FedEx and Logistics Deep Dive

Supply Chains Survive Diesel Shocks and Tariffs

J Kennedy Season 1 Episode 41

Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.

0:00 | 15:58
SPEAKER_00

You know, um when we think of a nervous system, we usually picture it well inside a human body, right? Right.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, totally.

SPEAKER_00

Like you touch a hot stove, the nerves fire, and your hand just pulls back instantly.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. The biological system detects a threat and adapts, I mean, immediately. The localized pain turns into a systemic response before you even really process what happens.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. But what happens when that nervous system is the entire planet?

SPEAKER_01

Oh man.

SPEAKER_00

When the nerve endings are, you know, shipping lanes, fiber optic cables, trucking routes, international borders.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

And more importantly, what happens when a whole barrage of sledgehammers starts hitting that global nervous system all at once?

SPEAKER_01

Well, that is precisely the diagnostic challenge we're wading into today, because right now the global nervous system is taking some massive, just unprecedented hits. And the way it's reacting is, well, it's both terrifying and brilliant.

SPEAKER_00

Welcome to the deep dive. Today is Monday, March 30, 2026.

SPEAKER_01

A busy Monday at that.

SPEAKER_00

Very. Our mission today is to take a massive stack of sources, specifically, a really comprehensive logistics and trade report, and extract the hidden, hyperconnected web of global supply chains, trade policy, and economic disruptions.

SPEAKER_01

Right, because this stuff affects everyone.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. Yeah. We want you, the listener, to understand how all of this impacts you, whether that's the price you're paying to fill up your car, uh the reason you're stuck in a four-hour line at the airport, or even the mystery behind a missing shipment of candy.

SPEAKER_01

Which is a wild story, by the way.

SPEAKER_00

It really is. Okay, let's unpack this because I promise you, despite how dense some of this financial and geopolitical data might seem at first glance, you are gonna walk away with a crystal clear understanding of how the modern world is currently functioning. Or, you know, malfunctioning.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, malfunctioning might be the better word for some of this. But what ties all these seemingly disparate reports together from neighborhood deliveries to international tariffs is the concept of adaptability. Trevor Burrus, Jr. Right. In an era of just constant volatility, the winners aren't necessarily the biggest players with the deepest pockets anymore. The winners are the systems that can pivot the fastest.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell Fast pivots. Okay. Well, we have to start with the macro shocks, right? The sledgehammers hitting the system.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Ross Powell The big ones.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. And the most immediate one is this global energy squeeze. We're looking at the economic fallout of the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, which has just choked off oil supplies. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

Completely choked them off.

SPEAKER_00

Trevor Burrus, Jr. The numbers here are staggering. U.S. crude is up 60% year to date.

SPEAKER_01

Wow.

SPEAKER_00

It's sitting at nearly$100 a barrel right now. For you listening, that means U.S. gasoline has surged to$4 a gallon.

SPEAKER_01

Right. Which hurts at the pump.

SPEAKER_00

It hurts a lot. But the real killer for the supply chain isn't standard gasoline, is it?

SPEAKER_01

No, no, it's diesel. Diesel has skyrocketed 50% to$5.38 per gallon.

SPEAKER_00

$5.38.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. And we have to remember diesel is the lifeblood of the physical economy. Amazon delivery vans, massive container ships, freight trains, they do not run on unleaded. Right. When diesel spikes like this, the cost of moving literally everything, I mean, from a toothbrush to a tractor, spikes right along with it.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. And I was reading this and thinking about how it practically impacts like the trucking industry here in the U.S. Oh, it's rough. It really is. It feels like independent big rig truckers.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

You know, the owner operators who just own one or two cabs, they are basically the shock absorbers of the whole economy.

SPEAKER_01

That's a great way to put it.

SPEAKER_00

They take the direct impact of that$5.38 diesel right on the chin. It just completely squeezes their profit margins.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

But then you look at the massive firms, companies like FedEx, JB Hunt, C. H. Robinson, who control something like 80% of the market, and they just seem to float right over the potholes. How are they doing that?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Well, they aren't immune, obviously, but they have the architecture to deflect the blow.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Meaning what? Exactly.

SPEAKER_01

Mainly through surcharges. Because they control so much market share, they can essentially pass the increased fuel cost directly on to the customer using dynamic pricing algorithms.

SPEAKER_00

Oh wow.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. So if fuel goes up on Tuesday, your shipping rate goes up on Wednesday. And right now, customers are just absorbing those costs to keep things moving.

SPEAKER_00

They don't have a choice.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. Plus, big players have immense financial leverage. They can hedge fuel risks on the commodities market, locking in fuel prices months in advance, and use their massive scale to negotiate better base prices. Independent drivers just don't have those levers to pull.

SPEAKER_00

Well, they just eat the costs.

