66% of logistics pros say talent quality β not cost β is the #1 factor in choosing a nearshore partner. Rapido's integration model explains why that's the right question to be asking.
Plus, a carrier pleading guilty to mob money laundering while still FMCSA-active, Iran's first post-ceasefire attack and what it means for diesel surcharges, FedEx Freight's first earnings as a standalone company, and more in today's newsletter.
Freight brokers are measuring their inboxes wrong. Most inbound email is monitoring, not work. And the longtail categories that look like noise are costing real margin. Here's how to audit what's actually in your inbox, and why it matters in 2026's margin-first market.
n a significant shift for the logistics sector, A.P. Moller-Maersk, a leading indicator of global trade health, is set to reduce its workforce by over 10,000 positions as it navigates through post-pandemic market adjustments and a noticeable downturn in seaborne trade. With a third-quarter profit drop to $521 million from $8.88 billion the previous year, Maersk's decision underscores the broader industry's struggle with overcapacity and plummeting freight ratesβa staggering 58% decline year-over-year.
The end of the cargo boom has led to a surplus of ships and a decline in big-ticket item shipments, which has not only affected Maersk but also led to a slide in shares for industry players such as Hapag Lloyd. The Ocean division, traditionally a profit-maker, posted a quarterly loss for the first time in years. This stark reversal from pandemic-driven highs has prompted Maersk to aim for savings of $600 million in the coming year, partly through workforce reductions, signaling a "reset of the baseline," as CEO Vincent Clerc put it, rather than a temporary cutback.
Amidst this backdrop, the 2M alliance with MSC has been halted, and with container demand projected to grow by just 2% against a fleet growth of 6%, the industry braces for a continued glut of ships.
Analysts predict a challenging 2024, with an overhang lasting well into 2025.
Last year, so many folks said the freight slowdown was a reversion to the mean.
Itβs not.
We are experiencing one of the sharpest downturns in history caused by a massive capacity build and its going to take a while to burn it all off. https://t.co/hk4P1qqrIy
Iβm Adriana, a writer and editor at FreightCaviar. Iβve covered everything from freight tech to industry lawsuits and market shifts, helping scale us to almost 14K subscribers. My goal: to make logistics stories digestible, clear, and fun to read.
Plus, a carrier pleading guilty to mob money laundering while still FMCSA-active, Iran's first post-ceasefire attack and what it means for diesel surcharges, FedEx Freight's first earnings as a standalone company, and more in today's newsletter.
Plus, the offshore dispatchers your safety score can't catch, why Hormuz stays closed even after the war ends, what Triumph Financial's invoice volumes say about where freight is headed, and more.
Plus, Super Ego fires back at 60 Minutes, China tells Maersk and MSC to exit Panama ports, New York loses $73.5 million over non-domiciled CDLs β and more in today's newsletter.
Plus, diesel's rising price streak finally snaps, a 13-year shipper relationship ends in a $726K lawsuit, Congress takes a real swing at cargo theft, and more in today's newsletter.
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