FedEx and Logistics Deep Dive

Why Drone Strikes Bankrupt the USPS

J Kennedy Season 1 Episode 33

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0:00 | 18:17
SPEAKER_01

Right now, a single drone strike uh halfway across the world in the Middle East is secretly deciding whether your local post office goes completely bankrupt this October.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, it's a terrifying thought, but it's true.

SPEAKER_01

Welcome to the deep dive. It is Wednesday, March 18th, 2026. Today we are opening up the massive logistics and global trade intelligence report for March 2026.

SPEAKER_00

And it is a dense report this month.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, absolutely. Our mission here is to map out the hidden arteries of the global economy. We want to show you exactly how massive geopolitical shocks, sudden technological leaps, and you know, severe political gridlock are all colliding to basically dictate the cost of your groceries, the fuel in your car, and how fast a package lands on your doorstep.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Right, because we often imagine global trade as this uh seamless, invisible machine just humming in the background. But looking at the macro environment right now, in March 2026, the baseline of that machine is defined by one unavoidable condition, and that is extreme friction.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Friction.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. The whole system is just grinding against itself at almost every possible level.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell All right. Let's unpack this. Because the first major domino falling in this massive supply chain is happening over in the Middle East, and those shock waves are well, they're traveling straight to your wallet.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Oh, completely.

SPEAKER_01

We're currently in the third week of the US-Israeli war with Iran. And the sheer volume of the conflict laid out in this intelligence report is just staggering. Since February 28th alone, there have been over 2,000 drone and missile attacks directed at Gulf Arab states.

SPEAKER_00

Right. Like a recent Iranian attack caused a huge fire at the UAE port of Fujaira. And that fire partially halted oil loading at a really critical juncture. Wow. And compounding all that pressure, operations at the Shah gas field have been completely suspended. So the energy squeeze is just incredibly acute right now.

SPEAKER_01

And the market reacted instantly to that physical bottleneck, right? I mean, oil prices surged 3% almost overnight. We're tracking Brent crude hitting$103.42 a barrel, with WTI reaching$96.21. But it isn't just the Middle Eastern crude feeling this pressure.

SPEAKER_00

No, not at all.

SPEAKER_01

The report specifically notes that Caspian oil grades, specifically CPC Blyn and Azeri BTC, have seen their premiums just jump significantly.

SPEAKER_00

Which, you know, perfectly illustrates how a localized shock reroutes global demand.

SPEAKER_01

How so?

SPEAKER_00

Well, normally refineries in the Mediterranean, they rely heavily on supplies flowing straight from the Middle East. But with those traditional routes completely compromised by the conflict, buyers are suddenly desperate for alternatives from the Caspian Sea region. They literally have nowhere else to turn, which drives up the price on those specific Caspian grades because of massive supply shortages in the Mediterranean.

SPEAKER_01

So if you are listening to this on your commute right now, wondering why a port fire halfway across the world actually matters to your daily life, the answer is right there at the pump. U.S. diesel just topped five dollars and four cents gallon.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

That is the highest price point we've seen since December 2022.

SPEAKER_00

And that five dollars and four cent figure, that is the single most important number for you to understand today.

SPEAKER_01

Really, the most important.

SPEAKER_00

Absolutely. Because it dictates your baseline cost of living. Look, trucking and rail networks, they operate on razor thin margins and they protect those margins using fuel surcharges. Right. So when the cost of diesel spikes to five bucks, logistics companies automatically trigger those surcharges. They pass that penalty directly down the line to the retailers.

SPEAKER_01

And the retailers pass it to us.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. The retailers just bake that extra transportation cost right into the sticker price of the goods you buy. The physical act of just putting a box of cereal on a grocery store shelf just became significantly more expensive.

SPEAKER_01

Now the government is obviously trying to signal calm amid this massive squeeze. White House economic advisor Kevin Hassett came out and noted that tankers are, quote, starting to dribble through the Strait of Hormuz.

SPEAKER_00

Starting to dribble.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, his words. He's expressing optimism that the war will end in a matter of weeks. However, in the exact same breath, Hassett noted that the U.S. is aggressively seeking alternative fertilizer supplies from Venezuela and holding discussions with Morocco.

SPEAKER_00

Right, they're scrambling.