SPEAKER_01

They do.

SPEAKER_00

Man. So the international chaos is hitting the asphalt here at home. But the physical infrastructure isn't just bogged down by expensive fuel, it's actively being paralyzed by domestic political gridlock.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. Government shutdown.

SPEAKER_00

Right. We have to talk about this 43-day partial government shutdown over the Department of Homeland Security. And just to be super clear here, before we dive into this, we are strictly neutrally reporting the viewpoints from the sources without taking a side.

SPEAKER_01

Purely looking at the logistical impact and the stated arguments.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. But the logistical impact is a nightmare. TSA and ICE agents who make an average of about$49,000 a year.

SPEAKER_01

Which isn't a lot.

SPEAKER_00

Not at all. They've been unpaid for over a month. And around 10 to 12 percent of TSA workers just called out.

SPEAKER_01

But you can't really blame them for.

SPEAKER_00

Right. But it causes huge problems. We're seeing wait times of four plus hours at major airports in Houston and Atlanta.

SPEAKER_01

It's a complete breakdown.

SPEAKER_00

And the political arguments driving this gridlock are incredibly entrenched. So let's break down what the sources say both sides are arguing. On the political right, the viewpoint coming from figures like Borders R, Tom Homan, President Trump, Representative Scalise, McLean, Burchett, Mace, and Senators Cotton and Johnson is that Democrats are throwing a temper tantrum over immigration.

SPEAKER_01

Right, that's their phrasing.

SPEAKER_00

Yes. They argue Democrats are obstructing border security and basically holding DHS and national security hostage. Trump actually just issued an order to use pre-existing funds to finally pay TSA workers.

SPEAKER_01

Right. And then looking at the left-wing viewpoint from the sources coming from Senators Van Hollen, Booker, Kim, and Representatives Subramanyam, Smith, and Himes, their argument is that Republicans and Trump are unnecessarily dragging TSA and the Coast Guard into a completely separate border fight.

SPEAKER_00

A separate issue entirely in their eyes.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. They note that Democrats actively offered to fully fund these specific agencies, but House leadership simply won't allow a vote on it. And they're questioning why Trump didn't release those pre-existing funds weeks ago to stop the suffering instead of waiting 43 days.

SPEAKER_00

It's a mess. And the sources also point out other budget anxieties. Senator Blumenthal is warning the USPS could run out of money by February, which threatens mail-in voting.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, right.

SPEAKER_00

And Senator Sanders is pushing New York Governor Ho Chule to raise taxes on millionaires to fund state needs. It's just pressure everywhere.

SPEAKER_01

It is. And you know, when the physical infrastructure is bogged down by expensive fuel and political gridlock, governments invariably try to protect their economies by pulling macro levers.

SPEAKER_00

Macro levers.

SPEAKER_01

Like international trade policy.

SPEAKER_00

Uh, tariffs and treaties.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

Which brings us to section two of our deep dive. The Washington Post did an analysis of President Trump's tariffs, which are the highest in nearly a century, by the way.

SPEAKER_01

A century? Think about that.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. And the sources note that the chronic trade deficit has actually declined for 10 straight months, and foreign partners have opened up some markets.

SPEAKER_01

Right, which is the stated goal of protectionism.

SPEAKER_00

But I have to push back a little here, or at least ask the question: what does this all actually mean? Because it sounds like plugging a leak in a boat, but the patch makes the boat heavier.

SPEAKER_01

That's a good analogy.

SPEAKER_00

Right. Because the source data shows that while the deficit is down, the promised factory jobs haven't actually materialized yet, and inflation is up.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, that's the classic tariff trade-off.

SPEAKER_00

Again, just presenting the source data neutrally here. But inflation being up feels like a big deal.

SPEAKER_01

It is. Because when you slap a tariff on a foreign good, the foreign company doesn't usually just eat the cost. They pass it on to the importer who passes it on to you, the consumer, so you're paying for that patch on the boat.

SPEAKER_00

Which hurts the wallet.

SPEAKER_01

Right. And this global protectionism isn't just an American thing. Look at the UK. Finance Minister Rachel Reeves is urging the G7 to avoid unilateral trade barriers. Really?

SPEAKER_00

Why?

SPEAKER_01

Well, she wants heavy investment in renewables. Her argument is that the West needs to prevent Vladimir Putin from profiting off the gas surge caused by all this conflict. Trade barriers get in the way of that energy security.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell Interesting. So it's all connected.

SPEAKER_01

Very much so. And closer to home, former USTR Catherine Ty is calling the upcoming July 2026 USMCA review a critical turning point.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell The USMCA, that's the NAFTA replacement, right?

