December import levels decline
United States-bound containerized freight imports dropped at the end of 2025, S&P Global Market Intelligence data show. December recorded 2.32 million TEU (Twenty-Foot Equivalent Units), a 5.0% decrease from December 2024, when imports were 2.44 million TEU.
Comparison with prior months
December’s total also trailed each of the previous six months, illustrating weaker late-year flows. Monthly figures cited by the firm include:
- July: 3.01 million TEU (the first month above 3.0 million TEU)
- August: 2.9 million TEU
- September: 2.72 million TEU
- October: 2.71 million TEU
- November: 2.63 million TEU
- December: 2.32 million TEU
S&P noted July’s peak followed a June decline and came as some importers adjusted sourcing in response to the White House reciprocal tariffs tied to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), which took effect on August 7.
Full-year 2025 volume barely ahead of 2024
For the calendar year 2025, total U.S.-bound containerized volumes reached 29.21 million TEU, a modest 0.3% rise from 2024’s 29.13 million TEU. The firm said this result came amid a year marked by tariff-driven and trade-policy volatility.
Tariffs, sector performance and seasonality
S&P Global Market Intelligence said December extended a four-month import downturn that began after IEEPA tariffs were imposed in August. Despite that trend, the firm highlighted that imports of autos and consumer durables continued to perform relatively well. Overall peak-season activity, the firm added, appeared "surprisingly normal."
Specifically, consumer electronics and leisure goods imports fell 22.5% from November to December, a drop the firm said aligns with the 10-year average seasonal pattern.
Outlook from S&P research director Chris Rogers
Chris Rogers, Research Director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, forecast that U.S. containerized imports will fall 8.2% year over year in 2026. He projected imports from mainland China to decline 10.4% and shipments from ASEAN to drop 11.9%.
Drivers behind the 2026 forecast
Rogers pointed to several factors behind the expected downturn: uncertainty about the timing of any additional tariff changes (including the possibility of reductions), and weakening new orders for U.S. manufacturers. The firm’s Purchasing Managers’ Index showed new orders have led to lower purchases for the first time since April, contributing to downward pressure on import volumes.
Impact of the 2026 Lunar New Year
S&P noted that the 2026 Lunar New Year is the latest since 2018, which can encourage later shipping decisions and raises the potential for a sharp drop in March import volumes as buyers delay shipments.
Rogers on recent normalization and inventory dynamics
In an interview, Rogers said December’s patterns were "surprisingly normal," with month-to-month volatility easing after the IEEPA tariffs took effect in August and with outstanding Section 232 tariffs still not implemented. He described the year-end as "a surprisingly calm end to an unsurprisingly hectic year."
"The wind down on inventories is to be expected as inventories are expensive so you would expect shippers to minimize wherever they can. That's leading the quantity of purchases to return to negative territory and kind of sets the scene for a weaker start to 2026," Rogers said.
Quarterly outlook and expected recovery timeline
Rogers and the firm expect a softer start to 2026, in part because shippers may extend hedging decisions. S&P Global Market Intelligence projects first-quarter 2026 imports to be down 14.5% year over year, driven by lower orders and the unwinding of inventory positions stockpiled before tariffs. The firm anticipates activity to normalize and growth to return by the fourth quarter of 2026.
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