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Shippers Budgeting Flat for 2026 Face Capacity Crunch, ITS Logistics Warns
By MGN Editorial•June 24, 2026 at 12:24 PM
ITS Logistics executives are sounding the alarm for shippers who have locked in flat budgets for 2026, warning that converging pressures on driver availability, fuel costs, and lean inventory levels are set to trigger a significant capacity reckoning.
## Capacity Warning Signals Tightening Freight Market Ahead
Shippers who have planned flat transportation budgets for 2026 may be caught off guard by a tightening capacity environment, according to senior executives at ITS Logistics, as reported by FreightWaves.
The California-based third-party logistics provider is cautioning that a confluence of structural pressures — including accelerating driver attrition, elevated fuel costs, and historically lean inventory levels — is creating conditions that could rapidly erode available freight capacity across North American supply chains.
### Key Pressure Points
According to ITS Logistics, the warning centres on three interlocking dynamics:
- **Driver exits:** An ageing driver workforce and ongoing recruitment challenges are reducing the pool of available capacity at a pace that flat-rate budget assumptions fail to account for.
- **Fuel cost volatility:** Persistent uncertainty in energy markets continues to place upward pressure on carrier operating costs, which are increasingly being passed through to shippers.
- **Lean inventories:** With many shippers having deliberately run down stock levels in recent years, any demand uptick is likely to generate rapid, concentrated freight surges that strain available capacity.
### Industry Implications
The warning from ITS Logistics reflects a broader concern within the logistics sector that the current period of relative freight market softness may be masking underlying structural vulnerabilities. Carriers and 3PLs have been operating in a prolonged rate-correction cycle following the post-pandemic freight boom, but executives argue this has lulled some shippers into assuming stable or declining costs will persist.
For maritime-adjacent supply chains — particularly those reliant on intermodal connections between port terminals and inland distribution networks — a domestic trucking capacity squeeze would compound existing port congestion and vessel scheduling pressures, potentially extending dwell times and disrupting just-in-time cargo flows.
Industry analysts recommend that shippers review contractual freight arrangements and consider securing capacity commitments ahead of any market tightening, rather than relying on spot market availability.
*Source: FreightWaves / ITS Logistics*
#freight capacity#supply chain#3PL#trucking#intermodal#logistics#shipping costs#inventory management
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