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Revenue Ton-Miles (RTMs)

Revenue Ton-Miles (RTMs) is a key performance metric used primarily in the freight and transportation industry, including rail, air cargo, and trucking. Think of it as the ultimate measure of how much stuff a company is getting paid to move over a certain distance. It represents the total volume of paid cargo transported. The calculation is simple: it's the total weight of cargo (in tons) multiplied by the number of miles that cargo is hauled. For a value investing practitioner, RTMs are a beautiful thing. Why? Because they measure real, physical business activity, not just financial figures that can sometimes be tweaked with accounting magic. A steadily growing RTM figure is a powerful signal that a company is successfully winning more business and that demand for its services is robust. It's a direct look into the operational heartbeat of a transportation company, making it an invaluable tool for understanding the underlying health and trajectory of the business long before it shows up in the bottom-line earnings.

Digging Deeper into RTMs

How Is It Calculated?

The beauty of RTMs lies in their simplicity. There's no complex financial wizardry here, just straightforward, real-world measurement. The formula is: Revenue Ton-Miles = Total Weight of Paying Cargo (in tons) x Distance Transported (in miles) For example, if a railroad company hauls 10 tons of grain for 500 miles, it has generated 5,000 RTMs (10 tons x 500 miles). If it also hauls a 20-ton shipment of lumber for 1,000 miles, that adds another 20,000 RTMs (20 tons x 1,000 miles). The company would report a total of 25,000 RTMs for these two shipments. By tracking this number over time—across millions of shipments—investors get a clear, unvarnished picture of the company's total freight volume. It's a pure measure of demand for the company's core service: moving goods from point A to point B.

Why Should an Investor Care?

For value investors, who love to see tangible proof of a company's success, RTMs are a goldmine of information. Financial statements are essential, but they can be influenced by accounting choices. RTMs, on the other hand, are hard to fake. A company either moved the tonnage or it didn't. Here’s what RTM trends can tell you:

A Value Investor's Checklist

Putting RTMs to Work

RTMs are most powerful when used as part of a holistic analysis, not in isolation. Here’s how to integrate them into your research process when looking at a transportation company like a railroad or trucking firm: