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Old Dominion (ODFL) 2025 — Grade A: Zero Debt, Zero Goodwill, LTL Leader

ODFL·2025·English

Grade: A — Strong Financial Health

Framework: Schilit *Financial Shenanigans* + Beneish M-Score + forensic accounting principles

Data: SEC EDGAR 10-K (filed February 24, 2026) + Yahoo Finance

Auditor: Ernst & Young LLP — Clean (unqualified) opinion, auditor since 1994

One-line verdict: Old Dominion is a fortress. Zero flags, zero watches across 17 completed checks. Revenue declined 5.5% to $5.5B as the domestic freight cycle softened — the 10-K states "continued softness in the domestic economy contributed to the decline in our revenue" — but even in a down year, ODFL generated $1.37B in operating cash flow at a 1.34x CFFO/NI ratio, carried only $40M of debt against $120M cash, held zero goodwill, and posted an M-Score of -2.75 (well below the -2.22 manipulation threshold). This is the cleanest balance sheet in U.S. trucking.

MetricResult
Red Flags**0**
Watch Items**0**
Checks Completed**17/18**
Beneish M-Score**-2.75** (clean)
Altman Z-Score**8.25** (safe zone)

The LTL Compounder Hits a Cyclical Trough

Metric2022202320242025Trend
Revenue$6.26B$5.87B$5.81B$5.50BDown from peak
Net Income$1.38B$1.24B$1.19B$1.02BCyclical decline
Gross Margin36.0%35.3%34.8%33.0%Compressing
Net Margin22.0%21.1%20.4%18.6%Still exceptional
Operating Ratio73.4%75.2%Deleveraging
Cash$236M$434M$109M$120MMinimal held

ODFL's 10-K discloses the operating ratio — the trucking industry's key metric — deteriorated from 73.4% to 75.2%. The company explicitly attributes this to "the deleveraging effect from the decrease in revenue and an increase in depreciation expense." LTL tonnage per day fell 8.8%, shipments per day dropped 7.5%, and weight per shipment declined 1.5%. Yet revenue per hundredweight increased 3.9% (4.8% excluding fuel surcharges), demonstrating pricing discipline even in a weak market.

Why This Business Is Built to Survive Cycles

ODFL operates the largest non-union LTL network in North America with 98%+ of revenue from LTL services. The 10-K describes the business model: "Our growth strategy includes increasing the volume of freight moving through our existing service center network primarily by increasing our market share and selectively expanding our capacity." The moat is operational — a single integrated network where density drives profitability. When volumes return, the operating leverage works in reverse: fixed costs (depreciation, facility overhead) spread over more shipments, and the operating ratio drops sharply. ODFL has done this through multiple cycles.

The January 2026 update in the 10-K shows the softness continues: "Revenue per day decreased 6.8% in January 2026... LTL tons per day decreased 9.6%." This is not a surprise — it reflects the industrial economy, not an ODFL-specific problem.

Cash Flow: Still Printing in a Down Cycle

Metric2022202320242025
Operating Cash Flow$1.69B$1.57B$1.66B$1.37B
CapEx-$775M-$757M-$771M-$415M
**Free Cash Flow****$916M****$812M****$888M****$955M**
CFFO / Net Income1.231.271.401.34

CFFO/NI has exceeded 1.2x for four consecutive years — every dollar of reported profit is backed by more than $1.20 in cash. Free cash flow actually *increased* year-over-year because CapEx dropped 46% as the company pulled back on expansion spending during the downturn. The 10-K notes CapEx is "a significant part of our annual capital expenditures" driven by "tractor and trailer manufacturers" supply and "shortages of suitable real estate."

Balance Sheet: Virtually Debt-Free

Cash of $120M against total debt of just $40M. Debt/EBITDA is 0.02x — essentially zero leverage. Interest coverage is 4,598x. The Altman Z-Score of 8.25 places ODFL firmly in the safe zone (anything above 3.0 is considered safe). Bankruptcy risk is nonexistent.

Zero goodwill. Zero intangible assets of note. ODFL has grown entirely organically — no acquisition-driven balance sheet bloat.

The 18-Point Screening

Revenue Quality

#CheckResultDetail
A1DSOPassDSO 31 days, flat YoY. Stable collections
A2AR vs RevenuePassAR -5.9% vs revenue -5.5%. In line
A3Revenue vs CFFOPassRevenue -5.5%, CFFO -17.4%. Both declining with cycle

AR declining in lockstep with revenue is exactly what you expect in a cyclical downturn. No channel-stuffing signal. DSO at 31 days has been stable across the cycle (36 days in 2023, now 31), suggesting collection discipline has actually improved.

Expense Quality

#CheckResultDetail
B1InventoryPassNo material inventory (service business)
B2CapExPassCapEx -46.2% vs revenue -5.5%. Prudent pullback
B3SG&A RatioPassSG&A/Gross Profit = 15.6%. Excellent
B4Gross MarginPass33.0%, -1.8pp. Cyclical compression, not structural

The 10-K explains the margin compression: "Salaries, wages and benefits" were 47.9% of revenue (up from 46.2%) due to "the 5.4% decrease in our average number of active full-time employees" being offset by an "annual wage increase" and higher benefit costs — "employee benefit costs as a percent of salaries and wages increased to 40.0% in 2025 compared to 37.3% in 2024" driven by "higher costs associated with our group health and dental plans."

