United States-bound containerized freight imports saw continued growth in May, according to data recently issued by S&P Global Market Intelligence.
May imports, at 2.70 million TEU (Twenty-Foot Equivalent Units), rose 11% annually, following April’s 8% annual gain, with growth intact for the ninth consecutive month, following a 14-month stretch of annual declines. Total first quarter imports were up 11% annually.
On a year-to-date basis through the first five months of 2024, total U.S.-bound imports, at 12.77 million TEU, posted a 13% annual increase, over May 2023’s 11.33 million TEU tally. What’s more, for the same period in 2021 and 2022, imports each came in at 13.6 million TEU, respectively.
Please click here to read the complete article.
SC
MR
More Global Trade
- Open eBL: Transforming the electronic bill of lading with open-source innovation and industry collaboration
- Will the new president of Mexico help or hinder manufacturing?
- Mapping the impact of geographic differences on global supply chain practices
- U.S.-bound July imports maintain strong momentum in July, S&P Global Market Intelligence reports
- A Silk Road city
- More Global Trade
What's Related in Global Trade
Explore
Topics
Procurement & Sourcing News
- Three frameworks for creative problem-solving in supply chain
- Mitigating geopolitical uncertainty: 4 essential tactics for industrial CSCOs
- Supply chain strategy for medical devices: A Q&A with industry expert Sanjay Gupta
- Inventory Management and the Supply Chain: Outlook 2025
- How technological innovation is paving the way for a carbon-free future in logistics and supply chains
- Parcel shipping spend: The untamed holdout in today’s supply chains
- More Procurement & Sourcing