June has begun with a markedly different market dynamic compared with the second quarter. Multiple rounds of GRIs and Peak Season Surcharges have gained traction, vessel utilization has strengthened across most services, and carriers are exercising tighter control over capacity allocations. While additional sailings have been introduced to support demand, available space remains limited on many routings, particularly to the U.S. East Coast, Gulf Coast and Pacific Northwest.
Against this backdrop, shipment planning and space procurement have become increasingly important for both shippers and overseas partners as the market progresses deeper into the summer shipping season. The combination of recovering demand, capacity discipline and evolving trade policy continues to shape the Transpacific market outlook.
Rate Momentum Strengthens Across the Transpacific
Carriers successfully implemented a significant General Rate Increase (GRI) effective June 1, marking one of the strongest rate restoration efforts seen this year.
Additional Peak Season Surcharges (PSS) have been introduced during the first half of June, reflecting carriers’ confidence in the current supply-demand balance and stronger booking activity from Asia.
Premium and guaranteed-space products have become increasingly important for customers seeking shipment reliability, with demand for these services rising as standard allocations become more difficult to secure.
Bunker-related cost adjustments continue to vary among carriers, resulting in wider pricing differences between services and carrier groups.
Market sentiment remains firm across all major U.S. gateways. East Coast and Gulf Coast routings continue to experience the strongest upward pressure due to tighter capacity and sustained demand.
The market has now entered a period where carriers are prioritizing yield management over volume accumulation, supporting a more disciplined pricing environment than what was observed earlier in the year.
Capacity Outlook Remains Tight Despite Additional Sailings
Space to the U.S. East Coast, Gulf Coast and Pacific Northwest remains extremely tight across most carrier networks.
Fixed-rate space has largely been suspended or released only against confirmed allocations, significantly increasing rollover risk for late bookings.
Gulf Coast services remain among the most constrained routings in the market. Standard FAK allocations are largely exhausted across several services throughout June.
Although blank sailings have decreased considerably compared with May, effective market capacity remains constrained due to stricter booking controls and allocation management implemented by carriers.
Several carriers have introduced extra-loader vessels and supplemental sailings during June in an effort to reduce cargo backlogs and ease pressure on heavily booked services.
Rollover risk remains elevated across most trade lanes. To protect schedule reliability and prevent destination congestion, carriers continue to carefully manage space releases rather than fully opening available capacity.
Customers requiring shipment certainty should expect guaranteed-space products to remain an important tool throughout June, particularly for time-sensitive cargo.
Looking ahead, vessel utilization levels suggest that capacity conditions are likely to remain tight through the remainder of June and potentially into the traditional peak season period.
Trade Policy Developments and Market Drivers
The U.S. tariff landscape continues to evolve, creating uncertainty for importers and supply chain planning decisions.
The legal challenge surrounding the 10% global tariff under Section 122 remains unresolved. While a lower court ruled against the tariff framework, the U.S. Court of Appeals has temporarily preserved the policy, meaning the surcharge continues to be collected for now.
Section 301 tariffs on China-origin products remain fully in place. Depending on product classification, additional duties continue to apply across a broad range of cargo categories.
Industry stakeholders are closely monitoring the latest USTR review process, as discussions regarding potential tariff adjustments for selected product categories continue.
The previously implemented IEEPA-related tariffs are no longer being collected following legal rulings, removing one source of cost uncertainty for importers.
Recent adjustments to Section 232 tariffs covering certain steel, aluminum and copper derivative products may provide limited relief for selected machinery, industrial equipment and agricultural sectors.
On the macroeconomic front, U.S. consumer spending and retail inventory replenishment activity remain relatively resilient. Importers continue to rebuild inventories ahead of the second half of the year, supporting stronger cargo demand from Asia.
Southeast Asia continues to gain importance as an export origin alongside China. Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia and Cambodia have all reported increasing shipment activity to North America, contributing to stronger vessel utilization across regional export gateways.
The combination of resilient demand, policy uncertainty and carrier capacity discipline continues to support a firm market environment despite broader concerns surrounding global economic growth.
RS Logistics continues to closely monitor carrier capacity management, regulatory developments, rate movements and demand trends across China and Southeast Asia. Our trade and pricing teams remain committed to providing timely market intelligence and practical solutions to support your customers and business development efforts.
Should you have any upcoming opportunities requiring assistance, please do not hesitate to reach out to our team.