J.B. Hunt Transport Services, Inc. (JBHT) is gearing up to report fourth-quarter earnings after the closing bell on Thursday, Jan. 15, and Wall Street is expecting solid improvement from the transportation giant.
Analysts are forecasting quarterly earnings of $1.81 per share for the Lowell, Arkansas-based company, which would mark a nice jump from the $1.53 per share reported in the same period last year. Revenue expectations are more modest, with the consensus estimate sitting at $3.12 billion compared to $3.15 billion a year earlier, according to data from Benzinga Pro.
The earnings report comes after J.B. Hunt made some shareholder-friendly moves back in October. On Oct. 22, the company announced a quarterly dividend and unveiled a fresh $1 billion share repurchase authorization, signaling management's confidence in the business and commitment to returning capital to investors.
Shares of J.B. Hunt closed Tuesday at $205.17, down 0.6% for the session.
What the Most Accurate Analysts Are Saying
In the lead-up to earnings, some of Wall Street's most reliable analysts have been adjusting their outlooks on the stock. Here's how the top-rated forecasters see things shaping up:
Evercore ISI Group analyst Vijay Kumar, who carries a 61% accuracy rate, maintained an Outperform rating on Jan. 13, 2026, while bumping the price target from $168 to $223.
JP Morgan analyst Brian Ossenbeck, boasting a 70% accuracy rate, kept his Overweight rating and lifted the price target from $176 to $211 on Jan. 12, 2026.
Bernstein analyst David Vernon stuck with a Market Perform rating on Jan. 9, 2026, but raised the price target from $158 to $195. This analyst has a 61% accuracy rate.
Goldman Sachs analyst Jordan Alliger, with a 71% accuracy rate, maintained a Neutral rating while increasing the price target from $169 to $187 on Jan. 8, 2026.
Perhaps most interesting was the move from Citigroup analyst Ariel Rosa, who holds an impressive 77% accuracy rate. Rosa downgraded the stock from Buy to Neutral on Jan. 8, 2026, but simultaneously raised the price target from $175 to $221. That's the kind of move that suggests the stock may have already captured much of its upside, even if the fundamentals remain sound.
The range of views and the recent flurry of target adjustments suggest analysts are recalibrating their expectations as the earnings date approaches, with most seeing continued strength but debating just how much room remains for the stock to run.




