04/16/2025
🚨 Imports Crashed This Month — Here’s What Truckers Should Know 📉
You know that feeling when you’re rollin’ good one month and then the next, the loads just… vanish? Yeah — that’s kinda what’s happening to the whole freight market right now. And it’s got a lot to do with tariffs and trade wars heating up again. Lets break it down.
📦 Big Surge, Then a Sudden Stop
Earlier this year — Q1 — things were looking hot. Importers were moving freight like crazy. March alone saw over 2.38 million containers hit our ports — third biggest March ever. Why? Folks were rushing to get goods in before new tariffs kicked in.
But then came April... and the brakes slammed HARD.
🚢 U.S. import bookings fell 64%
📦 Container loads dropped 49%
🇨🇳 Imports from China plunged 64%
🔄 Even our exports to China went down 36%
Why the free fall? Tariffs. On April 4, the U.S. raised tariffs big-time — and by the next day, China hit back. Boom — trade war 2.0.
🔍 Retailers Are Shifting Gears
Big players like Amazon, Nike, and Best Buy? They’re canceling shipments, switching suppliers, and basically holding their breath. A lot of freight has just... paused.
Word is, imports could drop another 20% in the second half of 2025. And if you’re a carrier or small fleet, that could mean fewer loads from ports and distribution centers.
🚛 So What Does This Mean for Us?
🚛 Dry Van — Feeling the Hit First
Dry van is usually the first to react to import shifts, because so much of it ties directly to consumer goods — electronics, clothing, furniture, appliances, you name it.
📉 What to expect:
Fewer port loads = fewer retail and warehouse re-supplies.
Spot rates likely to dip, especially on port-to-DC lanes and outbound from key import hubs (LA, Long Beach, Savannah, NJ).
🧊 Re**er — Slightly Insulated (For Now)
Re**er runs aren’t as closely tied to imported goods. Food, produce, and pharmaceuticals still move — tariff war or not.
🍓 What to expect:
Spring produce season is here, which helps offset the drop in dry imports.
Some retail re**er freight might get shaky (imported meats, specialty foods), but domestic demand stays strong.
Rates should hold steady, maybe even bump up on seasonal lanes (think: CA → Midwest).
💡 Watch this: If inflation creeps up again due to tariffs, consumers may pull back spending — even on food. That could slow re**er rates by late summer.
⚠️ Bottom Line: Freight's Gonna Get Weird
The import collapse isn’t just a port problem. It’ll creep into warehouses, distribution centers, and eventually the whole freight ecosystem.