SG&A at 15.6% of gross profit is remarkable for an asset-heavy trucking company. This is a lean operation.

Cash Flow Quality

#CheckResultDetail
C1CFFO vs NIPassRatio 1.34. Strong cash backing
C2FCFPass$955M FCF, FCF/NI = 0.93
C3AccrualsPass-6.3%. Negative accruals = clean earnings
C4Cash vs DebtPassCash $120M vs debt $40M. Net cash position

Negative accruals ratio of -6.3% is a strong signal. It means ODFL's cash earnings exceed its reported earnings — the opposite of what you see in manipulated financials.

Balance Sheet

#CheckResultDetail
D1GoodwillPassNo goodwill. Entirely organic growth
D2LeveragePassDebt/EBITDA = 0.02x. Virtually unlevered
D3Soft AssetsPassOther assets +2.2% vs revenue -5.5%. Normal
D4ImpairmentN/ANo write-off data

M&A Risk

#CheckResultDetail
E1Post-Acquisition FCFPassFCF positive, no material acquisitions
E2Goodwill SurgePassNo goodwill

Beneish M-Score

#CheckResultDetail
F1M-ScorePass-2.75, clean. Unlikely manipulator

All eight M-Score components are benign. DSRI (0.995) near 1.0 means DSO is stable. GMI (1.053) slightly above 1.0 reflects the mild margin compression. TATA (-0.063) deeply negative confirms cash-backed earnings.

Key Risks (from 10-K Item 1A)

1. Cyclical Exposure — Revenue Tied to Industrial Economy

The 10-K is explicit: "More than 98% of our revenue has historically been derived from transporting LTL shipments for our customers, whose demand for our services is generally tied to industrial production and the overall health of the U.S. domestic economy." In 2025, that dependency showed. Revenue is down 12% from the 2022 peak of $6.26B. The risk is not that ODFL's business model is broken — it is that a prolonged industrial recession could further compress margins and cash flow.

2. Insurance and Self-Insurance Liability

Ernst & Young flagged this as their Critical Audit Matter. ODFL's self-insurance reserves for bodily injury, property damage, and workers' compensation totaled $168.8M at year-end. The 10-K discloses these "analyses are complex and require significant judgment as the models utilize multiple valuation methods and reflect subjective assumptions." This is the single area of material estimation uncertainty in ODFL's financials.

3. Labor, Equipment, and Real Estate Cost Inflation

The 10-K warns: "Inflationary pressures have been significant in the United States in recent years. Inflation impacts the cost to operate our business by putting upward pressure on wages, benefits, real estate, equipment, fuel, parts and repairs, insurance, and other general and miscellaneous expenses." Employee benefit costs already rose from 37.3% to 40.0% of wages in 2025. If ODFL cannot pass these costs through via yield increases, the operating ratio will continue to deteriorate.

4. Equipment and Capacity Constraints

"Tractor and trailer manufacturers have previously experienced shortages of various component parts and supplies, forcing many manufacturers to reduce or suspend their production." ODFL depends on continuous fleet renewal and service center expansion. Supply chain disruptions could limit growth capacity when the freight cycle turns.

Summary

#CheckResult
A1-A3Revenue QualityPass Pass Pass
B1-B4Expense QualityPass Pass Pass Pass
C1-C4Cash Flow QualityPass Pass Pass Pass
D1-D4Balance SheetPass Pass Pass N/A
E1-E2M&A RiskPass Pass
F1Beneish M-ScorePass

Grade: A. No flags. No concerns.

Old Dominion is one of the cleanest companies we screen. Zero debt, zero goodwill, zero acquisitions, consistently positive free cash flow, cash earnings exceeding reported earnings, and an M-Score well into the safe zone. The revenue decline is cyclical, not structural — the company's 10-K makes clear this reflects "continued softness in the domestic economy" rather than competitive deterioration.

The auditor's only Critical Audit Matter was self-insurance reserve estimation — a standard issue for any large trucking company. No going concern language. No material weakness. No restatements.

The risk with ODFL is not the books — they are immaculate. The risk is macroeconomic: when does the freight cycle turn? That is an investment timing question, not a forensic accounting question. From an earnings quality perspective, this is a clean pass.

**Disclaimer**: This report is based on Old Dominion Freight Line's 10-K (filed February 24, 2026, SEC EDGAR) and public financial data. This is NOT investment advice.

Data: SEC EDGAR 10-K + Yahoo Finance

Auditor: Ernst & Young LLP (unqualified opinion, auditor since 1994)

This report is based on SEC 10-K filings and public financial data. Not investment advice.

Old Dominion (ODFL) 2025 — Grade A: Zero Debt, Zero Goodwill, LTL Leader — EarningsGrade