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Every year, supply chain teams expect the same rhythm once Lunar New Year ends. Production resumes gradually, volumes rebuild and carriers begin lowering prices to secure utilization. The weeks that follow are normally defined by softer demand and competitive discounting.
In 2026, that expectation has not materialized.
Major liners have moved quickly to publish new FAK levels, general rate increases and peak season surcharges across Asia outbound trades. Rather than allowing the market to drift, they are signaling a clear intent to defend price levels even during what should be a lull.
This stance is not the result of a sudden surge in cargo. Global demand indicators remain uneven and additional vessels continue to enter the fleet. What has changed is carrier strategy. Blank sailings, service redesign and disciplined pricing are being used to prevent the erosion that typically follows the holiday period.
Diverging Service Models
The Asia-Europe trade offers the clearest example of how this new environment works. Shippers are now confronted with diverging service models that present different balances between speed and exposure. Some major alliances are testing increased use of the Suez corridor, marketing reduced transit time and schedule reliability. Conversely, other global carriers are keeping many rotations via the Cape of Good Hope, where longer voyages help absorb surplus capacity while maintaining network breadth.
These approaches create meaningful choice but also greater complexity. Selecting a carrier is no longer just about comparing freight rates; it involves assessing how much uncertainty a supply chain can tolerate and what value should be placed on earlier arrival.
Assertive Growth in Emerging Markets
On routes to Africa and Latin America, the tone is more assertive. Physical constraints at several African ports restrict how much extra capacity can be deployed, while infrastructure and energy projects continue to generate shipments that depend on guaranteed space. Carriers recognize the resilience of this demand and are comfortable applying surcharges well before traditional peak months.
Latin America is experiencing structural change of its own. Manufacturing investments and adjustments to trade patterns are increasing the flow of parts and materials from Asia into Mexico and South America. Even after the holiday, availability remains tight, encouraging lines to test higher pricing in order to rebalance supply and demand.
From Disruption to Engineered Stability
Viewed across the last three years, the progression is clear:
- 2024: Rates climbed because disruption forced them upward.
- 2025: The industry adapted to longer routings and higher costs.
- 2026: Stability is being engineered.
Carriers are no longer passive observers of supply and demand movements; they are active participants shaping them. For cargo owners, this evolution alters procurement logic. The lowest nominal rate can quickly lose its advantage if shipments are delayed or rolled. Inventory buffers, contractual penalties and lost sales often outweigh small differences in freight spend.
Strategic Planning for Shippers
Planning now requires broader analysis. Alternative routes should be examined before bookings are confirmed, and quotations must reflect the full landed cost rather than base ocean freight alone. Trade terms should be selected with a keen awareness of how quickly surcharges can change. In many situations, paying a reasonable premium for secured allocation offers better overall protection.
In this environment, the right logistics partner plays a crucial role. Experienced teams translate market signals into practical routing options and help businesses understand not only what a shipment will cost but how reliably it will move.
The post-holiday window once brought predictable relief. In 2026, it brings a new operating reality, one where strategy outweighs tradition and careful planning determines success.


