Transportation Sector

Transportation Sector

The transportation sector is a category of companies that provide services to move people or goods, as well as transportation infrastructure. **Ticker** **Company** Alaska Air Group C.H. Robinson Worldwide Delta Air Lines Expeditors International of Washington J.B. Hunt Transport Services JetBlue Airways KSU You can invest in companies that move people and products by buying shares of individual transportation companies, or through sector-specific mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs) that specialize in the transportation sector. The transportation sector is a category of companies that provide services to move people or goods, as well as transportation infrastructure. The transportation sector consists of several industries including air freight and logistics, airlines, marine, road and rail, and transportation infrastructure.

The transportation sector is an important industry sector in the economy that deals with the movement of people and products.

What Is the Transportation Sector?

The transportation sector is a category of companies that provide services to move people or goods, as well as transportation infrastructure. Technically, transportation is a sub-group of the industrials sector according to the Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS). The transportation sector consists of several industries including air freight and logistics, airlines, marine, road and rail, and transportation infrastructure. These industries are further broken down into the sub-industries air freight and logistics, airlines, marine, railroads, trucking, airport services, highways and rail tracks, and marine ports and services.

The transportation sector is an important industry sector in the economy that deals with the movement of people and products.
These include companies such as airlines, trucking, railroads, shipping, and logistics firms, as well as those that provide transportation infrastructure.
The Dow Jones Transportation Index (DJTA) was the U.S.'s first stock market index, and still tracks 20 of the most important companies in the sector.

Understanding the Transportation Sector

The performance of companies in the transportation industry is highly sensitive to fluctuations in company earnings and the price of transportation services. Main factors affecting company earnings include fuel costs, labor costs, demand for services, geopolitical events, and government regulation. Many of these factors are interconnected. For example, if the U.S. government passes regulations that make it more difficult for people to earn their commercial drivers' license, this will reduce the supply of drivers, driving up the cost of hiring drivers.

Oil prices are a key factor for transportation, as the commodity’s price generally has an influence on transportation expenses. Gas and fuel prices that rise will increase costs for a trucking company, eating into their profit and potentially reducing their stock price.

Energy costs and the value of transportation stocks are certainly interrelated. Low energy costs may become a factor in boosting the share price of various transportation companies, but the influence can also be reversed. When demand for transportation services is high the impact will be reflected in quarterly reports of transportation companies. This information may, once disseminated, may motivate energy traders to bid up prices for oil and similar commodities. However, if demand for commercial transportation falls, this information could lead to a decline in oil prices as well.

Investing in the Transportation Sector

You can invest in companies that move people and products by buying shares of individual transportation companies, or through sector-specific mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs) that specialize in the transportation sector. The transportation sector is one of the most broadly diversified with industrial companies representing airlines, railroads, truckers, equipment and leasing stocks, and logistics companies. Funds that track this sector will track a benchmark sector index like the DJTA.

The Dow Jones Transportation Index

The Dow Jones Transportation Average (DJTA) is a price-weighted average of 20 transportation stocks traded in the United States. The DJTA is, in fact, the oldest U.S. stock index, first compiled in 1884 by Charles Dow, co-founder of Dow Jones & Company. The index initially consisted of nine railroad companies, a testament to their dominance of the U.S. transportation sector in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and two non-railroad companies. In addition to railroads, the index now includes airlines, trucking, marine transportation, delivery services and logistics companies.

Company

NYSE:
ALK

Alaska Air Group

Nasdaq:
CHRW

C.H. Robinson Worldwide

NYSE:
CSX

NYSE:
CNW

NYSE:
DAL

Delta Air Lines

Nasdaq:
EXPD

Expeditors International of Washington

NYSE:
FDX

NYSE:
GMT

Nasdaq:
JBHT

J.B. Hunt Transport Services

Nasdaq:
JBLU

JetBlue Airways

NYSE:
KSU

Kansas City Southern

NYSE:
KEX

Nasdaq:
LSTR

Landstar System

NYSE:
MATX

NYSE:
NSC

Norfolk Southern

Ryder System

NYSE:
LUV

Southwest Airlines

NYSE:
UNP

Union Pacific

NYSE:
UAL

United Continental Holdings

NYSE:
UPS

United Parcel Service

S&P Transportation Select Index

Additionally, the S&P Transportation Select Industry index provides a secondary benchmark for the sector.

Number of Constituents

Inception Date

June 18, 2006

Maximum Market Cap

Minimum Market Cap

Mean Market Cap

Median Market Cap

Related terms:

Constituent

A constituent is a single stock or company that is part of a larger index such as the S&P 500 or Dow Jones Industrial Average.  read more

Dow Jones Transportation Average (DJTA)

The Dow Jones Transportation Average is a price-weighted average of 20 transportation stocks traded in the United States.  read more

Dow Jones Utility Average (DJUA)

The Dow Jones Utility Average (DJUA) is a price-weighted average of 15 utility stocks traded in the U.S. Read how the DJUA acts as a market indicator. read more

Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS)

The Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS) is a system for categorizing every public company by economic sector and industry group. read more

Industrial Goods Sector

The industrial goods sector encompasses stocks that relate to producing goods used in construction and manufacturing. read more

Sector ETF

A sector exchange-traded fund (ETF) invests in the stocks and securities of a specific sector, typically identified in the fund title. read more