areas. The company provided full-service commercial leasing and short-term rental of trucks, tractors, and trailers to clients such as Domino’s Pizza, Home Depot, and Sprint. It managed inbound and outbound logistics for major manufacturers, retailers, and other businesses. Also, the company transported students by school buses in 21 states and managed more than 80 public transit systems. During the late 1990s, Ryder maintained operations in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Argentina, Brazil, Germany, The Netherlands, and Poland. Its stock was a component of the Dow Jones Transportation Average and the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index.
1930s Origins of an Industry Pioneer
In 1932 James A. Ryder gave up his job as a straw boss in a construction firm and bought a Model A pickup truck with a down payment of $125. Ryder hauled trash from Miami beaches and delivered construction materials to Palm Beach. In 1934 he entered the truck-leasing business through a contract with a local beer distributor. At the age of 21, Ryder was the owner of the first truck-leasing firm in the United States, Ryder Truck Rental System, Inc.
In 1939 Ryder took on a partner, Roy N. Reedy, and the two men set out to build a trucking empire. Truck leasing was novel, and the company broke new ground. Highway trucking began to rival rail as a means of overland shipping, based partly on the vast network of better highways constructed during the 1930s. World War II boosted demand for trucking as the war economy stretched the existing transportation system to capacity, and Ryder’s trucking and leasing operations grew.
The postwar era brought continued growth to the trucking industry as the interstate highway program further improved the efficiency of trucking. By 1952 Ryder was bringing in $3 million annually by renting 1,300 trucks. In the summer of that year news came that the Southeast’s largest, most profitable trucking outfit, the Great Southern Trucking Company, was up for sale. Ryder was familiar with Great Southern; his company leased its pickup and delivery trucks. Founded in 1933 by L. A. Raulerson, it had grown into the Southeast’s largest freight carrier with some routes as long as 1,100 miles. Ryder raised the $2 million asking price by December 1952. His company’s revenues were then quadruple what they had been, and Ryder was a huge motor carrier, as well as a major truck-leasing concern.
The Great Southern acquisition put Ryder on the map. Ryder System, Inc. was created in 1955 to absorb Ryder Truck Rental and Great Southern, and the new company offered shares to the public. Shortly thereafter Ryder System bought more than 25 companies in five years. The larger companies included Baker Truck Rental, Inc., of Denver, Colorado; Barrett Truck Leasing Co., of Detroit; T.S.C. Motor Freight Lines, Inc.; the truck leasing business of Columbia Terminals Co.; Dixie Drive-It-Yourself System, of Alabama; the truck leasing business of Barrett Garages, Inc., of San Francisco; Morrison International Corporation; and International Railway Car Leasing Corporation.
This growth resulted in certain problems, however, since the company had neglected proper financial controls. By 1960 Ryder System was forced to write off $2 million in bad debt, and profits dipped from $2.7 million in 1959 to about $1 million in 1960. A central accounting system was implemented to remedy the problems, and steady growth returned in the early 1960s.
In 1965 Ryder System sold its motor carrier division to International Utilities (IU), a diversified holding company. The trucking division grew under lU’s direction until its spinoff in 1982, keeping the Ryder name. Ryder System focused on the fast-growing truck-leasing business and, despite common misconceptions, had not operated as a freight carrier since 1965.
The late 1960s saw the development of new services in truck leasing and rental. In 1967 Ryder began offering one-way truck rental service. This service had been introduced and popularized by the U-Haul Company several years earlier. Ryder started with 1,000 trucks and expanded the one-way fleet to 7,630 the first year. Competition in this field grew rapidly; Hertz Corporation and E-Z Haul, a division of National Car Rental System, Inc., entered the field at the same time. As a result, the one-way market was oversupplied, and Ryder’s one-way unit got off to a slow start. Ryder was intent on capturing this market, however. In 1968 the company offered to buy U-Haul International Co., a subsidiary of Americo, Inc., but no deal was ever worked out. Ryder expanded its one-way dealership network through an agreement with Budget Rent-A-Car. While many competitors dropped out in the early 1970s, Ryder did not, selling surplus vehicles when necessary, and eventually surpassed U-Haul’s one-way rental in 1987.
