According to wwd.com, the global logistics landscape in 2026 is defined by persistent freight market volatility, tariff-driven compliance complexity, and escalating geopolitical friction over critical maritime infrastructure — notably the Panama Canal.
Trucking Industry Under Prolonged Pressure
A freight recession stretching back to 2022 continues to constrain the U.S. trucking sector. Carriers face weak demand and shrinking capacity, with recovery signals only beginning to emerge from late-2025 trends. This extended downturn has forced structural adjustments across regional and national fleets, impacting spot rates, driver retention, and equipment utilization.
Ocean Freight Slump Triggers Corporate Restructuring
Maersk is cutting about 1,000 jobs, or nearly 17 percent of its roughly 6,000 corporate positions, as the ocean carrier prepares for further freight rate decline and potential ripple effects from a broader Red Sea return. The move supports cost reductions of $180 million and reflects industry-wide concerns over supply overcapacity and cratering rates.
Tariff Compliance Enters a New Era
A second wave of tariff dominance has overtaken America’s economy after nearly a century, according to wwd.com. Customs processes now require heightened vigilance, with practitioners needing to adapt to rapidly shifting classification rules, origin verification protocols, and documentation standards tied to evolving trade policy.
Panama Canal Port Dispute Escalates Geopolitically
Panama Ports Company — operator of the Balboa and Cristóbal ports — has initiated arbitration proceedings seeking “extensive damages” after Panama’s Supreme Court ruled that CK Hutchison’s contract to operate two Panama Canal-adjacent ports is unconstitutional. China’s Hong Kong and Macau affairs office issued a scathing criticism of the ruling, calling it “utterly ridiculous,” intensifying international rhetoric around control and access to strategic maritime gateways.
Reverse Logistics and Last-Mile Expectations Intensify
Seventy-nine percent of online shoppers will abandon a purchase if the return policy does not meet their expectations. As return rates remain elevated, margins compress and fraud tactics grow more sophisticated, retailers are being forced to rethink how reverse logistics fits into their broader business strategy. Concurrently, last-mile delivery expectations have reset: speed at scale is now table stakes, driven by consumer demand for always-on fulfillment — a pressure point for both carriers and retailers.
Market Uncertainty Remains the Default
Xeneta’s Peter Sand notes that freight markets brace for another year of uncertainty, with carriers and shippers navigating volatile rates, shifting trade lanes, and an uneven path back to normalcy. This environment demands greater scenario planning, dynamic contracting, and real-time visibility tools — especially for cross-border flows exposed to regulatory, geographic, and infrastructural risk.
Source: wwd.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










