---
title: "Forward Air After the Merger: Dislocation or Structural Impairment?"
type: "News"
locale: "en"
url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/280909162.md"
description: "Forward Air has undergone a significant transformation following its $2.1 billion acquisition of Omni Logistics in January 2024, expanding its service offerings in expedited freight and logistics. Despite achieving over $75 million in annualized synergies, the company faces challenges, including shareholder backlash due to goodwill write-downs and integration costs, leading to an 80% drop in stock price to around $16.50. The market perceives the post-merger entity as burdened with debt and execution complexities, although operational improvements are noted, with positive EBITDA and a turnaround in free cash flow. The company now operates under three segments: Expedited Freight, Omni Logistics, and Intermodal, shifting from a network operator to a broader logistics orchestrator."
datetime: "2026-03-29T11:57:17.000Z"
locales:
  - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/280909162.md)
  - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/280909162.md)
  - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/280909162.md)
---

# Forward Air After the Merger: Dislocation or Structural Impairment?

****Introduction: Dislocation or Durable Business Reset?****

Forward Air stands at a pivotal juncture. Once a relatively narrowly focused expedited freight and intermodal logistics provider, the company transformed itself through the January 2024 acquisition of Omni Logistics, a move designed to broaden its service portfolio and create a more integrated logistics platform. The combined entity now spans expedited less-than-truckload services, global freight forwarding, contract logistics, and multimodal solutions across North America and beyond.

The Omni Logistics transaction closed in January 2024 after protracted negotiations, litigation, and amended terms, a deal worth over $2.1 billion that reshaped the company's equity structure and balance sheet in one move.

In the months since the transaction closed, the integration has been the central strategic focus. Management targeted more than $75 million in annualized synergies and, according to industry reporting, exceeded that target as cost savings and operational consolidation took hold. But the execution has not been without friction. Shareholder backlash followed early earnings results that included large goodwill write-downs and significant integration expenses, contributing to meaningful near-term earnings volatility and pressure on the company's share price.

Operationally, the company continued to execute in a challenging freight environment throughout 2025. In its third quarter results, Forward Air reported positive consolidated EBITDA despite weaker revenues compared with the prior year and implemented additional cost reduction measures to align its footprint with current demand conditions.

Against this backdrop, the market has already answered the question this situation once posed. The stock has declined to approximately $16.50, down more than 80% from where it traded before the Omni deal was announced in August 2023. More recently, shares fell an additional 14% in a single session after reports confirmed that the year-long board-led strategic review would not result in a full company sale, both Clearlake Capital and Apollo Global Management withdrew from the process, and Ancora Holdings, the activist investor that had most publicly pushed for a transaction, exited its position entirely before the conclusion was reached.

What the market is pricing at $16.50 is not ambiguity. It is a verdict: that the post-merger platform carries too much debt, too little free cash flow, and too much execution complexity to justify a premium over distressed standalone value. The deal optionality that had kept a floor under the equity through much of 2025 is now gone. What remains is a freight and logistics operator with $307 million in full-year 2025 EBITDA, $1.68 billion in net debt, and a free cash flow trajectory that only just turned positive.

The argument here is a direct disagreement with that verdict, not because the risks are overstated, but because the market is anchoring to what has already gone wrong rather than to what the operating data is beginning to show. The expedited franchise has improved margins sequentially through every quarter of 2025. Free cash flow swung from negative $100.9 million in 2024 to positive $17.5 million in 2025. No debt maturities arrive until December 2030. The question an owner must answer at $16.50 is not whether the last two years were painful, they were, but whether the embedded price already reflects that pain in full, or whether it reflects something worse that has not yet been established by the numbers.

****How the Business Earns Money (and What Omni Changed)****

Before the Omni deal, Forward Air's economics were built around a specific niche: time-sensitive, high-value freight moving through a terminal network. The company's expedited less-than-truckload operation is designed for shipments that are too urgent or too sensitive for standard LTL networks, where reliability and speed matter more than pure price. The model relies on a national footprint of terminals to consolidate, linehaul, and deliver freight with tighter service commitments than conventional carriers. Management has historically described the franchise as asset-light, with the terminal network doing the heavy lifting in service quality rather than a massive owned fleet.

Omni changed the shape of that model. In the company's reporting, the business is now organized into three segments: Expedited Freight, Omni Logistics, and Intermodal. Expedited Freight remains the core terminal-based network business. Intermodal provides first- and last-mile container drayage to and from ports and railheads, along with related handling and warehouse services. Omni Logistics brings a different economic engine: global forwarding and consolidation across air and ocean, customs brokerage, warehousing and distribution, and other supply-chain services. Put differently, Forward moved from being primarily a network operator to being a broader logistics orchestrator, with more of the revenue stream now tied to coordination, brokerage-like execution, and contract logistics.

