According to www.globenewswire.com, the Q1 2026 ITS Logistics U.S. Distribution and Fulfillment Index — powered by Cresa — reveals that rising transportation costs are straining lean inventory strategies across North American supply chains. The Logistics Managers’ Index (LMI) reached 65.7 in March — its highest level driven primarily by Transportation Prices — while Transportation Capacity contracted to 39.2. This represents the widest price-to-capacity inversion since the peak of the COVID freight cycle.
Geopolitical Shockwaves Amplify Cost Pressures
The escalation of the U.S.-Iran conflict and the functional closure of the Strait of Hormuz removed 20% of global oil supply, triggering energy price surges that cascaded into freight and warehousing operating expenses. As a result, the LMI Transportation sub-index jumped from 71.4 in January to 89.4 in March — a 25% increase in a single quarter. Concurrently, the Producer Price Index for Warehousing and Storage continued its multi-quarter upward trend, fueled by fuel prices, labor costs, and insurance burdens.
Inventory Behavior Remains Structurally Lean
Although LMI Inventory Levels rebounded meaningfully from December’s all-time low reading of 35.1, they remain several points below March levels for both 2024 and 2025. Inventory Costs accelerated to 76.2 during the quarter as fuel and carrying costs simultaneously entered the inventory equation. Meanwhile, consumer demand held steady despite deteriorating sentiment: the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index fell to 53.3 in March, yet March advance retail sales rose 1.7% month-over-month to $752.1 billion, with total Q1 sales up 3.7% year-over-year.
Industrial Real Estate Tightens Amid Construction Slowdown
Commercial real estate data from Cresa shows U.S. industrial vacancy at 7.51% on a 19.3-billion-square-foot inventory base. Annual rent growth re-accelerated to 1.3%, while only 334 million square feet is under construction — equal to 1.73% of existing inventory and the tightest supply pipeline in nearly a decade. Market-level tightness varied: Chicago registered 5.37% vacancy; Columbus led on rent growth at 5.90%; Dallas/Fort Worth stood at 8.7%.
“Cheap Velocity” vs. “Durable Velocity”
“Q1 exposed the difference between what we call ‘cheap velocity’ and ‘durable velocity.’ Cheap velocity is when loose, affordable freight markets make thin inventory work — you can replenish quickly because transportation is abundant. That assumption collapsed in March. Durable velocity is built differently: on replenishment capability, downstream spatial positioning, and carrier depth that doesn’t require favorable freight conditions to function.” — Ryan Martin, President of Distribution and Fulfillment for ITS Logistics
Five Strategic Priorities for 2026
- Reposition Inventory Downstream: Proximity to end markets proved critical amid ongoing transportation capacity contractions.
- Protect Transportation Optionality: Contract-over-spot orientation has become a structural requirement, not a preference, as LMI forecasts for Transportation Prices approach all-time highs.
- Invest in Replenishment Infrastructure: Closing the gap between lean inventory and lean execution is essential to leverage this strategy profitably in 2026.
- Act on Industrial Real Estate Now: Power-ready, parcel-capable space is tightening rapidly as the construction pipeline hits its leanest level in nearly a decade.
- Accelerate Labor Productivity Investment: With wage floors now structural, throughput per labor hour is the primary margin lever available to operators in 2026.
Source: www.globenewswire.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










