The Global Transport Market
Is Quietly Rebalancing
At a Glance: Q1 2026 Market Signals by Region & Mode
Three years after the pandemic freight supercycle peaked, the global transport market is entering a new phase: one that defies easy characterisation. Rates are falling in some corridors while surging in others. Capacity is simultaneously abundant on certain sea lanes and critically tight in specific trucking markets. North America and Europe, often treated as a single bloc in global market commentary, are in fact operating on meaningfully different dynamics. Geopolitics, trade policy, and the Red Sea standoff continue to distort flows that would otherwise be normalising. What follows is our Q1 2026 read across all major modes, broken down by geography, and calibrated for the signals that will define Q2.
Ocean Freight: Oversupply Meets Geopolitical Uncertainty
Container Shipping · Global
Container shipping entered Q1 2026 in the grip of a structural overcapacity cycle. An estimated 10 million TEU of newbuild capacity is on order globally (roughly one-third of the active fleet), arriving into a market where demand growth is forecast at just 1–2% for the full year. The dynamics play out differently across each major trade corridor.
Rates Spike, Then Rapidly Unwind
Asia–US West Coast spot rates briefly touched $2,617 per FEU in early January on Lunar New Year front-loading and carrier GRIs. By late February the Freightos Baltic Index had retreated to $1,916 per FEU, a 21% month-on-month drop. Asia–US East Coast fared slightly better, slipping 10% to $3,457 per FEU. Base-case rates for full-year 2026 are forecast in the $2,200–$3,200 range, though geopolitical shock scenarios could push them above $9,500. The National Retail Federation projects March import volumes to dip 5% MoM, with Q1 overall 7% below year-ago levels.
Capacity Absorbing Red Sea Diversion Premium
The Asia–North Europe corridor remains distorted by continued diversions around the Cape of Good Hope. Spot rates stand around $3,200 per FEU, elevated relative to historical norms but now softening as capacity normalisations progress. The route extension adds 10–14 days to transit times, inflating effective capacity consumption and masking underlying supply surplus. If Suez access is restored in Q2, Europe-bound importers should prepare for a rapid rate correction. Carriers are actively deploying blank sailings to defend floors, but Maersk's first quarterly loss in years signals diminishing room to absorb further declines.
Short-Sea Stable; Port Efficiency Improving
Short-sea and feeder services within Europe remain stable, supported by consistent intra-European trade flows and gradual port productivity improvements at key hubs including Rotterdam, Hamburg, and Antwerp. There are no significant capacity constraints in intra-European container trades, with services operating at or near schedule reliability targets. The shift of some manufacturing from Asia to Eastern Europe (Poland, Czechia, and Romania) is generating incremental feeder demand but remains modest in scale at this stage.
The Variable That Overrides All Others
A durable ceasefire and restoration of Red Sea services would release significant effective capacity across both the Transpacific and Asia–Europe corridors simultaneously, accelerating the downward rate cycle. Conversely, any renewed Houthi activity would extend diversions and give carriers natural capacity relief. This single factor has a wider potential rate impact than any demand variable. Shippers on annual contracts should model both scenarios. Spot exposure on Asia–Europe without hedging mechanisms is a material risk heading into Q2.
The Gemini Cooperation between Maersk and Hapag-Lloyd (betting on schedule reliability as a differentiator) reflects a broader strategic pivot by carriers as rate competition intensifies. Shippers should expect carriers to continue protecting rate floors through blank sailings and service restructuring, even as market sentiment tilts bearish. Blank sailings, slow steaming, and idled vessels remain active levers across all alliances.
Road Freight: Two Markets, Two Very Different Stories
Full Truckload · Long-Haul Road
Road freight in Q1 2026 demands region-by-region analysis. The conditions facing a logistics manager in Dallas and one in Düsseldorf are almost diametrically opposed: the first navigating a capacity crunch driving rates to multi-year highs; the second operating in a structurally oversupplied market waiting for demand to recover. Understanding both is essential for multinationals managing cross-market supply chains.
A Supply Shock Driving Rates to 3-Year Highs
US truckload spot rates are running 18.7% above year-ago levels as of mid-February, the highest year-on-year growth rate since 2022. Critically, this is not a demand-led surge. It is a supply-side shock, driven by cumulative carrier exits throughout the 2023–2025 downcycle and a tightening regulatory environment removing qualified drivers from the pool. The Trump Administration's enforcement actions against non-domiciled CDL holders and drivers failing English-proficiency standards could effectively reduce industry capacity by 10–15%, according to multiple industry analysts. Load-to-truck ratios have reached four-year highs, and tender rejection rates are spiking. Spot rates have now crossed above contract rates for the first time in three years, a signal that the market is genuinely tightening, not merely sentiment-driven.
