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Weekly Freight Report: April 17, 2026

April 17th, 2026

 

Freight Rates Surge to Two-Year High Amid Diesel Price Spike

Freight Rates Surge to Two-Year High Amid Diesel Price Spike

Truckload, LTL, and parcel rates have reached their highest levels since early 2024, driven by diesel holding at $5.61 per gallon and persistent capacity constraints rather than a surge in demand. The combination is particularly punishing for shippers: cost pressures typically ease when freight volume is soft, but this cycle is supply-side driven, meaning relief will be slow even if oil prices eventually decline. Importers managing domestic distribution legs should budget for continued rate pressure through at least the end of the second quarter.

Strait of Hormuz Collapse Triggers Largest Oil Supply Disruption in History

Strait of Hormuz Collapse Triggers Largest Oil Supply Disruption in History

The International Energy Agency described the near-shutdown of tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz as the single most important variable in global energy markets. The U.S. naval blockade has effectively halted Iran-linked vessel movements, and the full ripple effect on shipping costs has not yet reached its peak. Importers moving goods from the Gulf region or relying on Middle East routing for any portion of their supply chain should expect ongoing surcharges and delays. Companies with Asia-to-Europe lanes are already absorbing the rerouting impact.

Shippers Weigh Unusual Routes as High Air Cargo Rates, Ocean Gridlock Persist

Shippers Weigh Unusual Routes as High Air Cargo Rates, Ocean Gridlock Persist

With Middle East air hubs disrupted, some shippers of electronics and fast-moving consumer goods from Asia to Europe are now routing cargo by ship and plane through Los Angeles to access lower rates. While this workaround reduces exposure to the Middle East premium, it adds transit time and cost. Ocean gridlock is simultaneously reducing network flexibility across major trade lanes, leaving importers and exporters with fewer options and less buffer when shipments run behind.

U.S. Set to Launch Tariff Refund System on April 20

U.S. Set to Launch Tariff Refund System on April 20

U.S. Customs and Border Protection will launch its Consolidated Administration and Processing of Entries system this Sunday, opening the first pathway for importers to claim refunds on tariffs the Supreme Court ruled invalid. More than 330,000 importers paid duties on 53 million shipments subject to those tariffs. The system goes live in phases, starting with the most recent and straightforward import entries.

Trump's Refund Rollout Leaves Many Out for Now

Trump's Refund Rollout Leaves Many Out for Now

Trade lawyers are warning that the initial CAPE rollout is narrower than it appears. In the first phase, only the original importer of record or the customs broker who filed the entry can submit a claim. Small importers who paid tariffs indirectly through a supplier or freight forwarder will not be eligible right away. If your company paid elevated duties through a third party, the refund may take additional phases to become accessible. Monitor CBP guidance closely through the end of April.

Trump's Tariffs Dealt Economic Blows in All 50 States

Trump's Tariffs Dealt Economic Blows in All 50 States

Federal Reserve research confirms that U.S. businesses and consumers are absorbing approximately 90 percent of tariff costs, with agricultural and coastal export states bearing the heaviest impact. For importers and exporters, this analysis reinforces what many have already experienced: the cost pass-through to end buyers has limits, which means the burden is increasingly landing on supply chain operators. Companies managing freight in and out of export-heavy regions should factor this into volume forecasting for the remainder of 2026.

2026-04-17T09:12:29+00:00April 17th, 2026|Shipping News|
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