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Logistics & Supply Chain · Daily Brief
·5 min read
ByJoseph Lancaster, Editor
Signal
Stories
Bunker fuel prices have more than doubled in key hubs since the Middle East war began six weeks ago, according to the Journal of Commerce. Fuel now represents nearly 30% of airline operating costs, prompting Cathay Pacific to cut flights and reduce capacity. The surge is adding a new variable to trans-Pacific service contract negotiations as supply scarcity worsens alongside rising energy costs. Packaging supply chains are also being upended, with manufacturers saying full reshoring of sourcing to the U.S. is 'nearly impossible.' (Sources: Journal of Commerce, Supply Chain Dive)
Impact · Shippers negotiating trans-Pacific contracts face a radically different cost environment than existed at the start of the year. Fuel surcharges will rise across ocean, air, and trucking modes. Air cargo capacity reductions by carriers like Cathay Pacific will tighten space and push rates higher, particularly on Asia-origin lanes. Cold chain operators already facing California TRU emissions rules now confront diesel cost spikes as well.
Action · Review all fuel surcharge mechanisms in current and pending contracts. If your BAF formulas are pegged to indices that lag spot markets, negotiate interim adjustments or cap exposure. Identify alternative routing through hubs with lower bunker costs and assess whether shifting volume to rail or nearshore sourcing can mitigate exposure.
BNSF's CEO publicly warned that a merged Union Pacific and Norfolk Southern would command approximately 50% of all U.S. rail freight volume, according to FreightWaves. Separately, Norfolk Southern announced a partnership with Jaguar Transport Holdings to handle local switching operations at a Georgia facility supporting truck-to-rail shippers, signaling continued freight growth efforts even as the merger review proceeds. (Sources: FreightWaves, Supply Chain Dive)
Impact · A 50% market share concentration in rail would fundamentally alter shipper leverage in rate negotiations and service commitments. Even if regulators block the deal, the competitive signaling matters — rival railroads are already positioning defensively. Shippers heavily reliant on rail, particularly for bulk commodities and intermodal, should anticipate that regulatory review will be prolonged and contentious, creating uncertainty in long-term capacity planning.
Action · Map your rail exposure by carrier and corridor. If significant volume moves on UP or NS lanes, begin scenario planning for both merger approval and rejection outcomes. Engage your procurement team on diversifying modal options for key lanes before competitive dynamics shift further.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced the first wave of IEEPA tariff refunds will begin April 20, following the February Supreme Court decision that invalidated tariffs on most U.S. trading partners, per the Journal of Commerce. CBP will prioritize unliquidated entries in the initial refund phase. (Source: Journal of Commerce)
Impact · Importers who paid IEEPA-based duties on unliquidated entries are first in line for cash recovery, potentially freeing significant working capital. However, the phased rollout means companies with liquidated entries face longer waits. Customs brokers and trade compliance teams will need to verify entry status and ensure documentation supports refund claims.
Action · Audit all entries subject to IEEPA tariffs immediately. Identify which remain unliquidated and confirm documentation is complete. Coordinate with your customs broker to ensure you are positioned for the April 20 first wave. Begin modeling the cash flow impact of expected refunds on Q2 budgets.
The proposed $4.2 billion Hapag-Lloyd acquisition of Zim still requires Israeli government approval but represents a significant consolidation move in container shipping absent the financial distress that drove previous merger cycles, according to the Journal of Commerce. The deal could trigger further M&A among carriers. (Source: Journal of Commerce)
Impact · Further ocean carrier consolidation reduces shipper optionality and could concentrate pricing power among fewer mega-carriers, particularly on secondary trade lanes where Zim has been a competitive alternative. Alliance structures may also shift. Combined with the UP-NS rail merger proposal, shippers face a macro trend of fewer, larger transportation providers across modes.
Action · Evaluate your carrier diversification strategy. If Zim is a meaningful part of your ocean portfolio, identify alternative carriers now for lanes where the combined entity might reduce competition. Monitor Israeli regulatory proceedings and alliance restructuring announcements over the next 60 days.
Mexico's foreign direct investment ranking has risen in 2026, driven by nearshoring trends tied to U.S. supply chain diversification, according to FreightWaves. The FDI surge is creating cross-border freight opportunities as manufacturers shift production closer to U.S. markets. (Source: FreightWaves)
Impact · Rising FDI into Mexico increases demand for cross-border trucking, rail intermodal, and warehouse capacity along the U.S.-Mexico corridor. Laredo, El Paso, and other border crossings will see growing congestion pressure. Logistics providers with established Mexico operations gain a competitive advantage as new manufacturing capacity comes online.
Action · Assess your cross-border capabilities and capacity commitments at key border crossings. If you serve manufacturing clients considering nearshoring, proactively develop Mexico logistics solutions. Monitor border crossing wait times and invest in C-TPAT or trusted trader programs to expedite flows.
Pattern
PATTERN — Watch these indicators over the next 30-90 days: (1) Bunker fuel indices at Singapore, Rotterdam, and Houston — if prices remain elevated or climb further, expect a second round of emergency fuel surcharges across ocean and air by late May. (2) The Surface Transportation Board's response to the UP-NS merger filing — any procedural timeline or hearing schedule will signal how seriously regulators are engaging. BNSF's public opposition suggests a contested review. (3) CBP refund processing velocity after April 20 — the speed and scale of IEEPA refunds will indicate whether importers see meaningful Q2 cash flow relief or face bureaucratic delays. (4) Israeli government review of the Hapag-Zim deal — approval or conditions imposed will set the tone for whether other carriers pursue acquisitions. (5) Mexico cross-border truck volumes at Laredo and other gateways — sustained month-over-month increases confirm nearshoring is translating into real freight demand, not just headlines. (6) California CARB enforcement actions on diesel TRU compliance at warehouses — early enforcement patterns will preview how aggressively the state pursues violators and what penalties look like.
Sources
The Intelligence Layer