SPEAKER_01

They're racing to protect American farmers ahead of the crucial spring planting season.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell Now, before we discuss the electoral math tied to those agricultural impacts, we need to explicitly remind you, the listener, we are impartially reporting the contents of our sources today.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. Absolutely.

SPEAKER_00

We're not endorsing any political viewpoints, nor are we validating or condemning any policies from any party. We are simply laying out the facts regarding the geopolitical landscape exactly as the intelligence report presents them.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. And the reporting notes that these higher fuel and fertilizer prices are hammering farmers at literally the worst possible time. This demographic is obviously a key constituency for President Trump. So the cascading financial strain could have massive ramifications for the upcoming struggle over control of Congress in the midterms, potentially giving Democrats an opening to make targeted appeals in swing states like Iowa.

SPEAKER_00

If we connect this to the bigger picture, this kind of violent, immediate shock forces both governments and corporations to rethink their entire vulnerability profile.

SPEAKER_01

It has to, right.

SPEAKER_00

It does. The long-term reality is that relying on these vulnerable, easily choked arteries is proving to be a massive geopolitical liability.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Which is a great way to think about it. It's like the global supply chain is a human cardiovascular system. And the Strait of Hormues is this major artery that is currently experiencing a massive blockage.

SPEAKER_00

That's a great analogy.

SPEAKER_01

So it's forcing the blood or the oil and goods in this case to find much more expensive, inefficient routes just to keep the body alive. Precisely. Which brings us to how corporations are actually reacting to this. Because if I'm running a massive logistics company, I am looking at$5 diesel and geopolitical chaos, and honestly, I'm panicking.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, you'd be terrified.

SPEAKER_01

Because energy and shipping costs are skyrocketing, these companies cannot just sit still. They have to innovate aggressively just to survive the margin squeeze.

SPEAKER_00

And the data bears that out entirely, especially when you look at FedEx. Their stock is currently up to$354.66. Wow. Yeah, and they have their Q3 earnings coming out on Thursday. And investors are watching the tape really closely. The market is just waiting to see if management expects these geopolitical tensions to crush their profits.

SPEAKER_01

What about UPS?

SPEAKER_00

Interestingly, UPS is betting on higher margins right now, but FedEx is currently pulling ahead in overall value.

SPEAKER_01

And the lever FedEx is pulling to maintain that value is, surprise, surprise, artificial intelligence and automation. Right. The intelligence report states FedEx plans to integrate AI into over 50% of its core operational workflow by 2028. Just think about that. 50% of their core workflow in just two years. And they aren't alone. Nouveau Cargo just debuted a brand new platform called Nouveau AI, specifically designed for shippers. And DHL is deploying SVT Robotics soft T-bought platform across its network, allowing them to roll out robotics 12 times faster than traditional coding.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. And to understand why that 12 times faster metric actually matters, you have to look at the historical bottleneck of warehouse automation.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Which was what exactly?

SPEAKER_00

Well, in the past, getting a robotic arm to communicate seamlessly with the facility's overarching management software required months of really expensive custom coding.

SPEAKER_01

Right.

SPEAKER_00

But the soft TBO key platform acts like a universal translator. DHL can essentially plug and play completely different robotic systems instantly.

SPEAKER_01

But wait a minute, I have to push back a little on the tech optimism coming from these corporate reports.

SPEAKER_00

Go for it.

SPEAKER_01

Waymo's co-CEO is quoted here claiming that their autonomous vehicles aren't eliminating jobs. They're pointing to a study forecasting 114,000 new AV-related jobs over the next 15 years.

SPEAKER_00

Right, the usual defense.

SPEAKER_01

But if DHL is integrating robotics 12 times faster specifically to automate their warehouses, isn't labor displacement absolutely inevitable despite the corporate spin? I mean, come on.

SPEAKER_00

It is the defining tension of this entire technological pivot. When you really analyze why a logistics giant adopts automation, it all comes down to controlling the uncontrollable. Meaning the fuel costs? Exactly. The cost of diesel is out of their control. Drone Rikes in the Red Sea are completely out of their control. The only variable they can aggressively control to protect their margins is internal operational efficiency.

SPEAKER_01

Uh-uh, I see.

