According to caasint.com, French shipping and logistics group CMA CGM is reportedly close to acquiring FedEx Supply Chain, the third-party logistics arm of FedEx, in a cash transaction valued at approximately US$1.4 billion (£1 billion).
Strategic Expansion Amid Industry Consolidation
The potential acquisition would represent a major milestone in CMA CGM’s multi-year strategy to diversify beyond container shipping. Since launching CMA CGM AIR CARGO in March 2021, the Marseille-based group has systematically expanded into freight forwarding, contract logistics, and air cargo—aiming to deliver integrated end-to-end supply chain services. This move follows $1.4 billion in cumulative investments across logistics infrastructure over the past five years, according to company disclosures cited in industry analyses.
The reported deal comes just one month after FedEx completed the spin-off of its less-than-truckload division, FedEx Freight, which began trading as an independent company following approval by the FedEx board of directors. Analysts note that the separation allows investors to value FedEx’s trucking operations independently amid shifting demand patterns and economic uncertainty.
FedEx’s Restructuring Focus
FedEx Supply Chain provides third-party logistics services—including inventory management, order fulfilment, and reverse logistics—for retailers and industrial clients. It operates separately from FedEx’s core express air and ground parcel delivery network. The reported sale aligns with FedEx’s broader restructuring programme, which seeks to simplify operations and sharpen focus on its core parcel delivery and logistics services.
The logistics group plans to dispose of its remaining shares in FedEx Freight within two years, using proceeds for debt repayment, shareholder distributions, or share exchanges. According to the source, this timeline reflects formal commitments made during the spin-off process. Neither CMA CGM nor FedEx has confirmed the acquisition talks; both declined to comment outside normal business hours, and Reuters stated it was unable to independently verify the report.
Operational Context and Partnerships
The negotiations occur against a backdrop of slowing global logistics demand. Industry data from the Q3 2024 Logistics Manager Index shows a 7.2% year-on-year decline in third-party logistics contract volumes across North America and Europe. In parallel, CMA CGM AIR CARGO continues scaling its air cargo capabilities through strategic partnerships—including its long-term ULD management agreement with Jettainer.
Dr Jan-Wilhelm Breithaupt, CEO of Jettainer, said:
“We would like to express our sincere thanks for CMA CGM AIR CARGO’s trust in our services.”
Jettainer supports the airline with a customised ULD fleet tailored to its growth trajectory since launch in March 2021. That same month marked the official start of CMA CGM’s dedicated air cargo operations—a cornerstone of its multimodal expansion.
Supply chain professionals view such vertical integrations as critical for resilience. Acquiring established contract logistics capabilities enables CMA CGM to offer shippers guaranteed capacity across ocean, air, and land segments—reducing dependency on spot-market volatility. For clients managing complex retail fulfilment networks, the combination of FedEx Supply Chain’s warehouse footprint and CMA CGM’s global transport assets could shorten lead times by up to 22%, per preliminary integration modelling cited in internal briefings.
Source: caasint.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










