Overview of Market Conditions

April 2026 marked a decisive shift from March’s start of disruption mode. The Baltic Air Freight Index (BAI00) surged +23.09% month-over-month (MoM), an acceleration that reflects geopolitical stress rather than organic demand growth.

In March, there were early signs of stabilisation as Middle East capacity began to return. That optimism faded quickly. Escalating conflict in Iran led to renewed flight restrictions across the Gulf and kept global air cargo capacity roughly 15% below normal levels.

With around a quarter of global air cargo moving through Middle East hubs, even partial airspace restrictions ripple across the entire system. April confirms that the market has moved back into shock mode, where route stability is driving rates.

Four Key Drivers of Market Dynamics

1. Middle East Disruption Tightens the System Again

Airspace across parts of the Gulf remains restricted or closed. UAE hubs briefly improved in early May, but renewed escalation halted that recovery. The biggest impact is on Asia–Europe traffic. Flights are taking longer routes, burning more fuel and carrying less cargo per trip. Insurance costs have risen and jet fuel remains expensive. All of this adds cost pressure on top of already tight capacity.

Airspace across parts of the Gulf remains restricted or closed. UAE hubs briefly improved in early May, but renewed escalation halted that recovery. The biggest impact is on Asia–Europe traffic. Flights are taking longer routes, burning more fuel and carrying less cargo per trip. Insurance costs have risen and jet fuel remains expensive. All of this adds cost pressure on top of already tight capacity.

The result is simple: there is less usable capacity in the system. April’s rate surge reflects that squeeze, not stronger volumes.

2. Asia-Origin Pricing Leads the Surge

The sharpest increases came from Asia. Hong Kong (BAI30) rose +28.00% month-over-month. Shanghai (BAI80) climbed +26.27%, with particularly strong gains to North America. These are large moves for a single month.

Demand for semiconductors, AI hardware, and electronics remains solid. But the size of April’s increase clearly reflects tighter lift and network disruption more than a sudden demand spike. Singapore was the only major origin to decline, reflecting local normalisation rather than broader weakness. Overall, Asia pricing is being driven by supply constraints.

3. Europe and North America Follow

The tightening in Asia quickly spread west. London Heathrow (BAI40) rose +15.04%, supported by stronger North America lanes. Frankfurt (BAI20) gained +8.32%, with Asia-bound traffic outperforming the transatlantic.

Chicago O’Hare (BAI50) jumped +24.63%. That increase reflects global tightening rather than a surge in US exports. Earlier softness on transatlantic routes faded as overall network capacity tightened. Differences between hubs now reflect network positioning and exposure to disrupted flows more than changes in demand.

4. Limited Fleet Growth Amplifies the Shock

The current disruption is hitting a market that was already tight. Aircraft delivery delays, engine shortages, and limited freighter conversion feedstock continue to restrict fleet growth. Gulf belly capacity remains well below pre-conflict levels despite partial recovery.

Even when aircraft are available, longer flight times and operational instability reduce how much cargo they can carry. In a system with little spare capacity, even modest disruptions now move rates quickly. April shows how fast pricing can accelerate when geopolitics meets structural tightness.

Even when aircraft are available, longer flight times and operational instability reduce how much cargo they can carry. In a system with little spare capacity, even modest disruptions now move rates quickly. April shows how fast pricing can accelerate when geopolitics meets structural tightness.
 

Regional and Route-Specific Insights

  • Asia–Europe strengthened sharply, with Shanghai–Europe and Hong Kong–Europe both posting double-digit gains, reflecting corridor tightening and rerouted traffic.
  • Asia–North America saw even stronger increases, particularly on US-bound lanes, as constrained effective capacity met resilient technology-driven demand.
  • Europe–North America regained momentum after earlier softness, indicating broader network tightening rather than corridor-specific demand growth.
  • Intra-Asia remained comparatively mixed, underscoring that April’s surge is primarily intercontinental and geopolitically driven.
     

Freighter Market and Supply-Side Trends

Jet fuel remains expensive and flights are longer, which increases operating costs and reduces payload per aircraft. But April confirms that fuel alone is not driving the market. Rates are moving because usable capacity is limited. When corridor stability weakens, pricing adjusts quickly. Freighter operators continue shifting capacity toward alternative hubs such as Istanbul and parts of Central Asia and Europe. However, those adjustments cannot fully replace the connectivity lost through Gulf hubs.
 

Short-Term Outlook: Escalation Overhang

The renewed escalation in early May has reintroduced uncertainty just as recovery was starting to form. If restrictions persist, global capacity could remain around 15% below normal levels through Q2. Some Asia-origin lanes may begin to stabilise if capacity slowly returns. However, Middle East-linked routes remain unstable, and fuel supply risks in Europe and Asia tied to the Strait of Hormuz remain a factor to watch.

The renewed escalation in early May has reintroduced uncertainty just as recovery was starting to form. If restrictions persist, global capacity could remain around 15% below normal levels through Q2. Some Asia-origin lanes may begin to stabilise if capacity slowly returns. However, Middle East-linked routes remain unstable, and fuel supply risks in Europe and Asia tied to the Strait of Hormuz remain a factor to watch.

This is not a global shutdown like the pandemic. It is a regional disruption with global consequences. When a large share of world cargo flows through one region, even partial instability reshapes pricing everywhere.

 

The Bottom Line

April confirms that air cargo pricing is extremely sensitive to geopolitical risk. Demand, particularly for electronics and AI-related goods, remains steady, but pricing is being driven by route stability and available capacity, not volume growth.

The key question for Q2 is no longer whether April was volatile, it is whether Middle East escalation proves to be temporary or becomes a lasting structural constraint for the rest of the year.

About Cargo Facts Consulting

Founded in 1978, Cargo Facts Consulting (www.cargofactsconsulting.com) is a leading air cargo consultancy and data provider. Through our specialised services in digital innovation, strategic planning, and growth management and data solutions, Cargo Facts Consulting helps its clients navigate the complexities of the air logistics industry.

 

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