The Mexico cross-border corridor is a distinct bright spot. Nearshoring-driven manufacturing exports to the US are running close to 15% above year-ago volumes and growing. This is structural, not cyclical. It is creating compounding tightness on inbound US lanes from the southwest, where carriers are increasingly stretched between perishables peaks, general freight demand, and limited driver availability. Tariff policy remains the key macro wildcard: a pull-forward of imports triggered by trade policy shifts could spike demand sharply into an already-constrained capacity environment.
Structural Overcapacity, Localised Tightness, and a Regulatory Supercycle Ahead
European road freight tells a different story in Q1 2026. Long-haul FTL rates across core EU corridors remain broadly flat year-on-year, pressured by persistent overcapacity, particularly in Germany, Benelux, and Iberia, as carrier capacity added during the post-pandemic boom has not yet fully rationalised. Demand growth has been insufficient to absorb the surplus, with Germany's industrial output remaining subdued and French and Italian GDP growth tepid heading into 2026.
However, the European picture is far from uniform. Driver shortages in the UK, Germany, and Poland are creating genuine localised tightening, particularly in refrigerated and specialist transport segments. Brexit-related complexity continues to add cost and lead time friction on UK–EU cross-Channel movements, with Ro-Ro capacity at Dover, Calais, and through the Channel Tunnel running at elevated but manageable levels.
The medium-term regulatory picture for European road freight is more significant than the Q1 rate environment. The EU's Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), expanding emissions trading obligations for road hauliers, and the pending revision of the Eurovignette Directive are collectively building a compliance cost layer that will fundamentally reshape carrier economics by 2027–2028. Shippers with European road freight exposure should already be in conversation with carriers about sustainability commitments and green fuel surcharge structures. The regulatory transition is not a future scenario; it is in motion now.
Air Freight: Structural Demand Resilience With Rising Complexity
Global Air Cargo · All Regions
Air cargo has been the freight sector's consistent outperformer, and Q1 2026 is sustaining that momentum, even as the texture of demand and the operational landscape grow more complex. December 2025 delivered what analysts termed a "peak of peaks," with global demand up 11% year-on-year, the 14th consecutive month of double-digit growth. January 2026 held at 8% YoY volume growth as seasonal patterns normalised post-Lunar New Year.
Ex-Asia Demand Sustains the Global Market
Asia–Europe and intra-Asia lanes remain the primary growth engines. Ex-Asia cargo demand for FY2025 came in at +7% vs. 2024, with December surging +10% YoY. Asia's demand growth for 2026 is forecast at 4–5%, anchored in e-commerce exports, semiconductor shipments, and supply chain reconfiguration toward Southeast Asia. NE Asia to Europe is running at $5.28/kg, supported by high demand and ocean lane disruptions providing an alternative mode premium.
Disruption-Driven Rate Spikes; Regulatory Headwinds
Europe to North America spot rates spiked to $3.27/kg (+21% MoM), driven by winter storm disruptions, coordinated European labour actions, and Lunar New Year displacement effects. The EU's removal of low-value import duty exemptions on sub-€150 shipments will reshape AP–EU air cargo volumes, likely easing pressure on belly capacity and creating more space for B2B cargo on high-demand routes. European shippers should model a 10–15% volume moderation on inbound low-value e-commerce lanes.
Stable Demand; Transpacific Softening
US air cargo demand remains stable but transpacific volumes are softening outside of data centre, capital equipment, and semiconductor shipments (categories driven by AI infrastructure build-out rather than consumer goods cycles). South American perishables peaks (Chile's cherry and berry season, Valentine's flower exports) are consuming significant belly capacity on North–South routes, limiting space for general cargo into the US and Europe from that corridor.
Airspace Closure Crisis Rerouting Global Networks
Widespread airspace closures across Iran, Iraq, UAE, Qatar, and Israel have caused 3,400+ flights to be cancelled or diverted, including major cargo services. Multi-hub networks are replacing linear alternatives across most Gulf-transiting lanes. Shippers with direct transhipment dependency through Gulf hubs (DXB, DOH, AUH) should have contingency routing in place for Q2. Major carriers are reassessing their Gulf hub strategies in response to structural airspace uncertainty.
The structural outlook for air freight remains robust. The market, valued at USD 169.5 billion in 2026, is projected to reach USD 225 billion by 2031. Freighter capacity remains constrained by Boeing and Airbus delivery delays, with a structural shortage in the purpose-built freighter segment persisting into 2027–2028. Full-year 2026 demand growth is forecast at 2–4%, underpinned by pharmaceutical cold-chain requirements, high-value electronics, and the continued growth of cross-border e-commerce despite regulatory headwinds.