SPEAKER_00

That means stripping out human labor costs and digitizing everything they possibly can. Even the paperwork is being eliminated.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, really?

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, the International Air Transport Association, IADA, just launched Du G Digital. This initiative completely digitalizes the declarations for over 3,800 dangerous goods. They're automating the compliance, the sorting, the driving, just everything.

SPEAKER_01

And we're also seeing a massive spike in trucking tender rejection rates. The report shows they have climbed to 14.3%.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, that's a huge number.

SPEAKER_01

Industry executives are actually describing these as, quote, COVID-level type rejection rates. Now, for context, a tender rejection is simply when a trucking company turns down a request to haul a load. And while 14.3% sounds like a system failure, it is actually a healthy sign for the carriers, isn't it?

SPEAKER_00

It is, yeah. It means they have enough alternative offers and leverage to simply say no to cheap freight.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. And alongside the automation, this friction is forcing innovation and sustainability and security too.

SPEAKER_00

Right.

SPEAKER_01

Like FedEx is rolling out a reusable business-to-business packing system with a company called Returnity.

SPEAKER_00

That's interesting.

SPEAKER_01

And Lufthansa Cargo is now offering add-ons like sustainable choice and even personal physical supervision for flying valuable art. Wow. Yeah. And on the security front, Freight Waves is hosting a massive freight fraud symposium to tackle transaction security. Because obviously, as you digitize an entire global supply chain, the vectors for fraud just escalate exponentially.

SPEAKER_00

They absolutely do. And all of this drive for ultimate efficiency and speed, it's culminating in a fierce domestic delivery war. And it is directly threatening legacy institutions that simply cannot keep up with the algorithm.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, like the post office.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. Look at what Amazon is doing. They just launched one hour and three-hour delivery in U.S. markets. They're offering three-hour delivery in 2,000 cities and towns and one hour delivery in hundreds of areas.

SPEAKER_01

One hour? That's just wild.

SPEAKER_00

It is. And at the exact same time Amazon is pushing the physical limits of local logistics, they are pulling the rug out from under the U.S. Postal Service.

SPEAKER_01

Oh yeah, the report mentions this.

SPEAKER_00

Right. Because the two entities failed to agree on business terms. Amazon is sharply cutting its shipments through the USPS by at least two-thirds by September.

SPEAKER_01

So what does this all mean?

SPEAKER_00

Well, it means the U.S. Postal Service is facing a fatal financial math problem. Postmaster General David Steiner recently warned Congress that the USPS could run out of money entirely by October or November.

SPEAKER_01

This year.

SPEAKER_00

Yes, this year. Postal delivery is fundamentally a volume-based business model. You have massive fixed costs, you know, paying the litter carriers, fueling the trucks, covering federally mandated retirement costs. If you lose your biggest customer, you simply cannot cover the spread. Steiner says without congressional reforms, higher stamp prices, and the ability to borrow more money, the agency will literally fail.

SPEAKER_01

And this isn't just an American problem, right?

SPEAKER_00

No, not at all. The European Postal Service in post is currently forecasting flat core earnings, and they're revealing significant losses in the UK market.

SPEAKER_01

I mean, if you think about the mechanics of this, it's like a household budget.

SPEAKER_00

How so?

SPEAKER_01

It's like having a roommate who pays for 70% of the rent, and they suddenly decide to move out with almost zero notice. But your landlord, which in this case is the federal government with its mandated operational costs, says you still owe the full amount every single month.

SPEAKER_00

That's exactly what it's like.

SPEAKER_01

It really forces you to consider the cultural cost here. Is our insatiable demand for one-hour delivery breaking the public utility of the postal service?

SPEAKER_00

That's the big question.

SPEAKER_01

Because what happens to rural areas and small towns that Amazon's one-hour delivery algorithms just don't care about?

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. That is the prices lawmakers should be mitigating right now, but they are completely paralyzed. The financial paralysis of the USPS perfectly mirrors the broader paralysis happening in Washington and within global trade organizations.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Politics is actively stalling both domestic operations and international commerce.

SPEAKER_01

So let's look at the domestic shutdown first, because the U.S. government is in a partial shutdown, and it is impacting travel to the point where FedEx and 10 major airlines are actively begging lawmakers to just pay TSA workers during the record-breaking spring break travel period.

