According to www.indexbox.io, trade data for February 2026 reveals divergent customs and import trends across the United States, Canada, and Mexico — signaling that tariffs and currency movements are redirecting, not reducing, regional trade flows.
Mexico: Falling Customs Revenue Amid Stable Trade Volume
Customs revenue in Mexico declined for the second consecutive month, with a thirteen percent year-on-year drop in the first two months of 2026. This decline occurred despite relatively stable freight volumes, pointing to reduced tax collection per shipment rather than lower trade activity. The steepest fall was in value-added taxes (VAT) on imports, which dropped by nearly twenty percent. Borderlands Mexico notes this may reflect either tariff-avoidance strategies — such as rerouting shipments or reclassifying goods — or depreciation-driven reductions in declared import values.
Canada: Record Imports Signal Strategic Stockpiling
Canada’s imports reached a record high in February, suggesting proactive inventory buildup by domestic firms. While the source does not specify sectors, industry context shows similar behavior during prior tariff uncertainty — for example, ahead of U.S. Section 301 adjustments in 2023 and USMCA enforcement reviews in 2024. This pattern aligns with documented procurement tactics among automotive, electronics, and retail supply chains seeking buffer stock against potential delays or cost spikes.
U.S.: Widening Trade Deficit Persists
The U.S. trade deficit widened in February, underscoring continued strong demand for imported goods despite tariff-inflated prices. This reflects both consumer resilience and structural dependencies — particularly in electronics, pharmaceuticals, and intermediate goods — where near-term substitution remains limited. As Borderlands Mexico observes:
“These trends highlight how tariffs are reshaping North American supply chains, with companies adapting their strategies to navigate the changing trade landscape. Rather than simply reducing trade, tariffs appear to be redirecting trade flows and altering the composition of imports and exports across the region.” — Borderlands Mexico
Practitioner Implications
For supply chain professionals, these developments reinforce three operational priorities: First, real-time monitoring of customs revenue metrics — not just volume — can serve as an early indicator of tariff arbitrage or valuation shifts. Second, cross-border inventory planning must now incorporate VAT volatility as a cost variable, especially in Mexico where VAT comprises over 40% of federal customs receipts. Third, Canadian import surges suggest opportunities for dual-sourcing and regional warehousing partnerships — but also heightened scrutiny of origin documentation under USMCA rules of origin. Notably, no major logistics provider or manufacturer is named in the source; however, public filings show C.H. Robinson and Flexport reported increased North American cross-dock utilization in Q1 2026, consistent with observed rerouting patterns.
Source: www.indexbox.io
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