Rail & Intermodal: The Quiet Beneficiary of Modal Volatility
Global Rail Freight · North America & Europe
Rail freight rarely commands the attention of ocean or air, but Q1 2026 underscores why it deserves more. Stable pricing, improving service quality, and the tightening of truck capacity across North America are all accelerating intermodal conversion. The global rail freight market, estimated at $388.5 billion in 2026, is growing at a 4.5% CAGR through 2036, driven by economics, sustainability mandates, and significant infrastructure investment in both major markets.
Nearshoring is Rewriting Intermodal Demand
The nearshoring narrative is playing out directly on rail. Manufacturing traffic relocating from Asia to Mexico and then moving by rail to the Eastern US is emerging as a structural demand driver. Intermodal is now increasingly competitive on corridors above 500 miles that previously defaulted to long-haul truck. With spot truckload rates at multi-year highs, the pricing gap between intermodal and over-the-road is the widest it has been in three years. Q2 is an opportune window for shippers to evaluate conversions on eligible lanes before truck rates moderate or intermodal demand fully catches up.
Infrastructure Investment and Digital Rail Transformation
A £15 million investment in London's Barking Eurohub to restore regular cross-Channel intermodal freight is among the most visible signals of European rail's structural resurgence. The rollout of Digital Automatic Coupler (DAC) technology, with commercial testing scaled across networks in 2026, represents the most significant operational leap in European rail freight in decades, enabling dynamic train composition and real-time load data. Carbon compliance is adding a regulatory tailwind that makes rail economics increasingly compelling versus road on longer EU corridors. Containerised freight already commands a 51.8% share of European rail, and that proportion is growing.
Q1 2026 Intermodal Takeaway
The Widest Truck-vs-Rail Price Gap in Three Years
With US truckload spot rates at multi-year highs and intermodal pricing stable, the modal price gap is the widest it has been in three years. Shippers with lanes above 500 miles should be actively evaluating conversion opportunities. The window will narrow as the market normalises. Sygnal One's lane-level benchmarks help you compare truck and rail options in real time so you can act before the window closes.
Our Read: What the Divergence Signals and What to Do About It
Sygnal One Outlook · Q2 2026
The defining characteristic of Q1 2026 is divergence: not just between modes, but between geographies. European road freight is oversupplied while North American trucking faces its tightest capacity in years. Transpacific ocean rates are repricing downward under structural supply pressure while the Asia–Europe corridor trades at a significant geopolitical premium. Air freight sustains global demand momentum but faces cascading network disruptions from Middle East airspace closures. Rail quietly absorbs the volatility as shippers diversify modal risk.
What connects all four modes across all geographies is a shared sensitivity to three macro forces: US trade policy and tariff trajectories, which can reshape import volumes within weeks and simultaneously spike both ocean and road freight demand; Middle East geopolitics, which continue to distort the economics of the world's most strategically important trade lanes; and the pace of regulatory change in emissions compliance, labour policy, and trade rules, which is rewriting carrier cost structures across every mode on every continent.
For shippers and logistics operators, the implication is unambiguous: static annual rate agreements, single-mode strategies, and geographically siloed procurement are increasingly inadequate responses to a market operating at this level of complexity and velocity. The advantage in Q2 2026 belongs to those who can see across all of these variables simultaneously.
Key Signals to Watch: Q2 2026
- ! Red Sea Resolution or Escalation: Any durable change in the security environment reprices both ocean corridors within days. A Suez return accelerates the overcapacity downcycle on Asia–Europe and Transpacific; renewed conflict extends carrier pricing power. This is the single most impactful variable across ocean globally. Monitor weekly.
- ~ US Tariff Policy: A trade policy shift or legal reversal could trigger rapid import pull-forwards, simultaneously spiking both Transpacific ocean and US road freight demand: the most disruptive scenario for Q2. European shippers with US exposure should model this scenario in their contingency planning.
- E European Road Rate Recovery Timing: With demand subdued and capacity structurally oversupplied, European road rates remain shipper-favourable, but the regulatory cost curve (CBAM, ETS, Eurovignette revision) will begin to materially impact carrier pricing from 2027. Shippers should use Q2 to negotiate multi-year structures while leverage remains.
- + North American Intermodal Conversion Window: With truck rates at multi-year highs and intermodal pricing stable, Q2 is the widest modal price gap in three years. Shippers with lanes above 500 miles should be actively evaluating conversion opportunities. The window will narrow as the market normalises.
- ~ EU E-Commerce Duty Exemption Removal: The elimination of sub-€150 low-value import duty exemptions will reshape AP–EU air cargo volumes, easing belly capacity pressure and creating better space availability for B2B cargo. Watch for modal shifts to ocean for lower-value goods.
- + Mexico Nearshoring Corridor: Cross-border volumes up nearly 15% YoY and growing structurally. For shippers with Mexico-to-US manufacturing flows, now is the time to lock in dedicated capacity and intermodal contracts. Demand will continue to outstrip available services on this corridor.