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Descartes reports that US container imports dropped 5.5% in April due to trade and geopolitical risk.

U.S. Container Imports Dropped 5.5% In April As?Importers Deal With Trade Policy Uncertainty And Geopolitical Risks, Supply Chain Technology Provider?Descartes Systems Group Said?On Friday.

U.S. President Donald Trump’s changing trade policies have hit containerized?import _volumes. Iran has closed the Strait of Hormuz, a vital shipping route for energy supplies after U.S. and Israeli?strikes against the country.

Import trends can be viewed as a measure of the U.S. economic health. They rise when the economy is strong, and fall when it is weak.

Descartes data showed that U.S. ports handled 2,277.965 twenty-foot equivalent units in April, which was a 3.2% decrease from March's levels. It was the first time since 2022 that April's volumes had dropped sequentially.

Last month, container import volumes were 19% higher than the pre-pandemic level?from April 2019. The firm stated that this is due to "continued resilient in underlying demand."

However, so far in 2026, U.S. imports of containerized goods are?down by 5%.

In April 2026, the number of TEUs imported from China fell 15.3% on an annual basis to 680 778.

Importers will likely get a "short-term boost in cash flow" when the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Agency issues the first tariff refunds for May 12th,?Descartes stated. However, he warned that uncertainty and costs would continue to persist as long as "replacement duties remain in place."

(source: Reuters)