That shift carries two implications for an owner. On revenue quality, A terminal network business tends to be defined by density economics: higher network utilization spreads fixed terminal costs across more shipments, improving operating leverage when volumes cooperate. Forwarding and contract logistics tend to be defined more by gross margin discipline, purchase transportation management, and execution consistency across customers and modes. The combined business therefore has more moving parts, but also potentially more ways to retain customer relationships across a wider wallet share. The upside case is cross-selling and customer capture across modes. The downside case is complexity, weaker accountability, and diluted margin focus.

The second implication is balance sheet and integration sensitivity. The Omni transaction was not simply an operational expansion; it was a financial restructuring event. The deal terms were amended shortly before close, including a reduction in cash consideration and a defined pro forma ownership allocation for Omni holders. After closing, management's stated integration plan emphasized cost and operational synergies. By early 2025, the company reported that it had exceeded its initial synergy commitments, citing more than $100 million in annualized savings in the first year following the transaction. That progress matters, but it does not eliminate the underlying underwriting question: cost synergies are the easier part of integration; proving durable earnings power through a full freight cycle is the harder part.

This is also why the market reaction has been so severe. Investors are not debating whether Forward can move freight. They are debating whether the post-merger platform can produce stable cash flow while carrying a heavier capital structure and integrating a broader operating footprint. The company itself implicitly acknowledged that tension when it announced a board-led review of strategic alternatives in January 2025, alongside actions to amend its senior secured credit agreement and reduce operating expenditures. When a business begins reviewing strategic options soon after a transformative acquisition, it is usually a signal that the market is not giving management the benefit of the doubt on the standalone plan.

****The Owner's Ledger: Cash, Leverage, and the Burden of Proof****

After a transformational acquisition, the business question is no longer can the platform win accounts? It is can the platform turn those accounts into cash while carrying the capital structure it created?

Forward Air's post-Omni reality is defined by three linked constraints: integration execution, leverage, and the timing mismatch between synergy claims and free-cash confirmation. Management has emphasized cost and operational synergies and described progress in extracting savings. But owners do not get paid in synergy run-rates. They get paid in free cash flow that survives a freight cycle, pays interest, and reduces debt.

The key point is that the company is not starting from a clean slate. The acquisition introduced a heavier balance sheet and a tighter set of lender expectations. By late 2025, the company disclosed a leverage ratio around 5.5x (as reported in its quarterly filings), which places the equity in a familiar position for post-deal situations: small operational misses matter more because the fixed claims are larger.

That pressure shows up in the sequence of management actions. In early 2025, the board initiated a strategic review and the company amended its senior secured term loan credit agreement. In the same announcement, management described an initial transformation phase designed to reduce annual operating expenditures by about $20 million and reaffirmed full-year consolidated EBITDA guidance of $300$310 million for 2024. Taken together, those are not cosmetic disclosures. They are an implicit admission that the market is treating the post-merger platform as execution-sensitive, and that management needs to demonstrate control over cash and leverage quickly.

Through 2025, results have been mixed but not directionless. In the third quarter of 2025, the company reported operating income of $15 million and consolidated EBITDA of $78 million, despite a freight environment management characterized as an extended recession. The company also reported an increase in free cash flow in that period. That is the kind of datapoint owners should be looking for: not whether revenue is growing in a soft cycle, but whether the company can protect EBITDA and generate cash after interest and reinvestment.

For this article's underwriting frame, the owner-level question is therefore specific: what does the business look like when the cycle normalizes and integration noise fades? If the post-deal company can hold EBITDA in a durable range, convert that EBITDA into free cash flow, and use that cash to delever, the current valuation can be rationally understood as a dislocation, the market pricing integration risk as if it is permanent. If free cash flow remains inconsistent or leverage stays stubbornly high, the equity behaves less like an undervalued logistics platform and more like a levered claim on execution.

This is where Forward Air becomes an unusually clean case study for owners. The upside is not mystical. It is mechanical: stabilize margins, sustain cash conversion, pay down debt. The downside is equally mechanical: a complex integration in a weak freight tape, combined with leverage that reduces tolerance for error. The job of the next section is to quantify what the market is currently paying for that stream of cash, and what it is implicitly assuming.

The trailing twelve-month series (top panel) shows that earnings power was relatively stable from 2012 through roughly 2019, gradually trending upward but without dramatic acceleration. That stability reflects a business whose economics were historically tied to steady freight demand rather than episodic spikes. The clear inflection comes in 20212022, where trailing twelve-month earnings rise sharply to a visible peak. That period coincides with the post-pandemic freight tightness across the industry, when pricing power expanded and network utilization improved broadly across logistics providers.

What matters more for underwriting, however, is what happens next. The trailing figure compresses meaningfully after the peak, particularly into 2023 and early 2024, before beginning to recover. The compression is visible and material. That confirms that peak-cycle earnings were not sustained. But equally important, the series does not collapse to structurally impaired levels; it declines sharply, then stabilizes and begins to rebuild. That stabilization phase is the part the market is currently attempting to price.

The middle panel (quarterly results) shows more volatility, which is expected in freight. Through most of the 20122019 period, quarterly earnings remain consistently positive and clustered in a relatively narrow range. The standout feature is the negative quarterly reading in 2024, clearly visible as a one-off contraction. That negative quarter interrupts what had otherwise been a multi-year record of positive quarterly profitability. From the chart alone, we can observe that the company moved from elevated positive quarters in 2022 to compressed quarters in 2023 and a brief loss period before returning to positive territory.

The bottom panel (year-over-year quarterly growth) reinforces that pattern. Growth is modest or mixed in the earlier years, spikes materially during the 20212022 surge, then turns deeply negative into 2023 and early 2024. The magnitude of the red bars in that period confirms that the earnings reset was not incremental; it was severe on a year-over-year basis. However, the chart also shows that growth turns sharply positive again after the trough, including very strong positive comparisons in the most recent periods.

Taken together, the chart supports three disciplined conclusions:

-   The 20212022 earnings level was cyclical and not representative of steady-state performance.
-   The 20232024 contraction was sharp, including at least one negative quarter, indicating real stress rather than cosmetic softness.
-   Earnings have begun to stabilize and recover on a trailing and quarterly basis following that trough.

What the chart does not tell us is whether the current stabilization reflects a return to normalized freight economics, temporary cost actions, or structural improvement from integration and scale. That determination requires balance sheet analysis and margin examination. But purely from the earnings trajectory visible here, this does not resemble a business whose profitability permanently disappeared. It resembles a business that experienced a cycle peak, a reset, and now a partial rebuilding phase.

For an owner underwriting forward returns, the central question is whether the current trailing level is closer to normalized earnings or whether further compression is likely. The chart provides the history; valuation must determine whether the present price already assumes continued weakness or underestimates the rebuilding underway.

****Valuation and the owner's underwriting****

Forward Air is no longer priced like a balance-sheet rehabilitation case with an uncertain end-date. It is priced like a standalone deleveraging story that the market has already decided will not be rescued by a transaction. That is a meaningfully different starting point, and a more honest one.

The stock has declined to approximately $16.50, compressing the enterprise value to roughly $2.6 billion. Against full-year 2025 consolidated EBITDA of $307 million, that implies an EV/EBITDA multiple of approximately 8.5 times, well below where the company traded when the strategic review still carried deal optionality in the price. The market has done the repricing that the strategic process failed to deliver: it has stripped out the acquisition premium and is now pricing the business on what it can produce as a standalone operator. What remains extreme is the free cash flow multiple, with only $17.5 million in FCF produced in 2025, the EV/FCF ratio of roughly 149 times confirms that the market is not paying for current cash generation. It is waiting to see whether cash conversion can normalize at all.

Company

EV

EV / EBITDA (TTM)

EV / FCF (TTM)

Forward Air

~$2.6B

~8.5

~149

ArcBest

~$2.5B

~6.1

~26

Hub Group

~$3.0B

~9.0

~27

TFI International

~$12.5B

~10.5

~18

XPO

~$27B

~23

~84

Old Dominion

~$40B

~29

~44

At 8.5 times EBITDA, the company now trades at a modest premium to ArcBest, a cleaner, far less leveraged operator. That premium reflects neither optimism nor deal speculation. It reflects the market's judgment that the equity remains structurally subordinated to a heavy fixed claim, that the integration is still unproven at the cash generation level, and that the standalone path will take longer and involve more friction than the bull case assumed. The clean earners, Old Dominion, XPO, continue to trade at materially higher multiples because their cash conversion is predictable and their balance sheets give management room to move. Forward Air has neither of those qualities at present. The market knows it.

What the multiple does not reflect is what the business looks like if execution follows the trajectory already visible in the operating data. The expedited franchise posted a 10.1% EBITDA margin in Q4 2025, 350 basis points better year over year, with pricing discipline holding through a soft freight cycle. Omni stabilized through the year. Free cash flow turned positive at $17.5 million in 2025 after running at negative $100.9 million in 2024, an improvement of more than $118 million in a single year, driven by working capital normalization and integration cost reduction rather than revenue growth. That trajectory, if it continues, changes the cash generation picture materially.

A simple, disciplined scenario illustrates the payoff. Assume EBITDA recovers modestly to $340-360 million over the next two to three years, not a heroic freight cycle, just continued normalization of pricing and volume from the extended softness management has navigated throughout 2025. Assume working capital and integration costs normalize from their 2025 levels toward a more sustainable $20-30 million annual drag as the Omni platform stabilizes. On those assumptions, annual free cash flow available for debt reduction climbs toward $120-140 million per year. At that pace of repayment, net debt falls from approximately $1.68 billion today toward $1.40-1.44 billion over a two-year horizon. Leverage drops from roughly 5.5 times to approximately 3.9-4.0 times consolidated EBITDA, a range that places the business closer to where mid-range logistics operators are valued without a restructuring discount embedded in the price.

At that leverage, a multiple of 8.5-9.0 times $350 million EBITDA implies an enterprise value of approximately $2.975 to $3.15 billion. Subtract $1.42 billion in remaining net debt, and equity value lands in the range of $1.55-1.73 billion, or approximately $49-55 per share across the current share count of roughly 31.6 million. From a current price of approximately $16.50, that is a return profile of roughly 200% over two to three years, driven not by multiple expansion but by debt reduction and cash normalization alone.

That is not a guarantee. The market has already passed judgment on the standalone path and the judgment was not favorable. The question for an owner is whether the skepticism embedded in $16.50 is an accurate read of the business's structural limitations, or whether it is the market anchoring to what went wrong rather than what the operating data is beginning to show. The answer to that will determine whether the current price represents a dislocation in the process of resolving itself, or a discount that is exactly as deserved as it looks.

****Institutional Ownership and What It Signals****

The institutional positioning in Forward Air is not dominated by long-only transportation specialists accumulating patiently through a cycle. Instead, it reflects a mixed group of opportunistic, event-driven, and quantitative managers adjusting exposure around volatility.

Royce Associates holds approximately 282,000 shares valued near $7 million, with a recent increase of roughly 60.7%, adding about 106,000 shares. Royce's presence is notable because the firm historically focuses on smaller-cap value situations where balance sheet risk is visible but manageable. That increase suggests a willingness to treat the current dislocation as potentially cyclical rather than terminal.

Aristeia Capital, a special situations and credit-oriented investor, holds about 34,700 shares valued near $868,000 and increased its position by roughly 196.6%. That type of manager typically gravitates toward capital-structure complexity and post-transaction dislocations, which is consistent with Forward Air's current profile following the Omni integration.

Hudson Bay Capital Management reduced its position by approximately 39.7%, trimming nearly 78,700 shares, while Jefferies Financial Group reduced exposure by about 85.7%. These reductions suggest that not all institutional capital is willing to underwrite the integration and leverage path, particularly given freight-cycle softness.

On the other side, Tudor Investment initiated a position of approximately 98,900 shares, Jane Street Group increased its holdings by roughly 49.8% to 419,000 shares valued around $10.5 million, and Squarepoint Ops increased its exposure materially. Citadel Advisors also expanded its position significantly to roughly 310,000 shares valued near $7.7 million. These firms are generally more tactical and volatility-responsive in nature. Their involvement does not automatically signal conviction in long-term normalized earnings power; it signals engagement around liquidity, volatility, and potential corporate developments.

The pattern here is important. Ownership is dispersed among value managers, multi-strategy funds, and systematic firms. There is no visible concentration by a dominant long-horizon transportation allocator stepping in aggressively to anchor the shareholder base. That aligns with the valuation narrative: this is not yet a clean freight franchise trade; it is a restructuring and execution story that attracts opportunistic capital more than permanent capital.

For an owner underwriting the stock today, this mix of shareholders reinforces the central tension. If integration stabilizes and cash generation normalizes, the shareholder base could gradually rotate toward longer-duration holders. If execution disappoints, the current base is unlikely to defend the equity aggressively. The ownership profile therefore reflects the same conditional underwriting embedded in the price: stabilization first, rerating later.

****Risks that actually matter to an owner****

The first risk is that the equity is structurally subordinated to a heavier fixed claim than Forward Air historically carried. After the Omni transaction, the company's outcomes are now far more sensitive to interest expense, covenant headroom, and refinancing conditions than they were when the business was primarily a terminal-network operator. The Board's decision to amend the senior secured credit agreement and simultaneously reduce the revolving facility commitment is a useful tell: management and lenders both understood that leverage constraints had become a binding variable in the story. For an owner, this is not an abstract debt risk. It is the practical risk that operating softness can translate into limited flexibility at exactly the wrong point in the cycle, forcing asset sales, equity dilution, or strategic decisions on lender timelines rather than shareholder timelines.

The second risk is that integration is not simply a cost-cutting project, it is a customer retention project, and the two halves of this platform do not carry equal retention economics. The legacy expedited LTL franchise is deeply embedded. Its customers are time-sensitive shippers who stay because the service works, not because the price is lowest. The network maintained a claims ratio of approximately 0.1% through the integration period, and pricing held, revenue per hundredweight ex-fuel improved roughly 4.5% by mid-2025 despite a weak freight tape. That is what a sticky customer base looks like in a down cycle. Omni's forwarding and contract logistics customers operate in a different market. They benchmark rates across DHL, DSV, Kuehne+Nagel, and regional forwarders on a recurring basis. Switching costs are lower, relationships are more contractual, and the $50 million in revenue synergies originally premised on cross-selling Forward's expedited network into Omni's customer base remain largely unproven in the reported numbers, Omni's revenue ran materially below its pre-acquisition implied run rate through much of 2024 before stabilizing. The risk, concretely stated, is that management attention and operational resources get consumed by the more competitive, less sticky forwarding business at the expense of the service consistency that justifies the expedited franchise's pricing premium. Cost synergies will show up in EBITDA regardless. What will not show up automatically is the customer trust that sustains the more valuable half of the platform through a full cycle.

The third risk is that the acquisition brought with it a level of accounting fragility that can affect both perception and real capital allocation. The company has already recorded very large goodwill impairments tied to the Omni deal. While those charges are non-cash, they are not irrelevant. They are a signal that the economics initially underwritten for the acquired intangible value did not hold as expected. More importantly, repeated impairment and purchase-accounting volatility can obscure operating trends, complicate covenant optics, and keep investors anchored to what went wrong rather than what is now sustainable. In a situation where the market is already skeptical, that matters because credibility is part of valuation.

The fourth risk is that the strategic review has now run its course, and it produced nothing. A year-long process advised by Goldman Sachs, at one point attracting interest from at least five private equity firms, concluded without a transaction. Clearlake Capital and Apollo Global Management both withdrew from the bidding. Ancora Holdings, the activist that had most publicly demanded a sale, exited its position before the conclusion arrived. The stock dropped 14% in a single session when the outcome became clear, and that repricing removed the last piece of deal optionality that had been embedded in the equity. What this means for an owner is a specific change in the risk profile, not a generic one. The floor that a potential transaction provided, even an imperfect one, is gone. The equity now trades purely on what the standalone business can deliver. Management must demonstrate, without the backstop of a sale process, that the combined platform can produce free cash flow consistently, reduce leverage on a credible schedule, and retain the confidence of lenders whose covenants step down 25 basis points each quarter through the end of 2026. There is no alternative path being evaluated in parallel. There is no second bidder waiting in the wings.

That concentrates the risk in a way the previous framing did not capture. Execution disappointment no longer plays out against a backdrop where a transaction might absorb some of the downside. It plays out entirely through the equity, in a capital structure that leaves limited room for error. The standalone path is not inherently worse than a sale that might have occurred under leverage pressure and in a weak freight market, but it is now the only path, and owners underwriting the current price must be comfortable with that constraint explicitly, not as a residual consideration.

****Conclusion - What an Owner Is Actually Underwriting****

Forward Air today is not a simple freight cycle trade. It is a post-acquisition restructuring story whose outcome depends less on volume recovery and more on cash conversion discipline. The earnings trajectory shows a clear peak, a sharp reset, and early signs of stabilization. The valuation reflects skepticism, not optimism. At roughly an ordinary EBITDA multiple but with depressed free cash flow conversion, the market is effectively pricing the business as a platform that has yet to prove it can translate scale into equity-level returns.

For an owner, the question is straightforward. If the combined company can stabilize margins, demonstrate consistent free cash flow after interest, and gradually reduce leverage, today's price embeds a return profile that does not require multiple expansion to work. In that scenario, normalization alone can generate acceptable equity returns. If, however, integration remains operationally noisy and cash conversion remains thin relative to EBITDA, then the average-looking multiple becomes misleading, because the residual cash available to shareholders will remain constrained.

This is why the opportunity is conditional rather than obvious. The market is not ignoring a pristine franchise. It is discounting a complex one. The investment case rests on whether the post-merger platform matures into a stable logistics operator with credible deleveraging, or whether the past two years represent structural erosion rather than cyclical distortion.

The dislocation exists. Whether it becomes value depends on execution, not narrative.

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