In 1968 Ryder entered the new-automotive carriage business when it acquired M & G Convoy, Inc., and expanded it with the purchase of Complete Auto Transit, Inc., in January 1970. Ryder’s automotive carriage services were used by General Motors Corporation and Chrysler Corporation for the transport of new automobiles to dealerships. Also around this time, Ryder entered the dedicated contract carriage business, in which it provided transportation and distribution services customized for its clients.
Late 1960s Diversification Breeds Problems
In the late 1960s Ryder System also diversified into services unrelated to transport leasing. In late 1969 Ryder made a foray into the growing temporary help industry, initially placing office and industrial personnel, and later placing technical help. Ryder also acquired several trade schools in 1969 and 1970, offering courses in auto mechanics, truck driving, and a number of other technical fields. In 1970 Ryder purchased Mobile World Inc., a distributor of mobile homes and a mobile-home-park operator and franchiser. Also that year an insurance firm, Southern Underwriters, Inc., was acquired and a joint venture, Ryd-Air Inc., was formed to provide pickup and delivery service for 27 airlines in New York.
Although Ryder’s main line—full service truck leasing—remained strong in the early 1970s, the company’s management was spread thin over a growing number of new service fields. The oil crisis of 1973 prompted Ryder to purchase Toro Petroleum Corporation of Louisiana to ensure a steady fuel supply for its trucks, but the acquisition proved rash. The value of Toro’s oil reserves dropped as oil prices fell a few months after the purchase. Ryder had bought high and ended up with a $7 million operating loss.
Other problems—adjustments in the calculation of receivables from the education unit, tax assessments on the mobile home subsidiary, and reserve assessments on the insurance subsidiary—resulted in a 13 cents per share adjustment to Ryder stock following the company’s 1973 audit. The truck leasing and rental businesses continued to borrow in order to finance an expanded fleet. Ryder’s debts were more than $400 million, four times shareholders’ equity. Thus, Moody’s Investors Service downgraded Ryder’s rating on commercial paper in late 1974. Ryder System lost $20 million, and the company’s investors were deeply concerned. The board of directors began to question James Ryder’s ability to guide the future of the growing concern.
The recession of 1973-74 had taken a heavy toll on Ryder’s vast contract carriage and automotive carriage operations, which were heavily dependent upon the welfare of the automotive industry. Although Ryder’s core business of truck leasing and rental was holding its own despite the hard times, company borrowing had gotten out of control. Stockholders, displeased with the company’s troublesome acquisitions from the early 1970s, demanded a refocusing of attention back on Ryder’s basic businesses. In 1975 James Ryder, under pressure from the boardroom and his bankers, announced that he was seeking a “more professional manager” to run the still growing company. In the summer of 1975, after disposing of such unprofitable subsidiaries as Toro Petroleum and Miller Trailers, Inc., as well as the major portion of the technical schools, James Ryder stepped down as head of the company he had founded.
Company Perspectives
Ryder is the world’s largest provider of integrated logistics and transportation solutions. As businesses exhaust cost-cutting measures in the traditional areas of price and quality, the ability to reduce costs in the delivery of products, warehousing and other transportation and logistics areas is becoming increasingly important. Ryder’s transportation solutions are custom-designed to help businesses improve customer service, reduce inventory and speed products to market.
Ryder’s successor was Leslie O. Barnes, former head of Allegheny Airlines. Barnes inherited a company that was tattered after weathering a great storm, and the 59-year-old CEO was intent on whipping Ryder System back into shape. The debt-to-equity ratio was quickly pared from four-to-one to three-to-one. Ryder Liftlease Inc., a small but troublesome subsidiary, was sold, as were the remainder of the technical schools. Refocused on its primary businesses, Ryder rebounded. In 1977 the company acquired a major automobile carrier, Janesville Auto Transport Company, for $10 million in common stock. Ryder’s automotive carriage operations were profitable as a result of the industry’s rebound and tighter financial controls. During the 1979 downturn in the automotive markets, Ryder’s automotive contract carriage unit, representing 16 percent of Ryder System’s turnover, made a profit.
