Tuesday’s news cycle showed a global supply chain still pulled in two directions. Shippers pressed ahead with AI investments and 3PL consolidation moves, while ocean carriers and importers wrestled with a 12th straight month of declining US container volumes and lingering Middle East risk. Below, the briefings that mattered.
Operations & 3PL
Walmart simplifies inbound for suppliers. The retailer is rolling out a Prepaid Consolidation Program that lets vendors ship into a single Walmart location rather than juggle multiple distribution centres. The shift hands Walmart tighter control over middle-mile flows and aims to compress lead times during peaks. Source: Supply Chain Dive.
Sherwin-Williams leans on ITS Logistics. The paint group tapped ITS Logistics to move outbound volumes from its Nevada distribution centre during the peak. The partnership helped the brand sidestep capacity squeezes that have hit western US lanes since spring. Source: Supply Chain Dive.
LX Pantos plants a flag in Virginia. LX Pantos Americas signed MoUs with the Virginia Economic Development Partnership and the Port of Virginia to deepen logistics ties and prepare future site investments on the US East Coast. The move underlines Korean 3PLs’ push to anchor more capacity stateside. Source: Container News.
Rhenus extends its Asia road network. Rhenus Group is widening its road-freight footprint across Asia Pacific, with new cross-border trucking lanes in Southeast Asia and toward key Indian markets. The plan plays into ongoing nearshoring flows from China to ASEAN. Source: Logistics Manager.
Technology & Automation
Stord raises $250M to put AI in fulfilment. The Atlanta-based e-commerce 3PL pulled in $250 million at a $3 billion valuation, bringing total funding to nearly $800M. Capital will flow into AI agents across fulfilment centres and forecasting layers. Source: FreightWaves.
BMW pushes humanoid robots toward production. Trials at Spartanburg and Leipzig are moving beyond demos, with humanoid platforms now stepping into structured assembly tasks. The piece frames Physical AI as the connective tissue between robotics, MES, and a unified data backbone. Source: Logistics Viewpoints.
Warehouse robotics still needs smart software. A new analysis argues that hardware investment alone leaves throughput gains on the table. Without modern orchestration, WCS and WES layers, even the slickest fleet plateaus fast. Source: Supply Chain Dive.
Dassault Systèmes and iHawk pilot autonomous cargo twins. Singapore-based iHawk Global is using Dassault Systèmes’ virtual twin technology to model and run autonomous cargo operations. First real-world deployments are already live in pilot conditions. Source: Logistics Manager.
Sustainability & Energy
NYK readies a sixth transition bond. The Japanese carrier plans a mid-June 2026 issuance to fund LNG-fuelled vessels and other decarbonisation projects. It is the sixth tranche of its transition-bond programme, a signal that bond markets remain open to Japanese shipowners despite tighter labelling rules. Source: Hellenic Shipping.
RNG hits an inflection point in heavy-duty trucking. A new 15-litre engine, Clean Energy’s nationwide network and fuel savings around $3 per gallon are reshaping fleet fuel maths. After years of slow uptake, renewable natural gas is suddenly the dominant low-carbon option in Class 8. Source: FreightWaves.
Prologis anchors a $200M maritime fund. Prologis Ventures will co-anchor a $200 million vehicle targeting maritime and logistics innovation, with a focus on port tech, decarbonised shipping and intermodal software. The fund slots into a thin venture corner that has struggled to attract capital. Source: FreightWaves.
International Markets
Shein closes Everlane deal. The Chinese fast-fashion giant has formally acquired the sustainability-minded US DTC brand. Everlane’s finances get a lifeline, but the union with Shein will test investor and customer perception of its environmental positioning. Source: ESG Dive.
CMA CGM books resilient Q1, flags persistent Hormuz risk. The third-largest box carrier reported what it called “resilient” first-quarter results, with management warning that the Middle East crisis keeps rerouting global flows. Bunkers, insurance and routing decisions remain abnormally volatile. Source: gCaptain.
HJSC operating profit up 347% on shipbuilding mix. HJ Shipbuilding & Construction posted KRW 541.4 billion in Q1 revenue, with high-value vessel orders driving margin expansion. Korean yards continue to gain share as Chinese capacity faces US Trade Representative pressure. Source: Container News.
US imports down for a 12th month. S&P Global Market Intelligence pegged April US containerised imports at roughly 2.635 million TEU, a 5.2% annual drop. The decline was paced by materials and capital goods, hinting at softer industrial demand into summer. Source: Logistics Management.
Related Coverage
- Blue Yonder Doubles Down on Agentic AI at ICON 2026
- Gebrüder Weiss Opens €100M Automated Logistics Platform in Austria
- FM Logistic Secures SBTi Validation for 1.5°C Decarbonization Plan
- Amazon Opens Logistics Network to Outside Brands With New Supply Chain Arm
Updated daily — your morning briefing on global supply chain.
