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US Trade Slowdown: Holiday Shipping Faces Major Headwinds

by Priya Shah – Business Editor

Slowing Trade & Declining Freight Volumes Signal Concerns for Peak Season

Recent data ‌indicates a ​slowdown in North⁤ American trade,‍ impacting freight volumes and raising concerns for the typically⁤ busy peak season. While container imports reached‌ a record high in July, spurred by a pause in tariffs, the ⁢momentum quickly faded.

Honour Lane reported a “swift decline‌ and slow recovery” following the July peak, noting a gradual increase in manufacturing even before the Chinese Golden Week. Many customers have reported building inventory in the U.S. and ​temporarily halting shipments.‍ Ocean carriers have responded by⁤ announcing 35 blank sailings for ⁣October, including the suspension of an Asia too U.S.service ‌route by the ⁤ONE alliance (CMA CGM,COSCO,Evergreen,and⁤ OOCL) between Chinese ports and ⁤Long ​Beach‌ and Oakland,California,starting in early September. This reduction in ship capacity is contributing to⁢ rising ocean freight rates, with ‍a $1,000‌ general rate increase (GRI)​ per ⁢forty-foot container implemented‍ on September 15th.

According to Sea-Intelligence,North America is the only region to ‌experience‌ negative freight‍ container‌ volume growth during the trade war period.Noah Hoffman, Vice President​ of North American Surface Transportation for C.H. Robinson, explained that the‌ ocean⁣ peak​ season, typically running from⁢ July through October, “peaked in July” this year. The ⁤National Retail Federation’s‍ (NRF) Global Port tracker, produced with Hackett Associates, forecasts a “steady decline” in import cargo volume at major U.S. container ports for the remainder of ‌the year after near-record‍ numbers ⁢during the summer.

The ⁣NRF attributes the​ downturn to escalating tariffs,‌ stating ‍that⁣ “reciprocal tariffs across‌ the globe” ⁤and “more and‌ more sectoral tariffs impacting a wider scope of products” are creating‌ uncertainty. Retailers have increased inventory ahead of ‍tariff hikes, but the ⁣unpredictable trade policy hinders ⁤long-term planning.

Ben Hackett, founder of Hackett Associates, described the trade outlook for the final⁣ months of the year as “not optimistic.”

The⁤ Logistics Managers’ Index (LMI) August inventory data suggests the decrease in freight volumes is impacting related industries like ‌rail, trucking,‍ and ⁤warehousing. Zachary Rogers, an associate‍ professor of supply chain management at‌ Colorado State University and LMI member, noted that increased freight capacity in ⁤August indicates a lack ​of available ​freight to move, perhaps due to pulled-forward inventories and an overall reduction in goods flow.

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