In the late 1970s Ryder continued to grow internally and through acquisitions in the full-service truck-leasing business, in which the company continued to lead the continually expanding market. According to Barnes, only 38 percent of the U.S. private truck fleets were wholly owned by 1980, down from 60 percent in 1970. The vast majority of fleets were at least partially leased. Encouraged by the basic business’s performance during the latter half of the 1970s, Ryder System once again began to seek acquisitions in new areas. Barnes, however, unlike James Ryder, was inclined to test out new ventures on a small scale before fully committing to them. In 1978 a parcel delivery service, Jack Rabbit Express, was acquired. Moreover, a small property and casualty reinsurance company, Federal Assurance Co., was added to existing insurance operations.
By the late 1970s the one-way rental market was well-established. Ryder trailed U-Haul in this field, and in 1978, a third major competitor, Jartran Inc., joined the field. Jartran was an acronym for James A. Ryder Transportation. Giving up a $100,000 annual stipend to get out of his noncompetition agreement with Ryder System, James Ryder founded Jartran, which made a smashing entry into the field, building a 30,000 vehicle fleet in less than 18 months. James Ryder’s new company became a thorn in the side of his former company. The feisty Ryder appeared in Jartran ads as “the man who invented truck rental,” and his new vehicles resembled Ryder System’s enough to spark a lawsuit.
Nevertheless, Jartran had trouble making a profit. Once again, it appeared that James Ryder had grown the company too big too fast. As a downturn in the economy in 1979 killed the short-term rental market, Jartran cumulatively lost $30 million in 1979 and 1980. By July 1981 Jartran had dumped its commercial leasing division, and the company was foundering.
Ryder System, on the other hand, grew under the balanced leadership of Barnes and his new executive vice-president, M. Anthony Burns. In the early 1980s, new tax laws encouraged diversification into new areas. Ryder began shopping for a financial services company in order to take full advantage of available tax credits. Insurance was the obvious choice because of Ryder’s existing insurance business. In September 1981 Ryder System announced its desire to purchase the third largest insurance broker in the United States, Frank B. Hall and Co. Hall, however, was not interested in being acquired and maneuvered to avert a takeover. In October 1981 Hall announced its intentions to purchase Jartran, Ryder System’s troubled competitor, opening up potential antitrust obstacles for a takeover. Hall also filed a number of suits against Ryder.
Ryder System’s pursuit of Hall continued through 1982, and by August of that year Ryder System had boosted its holdings in Hall to 9.5 percent. Jartran was on its way to bankruptcy, but Hall had bought enough time to discourage Ryder System from acquiring any more Hall stock. In 1983 Ryder sold its interest in the insurance broker for $33 million.
In 1982 a severe recession shook the North American economy. Ryder System was well-prepared, however, with a $70 million cash surplus and a very low debt-to-equity ratio. While the majority of transportation companies were devastated, Ryder System’s profits increased. Burns moved up to CEO, and soon proclaimed Ryder’s intention to “be more forward-thinking, more risk-taking.” By slashing prices in half on one-way rentals, Ryder usurped a huge chunk of the market. By acquiring two new strategically located automobile carriage firms, Ryder improved its efficiency, reducing the number of trailers sent back empty.
1980s Acquisitions
Ryder System’s longstanding desire to enter financial services was satisfied in 1983 when the company became an 80 percent partner in a pension fund specialist, Forstmann, Leff, Kimberly. The joint venture set up long term trusts for pension fund investors. Ryder also decided to revise its in-house business information systems and offer them for sale to other transportation companies.
In its core transportation businesses, Ryder continued to make strides. Deregulation had been the industry trend since 1980. In 1983 new rules concerning single-source leasing allowed private fleet operators to secure drivers through Ryder as a part of the leasing agreement. Private shippers were also allowed to solicit outside freight business, effectively allowing direct competition with independent truckers. Ryder set up a new division to handle single-source leasing and bought three new freight packaging companies to book return loads for private shippers leasing from Ryder. In 1984, Ryder sold its Truckstops Corporation of America unit for $85 million to free managerial resources for more profitable businesses.
In the early 1980s Ryder System began to delve into another expanding transportation field—aviation leasing. In 1983 the Aviation Sales Co. Inc. and its subsidiary General Hydraulics Corporation, of Florida, an aircraft leasing firm and spare parts firm, respectively, were acquired. In 1985 Ryder bought Aviall, Inc., a turbine engine repair and overhaul firm located in Dallas. Aviall was also a parts distributor. A number of smaller leasing and repair companies were acquired. By late 1986 aviation services made up about one-fifth of Ryder System’s revenues, and in 1987 the division branched out overseas with the purchase of Caledonian Airmotive, Ltd. The Scottish subsidiary serviced the big engines on British Caledonian Airways’ DC-10s and 747s, among others. Caledonian Airmotive complemented Aviall’s operation both geographically and in services offered.
By 1988 just six years after entering the field, Ryder System was the world’s largest jet engine overhaul and rebuilding company, the largest aviation parts distributor, and one of the largest aircraft and jet-engine leasing companies. Ryder’s aviation division counted 300 commercial airlines among its clients, as well as dozens of private operators. In 1988 revenues from aviation neared $1 billion.
Ryder’s truck leasing continued to surge ahead. In 1986 a major federal tax law revision made it desirable for private fleet operators to lease their fleets rather than buy. Ryder had been determinedly expanding its truck fleet; between 1984 and 1988 it nearly doubled its fleet. More and more fleet operators turned over the hassles of fleet purchase, maintenance, and insurance to Ryder, allowing them to concentrate on manufacture and sale of their products.
In one-way rental, Ryder excelled. The longtime leader in the field—U-Haul—was distracted as family members battled amongst themselves for control of the business. U-Haul started renting all kinds of equipment, from rototillers to hoists, and its truck fleet quietly grew old. In 1987 the average age of a U-Haul truck was ten years. Ryder’s, on the other hand, averaged two years, and boasted all sorts of features not found at U-Haul, such as power steering, air-conditioning, AM-FM radios, fuel efficient engines, and radial tires. Ryder’s market share was 45 percent, equal to U-Haul’s in 1987, and surging forward.
Between 1983 and 1987 Ryder System spent $1.1 billion on 65 acquisitions. This time the company’s rapid expansion was readily digested. In 1985 Ryder entered the school-bus leasing business and quickly grew to be the second-largest private student transport company in the United States. Ryder also entered into public transportation system consulting and leasing at about the same time. Dedicated contract carriage received greater attention in the late 1980s. Ryder provided trucks, drivers, and management system design to such specialty freight companies as Emery Air Freight, such retailers as Montgomery Ward, Sears, and J.C. Penney, and such newspaper publishers as Dow Jones and the Miami Herald.
In 1989 Ryder’s growth flattened out, but its potential in its existing areas of operation remained strong. Late in the year the company sold its insurance operations, and, anticipating the coming recession, trimmed its fleet to better match demand. Ryder had proven its ability to manage well in tough times during the 1982 recession. As the automotive carriage and commercial truck operations were in the downside of the cycle, Ryder focused on improving market share while awaiting a general economic recovery. Its success was demonstrated in 1990 when Ryder moved 39 percent of the automobiles shipped in the United States and Canada.
Burns and the 1990s
As Ryder System entered the 1990s, its full-service truck leasing, contract carriage, jet turbine aircraft overhaul and maintenance, and new aviation parts-distribution units were performing well; other units would eventually rebound alongside the manufacturing economy. As the 1990s, progressed, however, it became clear to company leader Burns that fundamental changes were needed to properly position the company for long-term growth and profitability. Burns—who had completed his ascent of the company’s management ranks to preside as president, chief executive officer, and chairman—wanted to lessen the company’s interests and sharpen its focus, a desire reminiscent of Ryder’s mid-1970s restructuring. His intent was to adapt to changing market conditions before the trends of the future passed Ryder by. His vision was forward-looking, a perspective that he hoped would prevent Ryder from falling victim to the cyclically of its business.
As the “new Ryder” took shape during the mid-1990s, both recent and age-old components of the company were shed. No divestment was larger than the October 1996 sale of the company’s consumer truck rental business, its famed yellow Ryder rental truck fleet. The sale of the consumer truck rental business represented a $574 million deal, stripping the company of more than $400 million in annual revenue. Less than a year later, Burns also sold Ryder’s automotive carrier business, reaching an agreement with Allied Holdings, Inc. for a $111 million sale price. With the divestiture of the consumer truck rental business and the automotive carrier business, Burns felt his company was “leaner, more focused, more disciplined, more profit-minded,” and less vulnerable to the vagaries of capricious market conditions, ridding Ryder of businesses that were “seasonal, transactional, highly volatile, and in difficult markets.” With these two business segments gone, along with others, Burns pinned the company’s hopes for the future on three main business areas: logistics, corporate truck leasing and rental, and public transportation services.
