According to www.marketscale.com, U.S. shipping and inventory costs fell to 7.8% of GDP in 2025, yet supply chain leaders—including Ford Motor—are abandoning the notion of returning to pre-pandemic stability, citing persistent volatility as a structural condition rather than a temporary disruption.
Ongoing volatility reshapes investment priorities
Doug Cantriel, head of North American transportation and modernization at Ford Motor, stated during a panel tied to the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals’ annual State of Logistics Report:
“Normalcy in global supply chains is simply not returning.” — Doug Cantriel, head of North American transportation and modernization at Ford Motor
This posture reflects a broader industry pivot: large industrial operators are now designing networks that assume disruption as the baseline—not the exception.
That shift carries measurable financial consequences. Flexible logistics networks require higher fixed costs—buffer inventory, multi-carrier qualification, and parallel sourcing channels all consume capital previously eliminated by efficiency-driven procurement programs. According to the Wall Street Journal’s reporting on the State of Logistics Report, the 7.8% GDP share for logistics in 2025 masks underlying cost pressures, particularly as ocean container rates rose again in 2026.
Ocean rates climb amid geopolitical friction
Even with the improved 2025 GDP metric, ocean freight rates rebounded in early 2026. The Wall Street Journal cited the conflict in Iran and ongoing trade negotiations as key drivers pushing shippers toward routing flexibility over lowest-cost point-to-point contracts.
This has shortened rate forecasting windows and increased exposure to the spot market. In response, many large shippers have diversified port calls, added contract carriers as backups, and boosted investments in visibility tooling—all costly measures not fully captured in headline logistics-cost-to-GDP figures.
India’s freight expansion accelerates global reconfiguration
While U.S. operators reconfigure domestic networks, India’s freight infrastructure is expanding rapidly. Indian rail freight reached 142 million tonnes in June 2026, a 4% year-over-year increase, according to Logistics Outlook. That growth coincides with government investment: Indian Railways committed ₹499 crore to a rail-doubling project in Bihar—a corridor identified as one of the country’s most congested freight routes.
On the coast, Adani Ports sold a 49% equity stake in Vizhinjam Port to Terminal Investment Limited (TiL), the port arm of Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC), for $1.397 billion. Located at India’s southern tip near major east-west shipping lanes, Vizhinjam is designed as a deepwater transshipment hub capable of accommodating the world’s largest container vessels.
Fleet diversification adds strategic complexity
Regional maritime capacity is also scaling up. SHM Global CEO Mohammed Hajee, in an interview published by Logistics Outlook, outlined plans to expand into new markets and build larger vessels—part of broader momentum in South Asian shipbuilding and fleet investment.
Larger regional vessels improve per-unit freight economics but introduce risk if port infrastructure or berth availability lags vessel size growth. As Ford publicly confirms, volatility is no longer treated as transient—it is now embedded in medium-term planning frameworks across procurement, carrier contracting, and infrastructure lock-in decisions.
Operational implications for supply chain teams
The convergence of these trends signals a structural recalibration—not a cyclical correction. For operations and procurement leaders, the central question has shifted from “when will conditions stabilize?” to “which infrastructure investments, carrier partnerships, and routing architectures deliver resilience over the medium term?”
- Revisit carrier contracts assuming rate stability: ocean spot rates rose in 2026, even as the annual logistics cost metric improved—suggesting the 7.8% GDP figure understates current exposure.
- Evaluate Vizhinjam Port’s role in India-origin routing strategies, especially for cargo currently connecting through Colombo or Singapore, given TiL’s 49% ownership stake and MSC’s direct routing incentive.
- Model the Bihar rail-doubling project’s timeline into sourcing plans for eastern Indian manufacturers; improved inland connectivity could alter landed-cost calculations once capacity comes online in 2026.
- Build network flexibility as a line-item budget—not an exception reserve—as confirmed by Ford’s public stance and industry-wide adoption of volatility-as-baseline planning.
Source: marketscale.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










