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US-Mexico Cross-Border Trade Surpasses $84 Billion in March Amid USMCA Renegotiation Tensions

By MGN EditorialMay 17, 2026 at 12:00 PM

Cross-border trade between the United States and Mexico reached $84 billion in March, underscoring the critical importance of the North American trade corridor as USMCA renegotiation talks intensify.

## US-Mexico Cross-Border Trade Hits $84B as USMCA Talks Intensify Cross-border trade between the United States and Mexico surpassed $84 billion in March, according to FreightWaves, highlighting the enduring strength of the North American supply chain even as political negotiations over the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) enter a critical phase. The figures reflect robust freight flows across one of the world's busiest trade corridors, with goods moving by truck, rail, and intermodal connections through key border crossings. The volume underscores how deeply integrated the two economies have become since the original NAFTA framework was established — and how much is at stake as trade negotiators revisit the agreement's terms. ### Manufacturing Investment Signals Continued Nearshoring Momentum Alongside the headline trade figures, FreightWaves' Borderlands Mexico report noted two significant industrial developments that point to continued nearshoring activity in Mexico. United Foods International has opened a new facility in Phoenix, Arizona, strengthening cross-border food supply chain infrastructure, while a Chinese electronics manufacturer has announced plans to establish a factory in Torreón, in the northern Mexican state of Coahuila. The Torreón investment is particularly noteworthy for freight and logistics observers. Chinese manufacturers establishing production bases in Mexico can potentially access the US market under USMCA provisions — a trend that has drawn scrutiny from US trade officials and is expected to feature prominently in ongoing renegotiation discussions. ### Implications for Freight and Logistics For maritime and intermodal freight professionals, the sustained volume of US-Mexico trade has direct implications for port activity along the Gulf of Mexico and Pacific coastlines, where feeder services and short-sea shipping complement overland cross-border logistics. Ports such as Manzanillo, Veracruz, and Lázaro Cárdenas serve as critical gateways for goods that ultimately transit the US-Mexico land border. Any significant changes to USMCA's rules of origin, tariff schedules, or dispute resolution mechanisms could reshape freight flows and investment decisions across the entire North American supply chain — making the outcome of current negotiations a closely watched issue for shippers, carriers, and port operators alike. The USMCA is subject to a formal review process, with the next scheduled joint review set for 2026, though political pressures on both sides of the border have accelerated discussions ahead of that timeline. *Source: FreightWaves Borderlands Mexico*
#USMCA#cross-border trade#nearshoring#North America#intermodal#supply chain#Mexico trade#freight volumes

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