As Ryder entered the late 1990s, the company could not point to strong, tangible evidence that its “new” operating structure would provide all the answers for the new century ahead—and it did not expect to. At work were sweeping, fundamental changes that would take more than several years before a proper, accurate evaluation could take place. What Burns did achieve, however, was a measurable increase in contractual business and a growing position in logistical services. Although the company was heavily dependent on its truck leasing and rental business—the largest Ryder enterprise and a consistent, stable contributor to its bottom line—there were great expectations for the future of its logistical services business, the smallest Ryder enterprise. Whether or not expectations would develop into reality remained unanswered as the 21st century neared, but at Ryder’s corporate headquarters there was confidence that the near future would provide an answer welcomed by all, especially Burns.
Principal Subsidiaries
Ryder Integrated Logistics, Inc.; Ryder Transportation Services; Ryder Public Transportation Services, Inc.; Ryder Integrated Logistics—Canada; LogiCorp; Ryder Plc (U.K.); Ryder Deutschland GmbH (Germany); Ryder de Mexico, S.A. de C.V.; Ryder Polska Sp.z.o.o. (Poland); Ryder Argentina, S.A.; Ryder do Brasil, Ltda. (Brazil); Ryder Netherlands, B.V.; Ryder Truck Rental Canada Ltd.
Further Reading
Cook, James, “Repetition Compulsion,” Forbes, March 21, 1988.
Engardio, Pete, “Tony Burns Has Ryder’s Rivals Eating Dust,” Business Week, April 6, 1987.
“From Wings to Wheels,” Forbes, September 18, 1978.
Ryder, James A., “Shooting for the Big Time—and Making It,” Nation’s Business, January 1970.
Wax, Alan, “Institutions Grill Ryder over Earnings Change,” Commercial and Financial Chronicle, April 8, 1974.
—Thomas M. Tucker
—updated by Jeffrey L. Covell
Ryder System, Inc.
Ryder System, Inc.
founded: 1933
Contact Information:
headquarters: 3600 nw 82nd ave.
miami , fl 33166 phone: (305)593-3726 fax: (305)593-3336 url: http://www.ryder.com
OVERVIEW
Ryder System is a transportation company that focuses on three areas: integrated logistics, truck leasing and rental, and public transportation services. To the general public, Ryder System has been best known for the leasing and rental of its yellow trucks. However, in 1996 the company sold its consumer rental business so it could concentrate on servicing other businesses. Truck leasing and rental remained Ryder's largest segment in 1997, accounting for more than 45 percent of its revenue; however, the company was focusing its energy on integrated logistics (see "Strategy"). The company also provides student transportation services and operates 9,567 school buses in 25 states. With revenue of almost $5.0 billion in 1997 and assets of $5.5 billion, Ryder System ranked 292 in the 1998 Fortune 500.
COMPANY FINANCES
In 1997 Ryder System sales rose 11 percent to $4.9 billion. The breakdown was as follows: full service truck leasing, 37 percent; integrated logistics, 28 percent; public transportation services, 11 percent; commercial truck rental, 9 percent; international, 9 percent; and other, 6 percent. The company recorded its best operating results from continuing operations since 1987: earnings from continuing operations were $160 million compared to a loss of $19 million in 1996. Between April 1997 and April 1998 Ryder's stock traded in a range of $29 to $40. Its dividend was $.15 per share.
HISTORY
Jim Ryder began leasing trucks to a local beer distributor in the Miami area in 1934. This venture made him, at the age of 21, the owner of the first truck-leasing firm in the United States. In 1939 Ryder took on a partner, Roy Reedy, and the business began to expand rapidly. In 1952 Ryder acquired the Great Southern Trucking Company for $2 million. Three years later, the merged firms were reorganized as Ryder System Inc., and the new company offered its shares to the public. Ryder System entered the one-way truck rental business in 1967. The following year it began its auto carrier operations, which involved transporting new cars from factories to dealerships.
