Overview of Market Conditions

February 2026 marked a month of apparent stability but deep structural variance across global air cargo markets. The Baltic Air Freight Index (BAI00) was effectively unchanged month-on-month (MoM) by -0.02%, implying that January’s sharp post-peak correction had stabilised. However, beneath this flat headline, regional rate behavior reflected Lunar New Year (LNY) seasonality, Valentine’s Day perishables, and a sudden reset in the US tariff regime.

February was not a synchronised rally or collapse. It was a transition month, separating predictable seasonal volatility from deeper structural realignments.

Four Key Drivers of Market Dynamics

1. Lunar New Year Compression Without Structural Weakness: 

Lunar New Year drove a sharp drop in volumes, but rates held relatively firm. Asia Pacific rates declined only marginally and Shanghai still posted a modest monthly gain, confirming the slowdown was seasonal rather than structural. Unlike 2025, when tariff fears amplified front-loading, February’s export flows were more evenly spread, resulting in an orderly contraction with a mechanical rebound expected in March.

Lunar New Year drove a sharp drop in volumes, but rates held relatively firm. Asia Pacific rates declined only marginally and Shanghai still posted a modest monthly gain, confirming the slowdown was seasonal rather than structural. Unlike 2025, when tariff fears amplified front-loading, February’s export flows were more evenly spread, resulting in an orderly contraction with a mechanical rebound expected in March. The composition of cargo remains supportive: electronics, semiconductors, AI components, and high-value goods continue to anchor structural demand.

2. South Asia’s Structural “Air-First” Economy: While East Asia slowed, South Asia and the MESA region showed structural resilience. India’s export mix increasingly treats air as core infrastructure rather than a premium option. Frankfurt’s rebound to Southeast Asia and Heathrow’s strength on Asian lanes reflect this firmness. The market is increasingly split between essential air corridors with stable demand and discretionary lanes more sensitive to cost and modal shifts.

3. Tariff Regime Reset: Uncertainty Without Relief: Late February saw the US Supreme Court strike down the IEEPA tariffs, which were quickly replaced by a temporary 10% global tariff under Section 122, potentially rising to 15%. In practice, the trade cost environment changed little. De minimis remains suspended, refund rules are unclear, and policy volatility continues to cloud planning. Unlike January’s front-loading, February saw no surge in bookings as shippers adopted a cautious wait-and-see stance.

4. Capacity Discipline Differs Across Hubs: February demonstrated that airport-level capacity discipline now plays a decisive role in rate direction. London Heathrow’s double-digit surge contrasts sharply with Frankfurt’s modest decline, particularly on US lanes. This divergence reflects differences in bellyhold expansion, freighter allocation, and integrator positioning rather than fundamental demand shifts. Meanwhile, UPS overtaking FedEx at Louisville underscores ongoing express network optimisation amid cost and trade pressures.

Regional and Route-Specific Insights

  • Asia–Europe remains the most structurally balanced corridor. Shanghai–Europe rose 1.54% MoM, while Hong Kong–Europe was flat. Despite LNY compression, rates remained stable, supported by technology, fashion, and e-commerce flows.

Asia–North America shows a fragile equilibrium. Hong Kong–North America fell 4.19%, while Shanghai–North America edged higher. Southeast Asian origins continue to gain relative importance in US-bound trade as companies diversify supply chains.

  • Asia–North America shows a fragile equilibrium. Hong Kong–North America fell 4.19%, while Shanghai–North America edged higher. Southeast Asian origins continue to gain relative importance in US-bound trade as companies diversify supply chains.
  • Europe–North America performance diverged sharply. Heathrow’s surge suggests constrained lift or tactical demand strength, while Frankfurt’s pullback indicates localised oversupply or post-front-loading normalisation.
  • Intra-Asia volatility was most visible in Singapore’s correction (-16.60%), reflecting the unwind of January’s front-loading surge rather than structural weakness.

Freighter Market and Supply-Side Trends

The aircraft supply constraint remains the industry’s structural anchor. Global backlogs exceed 17,000 aircraft, roughly 60% of the active fleet, with engine shortages further delaying deliveries. Passenger airlines continue to retain older widebodies longer, limiting feedstock availability for freighter conversion programmes.

IATA is estimating more than $11 billion in additional industry costs tied to supply chain bottlenecks, including $4.2 billion in incremental fuel burn from operating ageing aircraft.

Capacity has expanded modestly, particularly through bellyhold growth, but expansion is uneven. Asia–Europe and intra-Asia corridors benefit most from passenger recovery, while some transpacific freighter operators continue to face tighter margins.

Structural supply constraints cap the downside for rates during seasonal dips, but no longer generate scarcity-driven spikes.

Short-Term Outlook: From Seasonal Recovery to Geopolitical Stress

March should bring a mechanical rebound in Asian volumes as factories resume operations, with rate direction depending on how quickly airlines restore capacity.

The more significant wildcard is the Middle East. Escalating tensions and missile activity raise the risk of airspace closures, longer routings, War Risk surcharges, and higher fuel burn. If disruptions persist, capacity redeployments and corridor congestion could meaningfully tighten Asia–Europe and Asia–Middle East lanes, with visible rate impact likely emerging in March data and extending into Q2.

The more significant wildcard is the Middle East. Escalating tensions and missile activity raise the risk of airspace closures, longer routings, War Risk surcharges, and higher fuel burn. If disruptions persist, capacity redeployments and corridor congestion could meaningfully tighten Asia–Europe and Asia–Middle East lanes, with visible rate impact likely emerging in March data and extending into Q2.

February confirms that global air cargo is no longer moving in sync. The market is fragmenting into structurally tight, air-first corridors and capacity-sensitive, discretionary lanes where geopolitical shocks can quickly reshape network economics.

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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