Hub Group
Hub Group (NASDAQ: HUBG) is a transportation management company in North America, providing intermodal, truck brokerage and logistics services. As a publicly traded company with over $3.5 billion in revenue, the company owns two subsidiaries: Mode Transportation (formerly Exel Transportation Services), a third party logistics company (Unyson); and Hub Group Trucking, which provides intermodal freight transport and drayage services.[3][4] Hub Group was founded in 1971 by Phillip Yeager.[5] The company went public in 1996 and is traded on the NASDAQ exchange.[6] David Yeager, son of Phillip Yeager, serves as Hub Group chairman and chief executive officer. The company is headquartered in Oak Brook, Illinois.[3]
Public | |
Traded as | NASDAQ: HUBG (Class A) S&P 600 Component |
Industry | Transportation |
Founded | Hinsdale, Illinois (1971) |
Founder | Phillip Yeager |
Headquarters | |
Number of locations | 33 |
Area served | North America |
Key people | David P. Yeager, Chairman and CEO Phillip D. Yeager, President and COO Terri A. Pizzuto, Executive Vice President and CFO |
Services | Intermodal freight transportation Logistics Truck brokerage |
Revenue | $3.5 billion (2015) |
$117 million | |
$70.9 million | |
Total assets | $1.3 billion |
Total equity | $647.84 million |
Number of employees | 4,377[2] (2017) |
Divisions | Unyson |
Subsidiaries | Hub Group Trucking |
Website | hubgroup |
History
In 1971, Phillip and Joyce founded Hub Group (then known as Hub City Terminals) in Hinsdale, Illinois.[6] The company was started with $10,000 and was located in a windowless, one-room office above a flower shop.[6][7] The 43-year-old Phillip Yeager quit his job at the Pennsylvania Railroad, where he had worked for 19 years, to create Hub Group.[5][6] At the time of its formation, Hub City Terminals worked as a shipper's agent, which was an intermediary that booked intermodal transportation with railroads.[5]
In 1975, Yeager and his wife set up a series of S corporations to expand their business.[5] Each office operated separately and had its own profit and loss center.[8]
Hub City Terminals was renamed Hub Group in 1985.[5]
In 1995, David Yeager became chief executive officer of Hub Group.[3] He had been with the company since 1975, when he opened the company's Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania regional office.[3] David Yeager had become co-chairman of the company in 1992.[9]
In 1996, Hub Group held an initial public offering.[6] A year later, in 1997, the company became the first intermodal marketing company to top $1 billion in yearly revenue.[10] Hub Group had 34 regional offices by 1998, when the company borrowed $100 million to begin purchasing all outstanding minority interests in the company's regional offices.[8][10]
The company moved from a geography-based operation with multiple regional offices to a centralized operation with a single profit and loss center headquartered in Lombard, Illinois in 2004.[8][11] The reorganization effort allowed Hub Group to compete as a single network.[11]
Mark Yeager was appointed president and chief operating officer in April 2005.[12] Yeager had joined Hub Group in 1992 and served as president of the company's field operations immediately prior to his appointment.[12] Yeager succeeded Thomas Hardin, who had served as Hub Group president since 1985.[12]
Hub Group acquired Memphis, Tennessee-based drayage company Comtrak Logistics for $48 million in 2006.[13] The two companies had worked together for over 20 years by the time of the acquisition.[13] The deal included Comtrak's client lists and proprietary transportation tracking software.[13] Comtrak founder and Chief Executive Officer Mike Bruns was retained as head of Hub Group's Comtrak Logistics subsidiary, now named Hub Group Trucking.[13]
Hub Group founder and Chairman Phillip Yeager died in October 2008 from complications following a heart attack.[5][6] Yeager was 80 years old.[5][6] Company CEO David Yeager became chairman of Hub Group in November 2008.[3]
In 2011, the company acquired Exel Transportation Services, a third-party logistics provider, for $83 million.[14] Hub Group renamed the subsidiary Mode Transportation.[14] Exel Transportation President James Damman was retained by Hub Group to lead Mode Transportation and the subsidiary remained located in Dallas, Texas.[14]
Hub Group moved its headquarters from Downers Grove to Oak Brook in January 2013. At that time, the four-story, 140,000 square-foot building was the first new office building built in Oak Brook in over a decade.[15] The new corporate headquarters is LEED Gold certified.[16]
On August 8, 2015, Mark Yeager resigned as president and chief operating officer.[17] In September 2015, Hub Group appointed Donald Maltby as Yeager's successor. Maltby previously served as Chief Supply Chain Officer from January 2011 until May 2014.[18] Phillip D. Yeager became President and chief operating officer on May 30, 2019. [19]
Operations
Hub Group is organized into two segments: Mode Transportation and Hub.[3] Both segments offer intermodal, logistics and truck brokerage services.[3] The company's logistics business operates under the Unyson name.[3][20]
As of December 2015, Hub Group Trucking performed services for 75 percent of Hub Group's drayage needs.[21]
References
- "US SEC 10-K Hub Group, LLC" (PDF). U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. March 2016. Retrieved 21 April 2016.
- "Hub Group". Fortune. Retrieved 2019-01-25.
- "Form 10-K Hub Group, Inc". Securities and Exchange Commission. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
- Jeff Berman (4 April 2011). "Hub Group acquires Exel Transportation Services". Logistics Management. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
- Joseph Bonney (20 October 2008). "Hub Group founder Phillip C. Yeager dies". Gulf Shipper.
- Mark Zaloudek (8 October 2008). "Fortune 1,000 firm grew from a 'leap of faith'". Sarasota Herald-Tribune.
- "Hub Group, Inc". The Wall Street Transcript. Retrieved 8 June 2014.
- John Gallagher (15 December 2003). "Realigning Intermodal". Traffic World.
- John D. Boyd (6 October 2008). "Hub's Yeager Dies". Traffic World.
- Jack Burke (23 March 1998). "Hub Consolidates, Buys". Traffic World.
- "Hub Reorganization Pays Off". Traffic World. 17 May 2004.
- "Hub Group Promotes Yeager". Pacific Shipper. 1 April 2005.
- Jane Roberts (22 February 2006). "CEO, founder sells trucking firm Comtrak Logistics for $48 million". The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Tenn.
- "Hub Group Acquires Exel Transportation Services". Penton Insight. 6 April 2011.
- "Freight company building new headquarters in Oak Brook". Chicagotribune.com.
- "Sustainability". www.hubgroup.com.
- "Hub Group's Mark Yeager Steps Down as President, COO". Transport Topics. 11 August 2015.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-11-06. Retrieved 2015-10-16.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- "Hub Group, Inc. Announces Appointment of Phillip D. Yeager as President and Chief Operating Officer". Hub Group Inc. Retrieved 2020-04-23.
- "Hub Logistics is now Unyson Logistics". Logisticstoday. 1 May 2005.
- "Hub Group's CEO Dave Yeager on Q4 2015 Results - Earnings Call Transcript". Seeking Alpha. February 3, 2016. Retrieved April 21, 2016.