In the early 1970s Ryder Systems experienced financial troubles because of its diversification program. Consequently, in 1975 founder Jim Ryder was forced to step down as company head. Ryder System's results improved under new leadership during the late 1970s. In the mid-1980s Ryder System expanded briskly: it made 65 acquisitions for more than $1.1 billion. Ryder System entered the 1990s as a major player in truck and trailer leasing, automobile shipping, student transport, and aviation leasing and maintenance. By the late 1990s, however, the company had sharply changed direction and was concentrating on the integrated logistics business.
STRATEGY
Recently Ryder System has placed its primary emphasis on integrated logistics, which accounted for about 28 percent of its revenues in 1997. Integrated logistics is much more than simply hauling stuff from one place to another. As the company describes it, it is "the process of getting the right products to the right place at the right time in the right condition." Integrated logistics can therefore involve purchasing raw materials, warehousing, inventory management, distribution, and a range of other services. The objective is to minimize costs and increase efficiency by integrating a range of services necessary to bring a product to market. Ryder System management expected the total market for logistics services to grow to $20 to $30 billion by the end of the 1990s, compared with $5 billion to $6 billion in 1995.
INFLUENCES
After Jim Ryder took on Roy Reedy as partner in 1939, the two set out to create a trucking empire. The network of better highways that had been built in the 1930s supported their efforts. World War II also gave the company a boost, since it increased the demand for trucking services. Construction of the interstate highway system in the 1950s and postwar prosperity were further boons to the company. By 1952 the company's 1,300 trucks were generating $3 million in revenue.
The purchase of Great Southern Trucking in 1952 and 25 other companies in the late 1950s significantly expanded Ryder's operations. The company had some difficulty absorbing these companies, however, and bad debts mounted. But the introduction of a centralized accounting system in the early 1960s alleviated these problems and set the stage for further growth. In 1967 Ryder System introduced one-way truck rentals to compete with U-Haul, which had popularized the service several years earlier. Competition in this area from a growing number of rivals proved fierce. But Ryder System continued to put resources into the business and expanded its share of the market.
In the late 1960s and early 1970s Ryder System followed the then-current trend of diversifying into unrelated businesses. It bought trade schools, a temporary-help business, a mobile-home distributor, an insurance firm, and a petroleum company. The diversification program soon proved unsuccessful. When the company's transportation business also came under pressure in 1973 and 1974, Ryder System began to record losses. The board of directors eventually pushed out founder Jim Ryder in 1975. The new CEO, Leslie Barnes, dumped some of the money-losing acquisitions and refocused on Ryder System's transportation business. The company's full-service truck-leasing operations soon recovered, as did its business of transporting cars from the factory to the dealer.
Ryder System rode out the recession of the early 1980s well, using it as an opportunity to take over weaker competitors. It did get into a battle with Jim Ryder, who had started his own one-way rental business under the name Jartran. By 1982, however, Jartran was on its way to bankruptcy. Meanwhile, Ryder System's truck leasing and one-way rental businesses surged. Partly due to changes in tax laws, more and more fleet operators were turning the functions of fleet purchase, maintenance, and insurance over to Ryder System. Between 1984 and 1988 Ryder System's truck fleet almost doubled. In the oneway rental business Ryder System's market share reached 45 percent, equal to that of the traditional leader, U-Haul. In 1985 Ryder entered the school-bus leasing business and quickly became the second-largest private student-transport company in the United States.
Ryder also entered the aviation leasing field with its purchase of Aviation Sales Co. and other companies in the early 1980s. By late 1986 aviation services accounted for 20 percent of the company's revenue. In 1988, just a few years after entering the field, Ryder was the world's largest jet engine overhaul and rebuilding company, the largest aviation parts distributor, and one of the largest engine and jet-engine leasing companies.
CURRENT TRENDS
In 1997 Ryder System was a completely different company than it had been just ten years prior. Prompted by weak earnings in 1989, the company began to restructure its operations. It laid off workers and sold most of its insurance operations. It closed many offices and facilities. With the airline business weak, Ryder System discarded the aircraft leasing and maintenance businesses it had bought and built up just a few years before. In 1993 the company made a major effort to become more competitive with U-Haul in the one-way truck rental business. But after spending some $200 million on trucks and system upgrades, the company's results in this area remained disappointing. In 1996 Ryder System threw in the towel and sold its consumer truck rental business. A year later, it sold its automotive carrier operations.
While leasing and short-term rental of trucks to businesses remained its biggest revenue generator, Ryder System's main emphasis was on its logistics operations. In 1994 Ryder System bought LogiCorp., which processed shipments for global carriers. The acquisition helped Ryder System design sophisticated delivery systems and brought in many new customers. Revenues from the logistics business, which in 1994 totaled $646 million, more than doubled in 1997 to $1.4 billion. Moreover, the profitability of these operations was improving. Ryder had a strong roster of logistics clients, including General Motors, Xerox, John Deere, and Whirlpool.
FAST FACTS: About Ryder System, Inc.
Ownership: Ryder System, Inc. is a publicly owned corporation traded on the New York Stock Exchange.
Ticker symbol: R
Officers: M. Anthony Burns, Chmn., Pres., & CEO, 55
Employees: 42,342
Principal Subsidiary Companies: Ryder System's principal operating subsidiaries include: Ryder Integrated Logistics, Inc. and Ryder Truck Rental, Inc.
Chief Competitors: In North America, Ryder's integrated logistics, transportation, and public transportation services compete with companies providing similar offerings on a national, regional, and local level. Its rivals include: Rollins Truck Leasing; Penske; and Laidlaw.
CORPORATE CITIZENSHIP
In 1996 Ryder System issued its first Environmental Progress Report. The report details the goals of the company's environmental program and the progress made toward those goals.The report is available to the public by calling or writing to the company.
Ryder System also maintains the School Bus Safety Site on the Internet. These pages offer safety tips on waiting for, boarding, riding, and exiting a school bus. The site's address is http://www.ryder.com/ryder/schoolbussafety/index.html.
CHRONOLOGY: Key Dates for Ryder System, Inc.
- 1933:
Founded by Jim Ryder
- 1939:
Roy Reedy becomes partner
- 1952:
Acquires Great Southern Trucking Company
- 1955:
Offers shares to the public
- 1967:
Begins offering one-way truck rentals
- 1968:
Begins transporting new cars from factories to dealerships
- 1975:
Jim Ryder steps down as head of company and Leslie Barnes takes over
- 1985:
Begins leasing school buses
- 1988:
Becomes the largest jet engine overhaul and rebuilding company and the largest aviation parts distributor
- 1996:
Sells consumer truck rental business
- 1997:
Sells automotive carrier operations
GLOBAL PRESENCE
In 1997 revenue from Ryder's international division accounted for approximately 9 percent of total revenue, an increase of 28 percent from 1996. Ryder had operations in eight foreign countries: Canada, Mexico, Argentina, Brazil, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Germany, and Poland. Ryder System often has followed its customers into countries where they operate. For example, its first large customer in Mexico was Procter & Gamble, which was already an important domestic client.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
Bibliography
"allied holdings signs definitive agreement to acquire ryder automotive carrier services." pr newswire, 21 august 1997.
barfield, claude e., and mark a. groombridge. "a system america wanted: world trade organization." journal of commerce and commercial, 27 february 1998.
bonney, joseph. "ryder raises its stake in logistics." american shipper, april 1995.
degeorge, gail. "ryder sees the logic of logistics." business week, 5 august 1996.
fitzgerald, mark. "outsourcing trend benefits ryder." editor & publisher, 16 august 1997.
la monica, paul r. "ryder system going nowhwere?" financial world, 16 september 1996.
nakamoto, michiyo, "fugifilm snaps up market share in u.s." the financial times, 9 december 1997.
reed, tom. "ryder still searching for right formula." knight ridder/tribune business news, 8 october 1995.
riddle, j. ernie. "reengineering ryder to meet rising consumer expectations." national productivity review, winter 1995.
rosenberg, hillary. "m. anthony burns of ryder system: road warrior." institutional investor, april 1995.
"ryder system, inc." hoover's handbook of american business 1998. austin, tx: hoover's business press, 1997.
spiegel, peter. "is he paranoid enough?" forbes, 22 september 1997.
For an annual report:
write: ryder, 3600 nw 82 ave., miami, fl 33166
For additional industry research:
investigate companies by their standard industrial classification codes, also known as sics. ryder's primary sic is:
7513 truck rental and leasing, without drivers