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Maritime Freight Briefing: China PMI Stalls, Cargo Theft Escalates, and FedEx Expands European Hub

By MGN EditorialJune 1, 2026 at 06:00 PM

China's manufacturing PMI flatlines at the expansion threshold, raising questions for global freight demand, while cargo theft emerges as a systemic supply chain threat and FedEx commits $54 million to bolster European logistics capacity.

## Maritime Freight Briefing: China PMI Stalls, Cargo Theft Escalates, and FedEx Expands European Hub ### China Manufacturing PMI Hits Neutral Territory China's manufacturing purchasing managers index (PMI) fell to exactly 50.0% in May, landing precisely at the threshold between expansion and contraction, according to FreightWaves. For maritime freight professionals, the reading carries significant weight: China remains the world's largest exporter of manufactured goods, and any sustained softening in factory output translates directly into reduced containerised cargo volumes on transpacific and Asia-Europe trade lanes. A PMI reading at 50.0 is neither alarming nor reassuring — it signals a manufacturing sector that has lost momentum without yet tipping into decline. Analysts will be watching June figures closely to determine whether the stall is temporary, reflecting seasonal adjustments or trade policy uncertainty, or the beginning of a more prolonged contraction that could suppress booking volumes and freight rates through the second half of 2026. For carriers and freight forwarders managing capacity on major deep-sea routes, the data reinforces the need for cautious near-term planning as demand signals from the world's primary export engine remain ambiguous. ### Cargo Theft Declared a National Supply Chain Crisis Cargo theft has moved well beyond the docks and truck stops — it is now a matter of congressional testimony and federal law enforcement concern. FreightWaves reports that industry advocates, including voices linked to cartel-connected theft investigations, have delivered a stark message to U.S. lawmakers: cargo theft is no longer simply a transportation industry problem, but a broader economic and public safety issue affecting every American consumer. Rising incidents of organised cargo theft — targeting everything from electronics and pharmaceuticals to food and fuel — drive up insurance premiums, inflate retail prices, and undermine supply chain integrity. The involvement of sophisticated criminal networks, including those with alleged cartel affiliations, has elevated the issue to a national security dimension. Port terminals, intermodal yards, and last-mile delivery operations are all considered vulnerable points in the cargo chain. For maritime operators, the implications are clear: enhanced cargo tracking, improved terminal security protocols, and closer coordination with law enforcement agencies are becoming baseline expectations rather than optional investments. ### FedEx Commits $54 Million to Netherlands Trucking Hub On the infrastructure front, FedEx is investing $54 million to expand capacity at its Netherlands trucking hub, according to FreightWaves. The move is designed to accommodate growing freight demand across Europe and to strengthen connectivity between the company's road freight network and its air cargo operations. The Netherlands, home to the Port of Rotterdam and Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport, occupies a strategic position as Europe's primary logistics gateway. FedEx's investment underscores the continued importance of multimodal integration — linking sea, road, and air freight into seamless supply chains — as shippers demand faster, more flexible delivery options across the continent. The expansion is part of FedEx's broader strategic realignment following its separation of freight and express divisions, signalling that European surface transport remains a core growth priority for the company.
#China PMI#freight demand#cargo theft#supply chain security#FedEx#European logistics#multimodal freight#containerised cargo#transpacific trade

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