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What the ARC Industry Leadership Forum Revealed About the Future of Supply Chain Execution

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What The Arc Industry Leadership Forum Revealed About The Future Of Supply Chain Execution

By the end of this year’s ARC Industry Leadership Forum, a consistent picture had emerged. The discussion shifted away from aspiration and toward execution discipline.

Across the week, conversations converged on a shared understanding of what is constraining progress. It is not a lack of tools. It is not confusion about direction. And it is not an absence of data.

The constraint is execution under real-world variability.

Supply chain environments are changing faster than many operating models can adapt. Raw materials fluctuate. Energy availability is less predictable. Demand patterns shift with little warning. Under these conditions, even well-designed systems struggle if they rely on assumptions that no longer hold consistently.

Autonomy, viewed this way, is less a technology challenge than an organizational one. Systems can recommend and optimize, but value depends on the ability to respond in a coordinated and timely manner.

Another recurring theme was sequencing. Rather than asking how quickly advanced capabilities can be deployed, leaders focused on what must be stabilized first: standardized execution, shared data definitions, and clear ownership between planning and execution.

A quieter but important shift was the move away from external benchmarks toward internal consistency. The goal was not to emulate industry leaders, but to reduce self-inflicted complexity.

The Forum closed without dramatic conclusions, which is appropriate. Progress in supply chain and logistics operations rarely comes from singular breakthroughs. It comes from addressing constraints methodically.

This year’s Forum clarified the work ahead. For many organizations, that clarity may be the most valuable outcome of the week.

The post What the ARC Industry Leadership Forum Revealed About the Future of Supply Chain Execution appeared first on Logistics Viewpoints.

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Supply Chain Takeaways from the Final Day of the ARC Industry Leadership Forum

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Supply Chain Takeaways From The Final Day Of The Arc Industry Leadership Forum

As the Forum drew to a close, the most noticeable shift was not in ambition, but in tone.

There was broad recognition that autonomous operations are an incremental outcome rather than a discrete milestone. Most organizations are still working through foundational constraints, including execution variability, uneven data quality, and loosely connected systems.

In closing conversations, leaders emphasized sequencing over speed. Questions focused on what needs to be stabilized first, where automation adds value today, and where human oversight should remain intentional rather than incidental.

One comment heard late in the week captured the sentiment well: “We don’t need fewer people involved. We need fewer surprises.”

That perspective reflects a move away from assumption-driven roadmaps toward operational realism. Leaders were less interested in bold claims and more focused on reducing sources of instability within their own environments.

Leaving the event, there was less confidence in quick transitions and more clarity about where sustained attention is required next.

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ARC Forum Day Two: Why Supply Chain Coordination Matters More Than Optimization

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Arc Forum Day Two: Why Supply Chain Coordination Matters More Than Optimization

By the second day, attention shifted from individual technologies to how decisions interact across the supply chain.

Many organizations have already optimized local functions with reasonable success. Transportation routes are efficient. Inventory targets are analytically justified. Production schedules are well modeled. Despite this, overall performance often remains inconsistent.

In multiple discussions, similar scenarios emerged. Planning decisions that appeared optimal on paper created congestion or rework once execution constraints were applied. Each function performed well within its scope, yet the system struggled as a whole.

Coordination emerged as the central challenge. Integrated planning is not simply a software feature. It depends on shared assumptions, aligned incentives, and consistent data definitions across functions. Without these, optimization remains local and fragile.

One observation surfaced repeatedly: analytics capabilities are widely available, but alignment is not. Organizations often have the information they need, but lack a common operating rhythm to act on it.

Day two reinforced that the next phase of improvement will come from synchronizing decisions across planning and execution, rather than refining algorithms in isolation.

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Transpac ocean rates slide early; Carrier revenue slipping as fleet grows – February 10, 2026 Update

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Transpac ocean rates slide early; Carrier revenue slipping as fleet grows – February 10, 2026 Update

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Published: February 10, 2026

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Weekly highlights

Ocean rates – Freightos Baltic Index

Asia-US West Coast prices (FBX01 Weekly) decreased 21% to $1,916/FEU.

