According to www.msn.com, French container shipping company CMA CGM Group announced it will acquire FedEx Supply Chain, the third-party logistics subsidiary of FedEx, for $1.4 billion.
Strategic Expansion in North America
The acquisition is expected to close later this year, subject to regulatory approvals. It will triple the size of CMA CGM’s logistics arm, CEVA Logistics, and significantly expand its footprint as a contract logistics provider across North America. According to the report, CMA CGM pledged in 2025 to invest $20 billion in U.S. warehousing, air cargo, and logistics infrastructure over four years — a commitment directly tied to scaling its end-to-end capabilities beyond ocean transport.
The deal positions CMA CGM to offer integrated solutions including warehousing, distribution, and fulfillment — services currently managed by FedEx Supply Chain for clients across multiple sectors. The unit’s operations are headquartered in Memphis, Tennessee, where FedEx is also based. This geographic alignment supports seamless integration with existing U.S. infrastructure while reinforcing CMA CGM’s stated objective to strengthen supply chain resilience on the continent.
Commercial Agreements and Revenue Projections
As part of the transaction, FedEx and CMA CGM intend to enter into multiyear air and ocean freight commercial agreements. These accords are expected to be finalized in phases between 2026 and 2028. According to the source, the combined air and ocean freight agreements are projected to generate $3.5 billion in revenue for CMA CGM over the next decade.
This structured commercial rollout reflects deliberate sequencing: the logistics asset transfer precedes long-term service contracts, allowing operational harmonization before volume ramp-up. The phased implementation mitigates execution risk while enabling both parties to align IT systems, compliance frameworks, and performance metrics incrementally — a practical consideration for supply chain professionals managing complex cross-enterprise integrations.
Rationale and Industry Context
Rodolphe Saadé, CEO of CMA CGM Group, stated the deal will “
reinforce our long-term commitment to investing in the United States and supporting the resilience and efficiency of its supply chain.
” This strategic pivot follows years of acquisitions by the Marseille-based carrier — now the world’s third-largest container line — across logistics, ports, terminals, and air cargo. The move also serves to reduce exposure to geopolitical volatility, including trade policies associated with former U.S. President Donald Trump.
Meanwhile, FedEx is streamlining its portfolio to focus on higher-margin business-to-business deliveries in healthcare, automotive, aerospace, and data center industries. It completed the spinoff of FedEx Freight — which handles heavy and bulky shipments — on June 1. As Raj Subramaniam, CEO of FedEx, said in the official statement: “
By streamlining our portfolio, FedEx is better positioned to execute our long-term vision and continue to serve as the heartbeat of the industrial economy.
” The divestiture of FedEx Supply Chain marks the latest in a series of portfolio recalibrations by major logistics players, mirroring similar moves by UPS and DHL to sharpen core delivery and express competencies.
Source: msn.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