SPEAKER_00

It's a mess. And once again, maintaining strict neutrality, we're going to outline the mechanics of the DHS funding fight that is actually causing this shutdown.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, exactly.

SPEAKER_00

The White House recently offered a counteroffer regarding the Department of Homeland Security. Their proposal included expanding the use of body cameras, limiting immigration and customs enforcement ICE activities at sensitive locations, and creating mandatory compliance audits via the DHS Inspector General.

SPEAKER_01

And that was a reaction to a specific event, right?

SPEAKER_00

Right. This counteroffer was introduced after an incident in Minneapolis where ICE agents killed two U.S. citizens.

SPEAKER_01

And over in the House, Speaker Johnson dismissed a discharge petition that was backed by minority leader Jeffries. Right. For those unfamiliar with the parliamentary weeds, a discharge petition is essentially a procedural bypass valve. It allows a majority of lawmakers to force a vote on a bill, basically pulling it out of committee and bypassing the speaker's control entirely. The petition aimed to fund the non-IC agencies within DHS, like the TSA and FEMA. But Speaker Jennison dismissed the effort, explicitly calling it an attempt to, quote, defund the police.

SPEAKER_00

Meanwhile, Senator Mark Wayne Mullen is facing a confirmation hearing to replace outgoing Homeland Security Secretary Christy Noam. So there's a lot of moving parts there.

SPEAKER_01

What's fascinating here is how trade policy is being weaponized by every major power simultaneously. I mean, let's look at the tariff situation. The Supreme Court just overturned President Trump's IEPA tariffs. Right. And IEPA stands for the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which basically grants the executive branch broad authority to regulate commerce during a national emergency. Because those tariffs were overturned, FedEx immediately became the first firm to file legal action to get a full refund. And they're promising to pass their refunded money back to the consumers who originally absorbed the cost.

SPEAKER_00

And across the Atlantic, the EU trade committee is voting to restart the ratification of a U.S. trade deal, but they added a critical amendment.

SPEAKER_01

What was it?

SPEAKER_00

They stipulated the deal will not take effect unless the U.S. honors the terms, which is a direct response to the U.S. opening fresh investigations into EU trade practices. It's a massive failsafe built right into the treaty.

SPEAKER_01

And we are seeing similar gridlock at the World Trade Organization, too.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, we really are.

SPEAKER_01

The U.S. is pushing to make a 1998 moratorium against e-commerce tariffs permanent, but they are facing heavy pushback from India, Brazil, and South Africa. The resistance is rooted in concerns over U.S. big tech dominance.

SPEAKER_00

And the most precarious standoff of all is the Tech Cold War. China is actively penalizing executives over Meta's$2 billion acquisition of an AI startup called MANIS.

SPEAKER_01

Right.

SPEAKER_00

The Chinese government is restricting these executives from leaving the country for Singapore in an apparent effort to stop AI offshoring.

SPEAKER_01

Concurrently, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announced they are finally filling Chinese purchase orders for their advanced H-200 chips.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, but the mechanics behind this are deeply political.

SPEAKER_01

Very. We started with an attack on a port in the UAE that is driving up the price of the diesel fuel powering the trucks on your highway. That margin squeeze is forcing logistics giants like FedEx to aggressively strip out human labor in favor of AI. Right. That exact same drive for ultimate efficiency is pushing Amazon to ditch the post office, threatening the very existence of the USPS. And all of this is happening while Washington is too gridlocked to pay TSA agents, and global superpowers are trading 25% cuts on AI chips.

SPEAKER_00

It's a lot to take in.

SPEAKER_01

Here's where it gets really interesting.

SPEAKER_00

This raises an important question for you to mull over. If global supply chains become this volatile due to constant geopolitical warfare, port fires, and cascading tariffs, and local automation becomes incredibly cheap and efficient to deploy, will the very concept of global trade as we've known it since the 1990s simply cease to exist? Could the future of logistics become entirely radically hyper local?

SPEAKER_01

That is something to seriously think about the next time you hit buy now and expect a package at your door in an hour. Thank you for joining us on this deep dive. Keep questioning the forces shaping the world around you, and we will be here to help you navigate the intelligence.