Asia-US East Coast prices (FBX03 Weekly) decreased 10% to $3,457/FEU.

Asia-N. Europe prices (FBX11 Weekly) decreased 8% to $2,548/FEU.

Asia-Mediterranean prices(FBX13 Weekly) decreased 9% to $3,784/FEU.

Air rates – Freightos Air Index

China – N. America weekly prices increased 9% to $7.32/kg.

China – N. Europe weekly prices decreased 3% to $3.33/kg.

N. Europe – N. America weekly prices increased 1% to $2.56/kg.

Analysis

The transpacific container market is firmly post the pre-Lunar New Year rush this year, with reports that demand increase that did materialize was muted. And while ocean rates typically ease as the holiday approaches, they normally remain elevated relative to levels before the rush until after the post-holiday backlog is cleared.

This year, however, Asia – US West Coast rates that slipped more than 20% last week to about $1,900/FEU are all the way back to early December levels, suggesting that prices are already entering the post-LNY, pre-peak season lull. The latest National Retail Federation US ocean import report projects March volumes will dip 5% month-on-month, with Q1 demand expected to be down 7% year on year as retailers exercise caution and as totals are compared to volumes frontloaded in Q1 last year.

US container ports and air hubs have mostly recovered from the recent winter storm, though backlogs at inland rail terminals continue to cause delays for shippers. Bad weather in Europe closed ports in the Western Mediterranean and disrupted transits in the Bay of Biscay for a second time towards the end of last week. As conditions have improved this week operations and transits have resumed, though carriers warn of congestion and delays due to disrupted schedules.

Despite the congestion, easing pre-LNY demand means cooling rates on these lanes as well, with Asia – N. Europe and Mediterranean prices both down more than 8% last week, and daily rates so far this week slipping further to $2,700/FEU to Europe and $3,700/FEU to the Med. Though prices to Europe are about down to pre-LNY rush levels, those December rates were supported by strict capacity reduction, and expectations for a post-LNY bump on these lanes are reflected in GRIs of several hundred dollars per FEU planned for March.

Record global container volumes last year weren’t enough to keep carrier revenue growing as the global fleet continues to expand – likely a sign of things to come. Hapag-Lloyd and Maersk both reported drops in earnings last year, with Maersk among carriers reporting losses for the first time in a long time in Q4 despite volume growth. And as a clear indication of the current uncertainty in the market, even with projections for demand growth again this year, Maersk forecasts either a profit or loss of around $1B for 2026, mostly hinging on whether or not container traffic returns to the Red Sea.

In trade war developments, President Trump signed executive orders codifying tariff reductions for India, and empowering the departments of commerce and state with the discretion to impose tariffs on countries trading with Iran or selling oil to Cuba – examples of a new kind of authority-backed tariff threat as compared to declarations on social media. Hutchinson Ports is seeking arbitration with Panama over the recent invalidation of their port operation concessions there, with China reportedly asking state companies to pause any development plans in Panama in retaliation.

Global air cargo volumes are projected to increase this year, though not as quickly as last year and at a big step down from the rapid e-comm driven rise in 2024. There are indications that China-US e-commerce volumes have contracted since the de minimis closure last year, and signs that e-comm growth to Europe is slowing. The EU is set to change their de minimis rules by 2028, and will assign a handling fee to low-value imports starting in July. But some EU countries are already charging for parcel imports – with reports of falling e-comm air volumes as a result – and opposition to de minimis from domestic retailers continues to grow, with objections by businesses in Poland the latest example.

Freightos Air Index data show China – N. America rates continued to climb last week, up 9% to more than $7.30/kg possibly reflecting some pre-LNY bump. And the pre-Valentine’s Day surge of S. American flower exports has prices to N. America at $2.10/kg and to Europe at $1.95/kg up 8% and 17% respectively compared to the end of January.

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Judah Levine

Head of Research, Freightos Group

Judah is an experienced market research manager, using data-driven analytics to deliver market-based insights. Judah produces the Freightos Group’s FBX Weekly Freight Update and other research on what’s happening in the industry from shipper behaviors to the latest in logistics technology and digitization.

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