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. She says it needs major updates for things like AI, competition with China, and just general supply chain resilience.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, and we're seeing lawmakers jump on this too. Senators Baldwin, a Democrat, and Moreno, a Republican, are pushing the Commerce Department for a national security probe into Mexican-made heavy equipment. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

Like tractors and stuff.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. Deer, caterpillar, CH industrial. They want to protect domestic manufacturing. And just a quick note on the WTO, the World Trade Organization ministerial talks, it looks like a compromise is emerging for a four-year extension on the e-commerce moratorium. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

Which is the ban on digital tariffs, right?

SPEAKER_00

Trevor Burrus Exactly. Basically saying you can't tax a digital download across borders. It's got a one-year sunset clause, though.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, so a lot of policy debates. But while politicians debate tariffs and treaties, the actual companies moving goods can't just sit around and wait for legislation.

SPEAKER_00

No, they go bankrupt.

SPEAKER_01

Right. They have to adapt immediately through radical technological upgrades.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell, which brings us to corporate adaptability. Let's look at FedEx. Their stock is at$343.97, down about 1.6%. But despite that little dip, they are making massive structural moves. Huge moves. They're doing a freight spinoff by June 1, which costs them$126 million in Q3 just to set up. But the really wild part is this FedEx surround system.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, this is fascinating.

SPEAKER_00

It uses advanced sensors for real-time risk detection. But here's where it gets really interesting. FedEx isn't just using AI as a tracking tool, they expect AI to be integrated into over 50% of their workflows by 2028.

SPEAKER_01

50%.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. It's the difference between using a spell checker, which is just a tool you use after the fact, and having a co-writer sitting right next to you, embedded in the process. AI is becoming their coworker.

SPEAKER_01

It's an embedded collaborator. And speaking of incredible tech applications, we have to talk about the KitKats.

SPEAKER_00

Oh my gosh, yes. The Kit Kat heist. I love this story. So twelve tons of KitKats were stolen in transit.

SPEAKER_01

Twelve tons.

SPEAKER_00

From Italy to Poland. Yeah. Just vanished.

SPEAKER_01

Now, usually a company hides that, but yeah, you don't want the bad PR of losing a massive shipment to organized crime.

SPEAKER_00

Right. But Nestle went totally public with it. They blasted it everywhere.

SPEAKER_01

And what's fascinating here is why they went public. Nestle uses product level traceability.

SPEAKER_00

Meaning what?

SPEAKER_01

Meaning there are unique batch codes on every single unit. So by announcing the theft, they essentially weaponize those batch codes. Yeah. Every stolen case becomes a signal. If anyone across the market, a shady distributor, a warehouse worker, scans that code, Nestle knows exactly where the black market is operating. They turned a massive loss into a global warning system.

SPEAKER_00

That is brilliant. It's like turning the candy itself into a tracker.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. But while technology like AI and batch codes provide the brains of the supply chain, companies are also spending billions to rewire the muscle.

SPEAKER_00

The physical delivery routes.

SPEAKER_01

Right.

SPEAKER_00

Which brings us to the rural delivery war. Amazon is investing$4 billion billion with a B to expand rural delivery. They want to reach one in five rural households with 24-hour service.

SPEAKER_01

By leveraging small business owners.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. But I have to ask, is this really just about getting packages to people faster? Or is Amazon actively trying to conquer the last geographical fortress that Walmart currently dominates?

SPEAKER_01

Oh, it's absolutely a turf war. Walmart has historically owned rural America because of their physical footprint. If Amazon can get a package to a farmhouse in 24 hours, Walmart loses its biggest advantage.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, why drive 40 minutes to the store if it's on your porch tomorrow?

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

And it's not just Amazon. Chick Flay is building a$50 million tri-temperature distribution hub in Lubbock, Texas. FedEx is launching same-day local delivery with one rail. Even as Amazon and FedEx expand free returns, the micro networks are just exploding.

SPEAKER_01

But none of this physical expansion works without the people driving the trucks and moving the boxes. Labor. Yes. Labor stability. And there is some really good news in the reports here. The Teamsters and DHL reached a tentative four-year agreement. Oh, nice. It covers thousands of workers across 26 locals, and it averted a nationwide strike right before the March 31 expiration.

SPEAKER_00

Thank goodness. A strike on top of everything else would have been catastrophic.

SPEAKER_01

It would have broken the system. But here's the thing all these hyperfast local deliveries rely on goods that actually cross the oceans first. Right. Which brings us to probably the most counterintuitive data point in the entire report.

SPEAKER_00

The ocean freight paradox. Okay, let's look at the data from Hopag Lloyd, the massive ocean carrier. They transported 13.5 million TEU, those standard shipping containers. That's an 8% increase.

SPEAKER_01

Which beats market growth.

SPEAKER_00

Right. They move more stuff than ever. Yet their group profit plummeted from 2.4 billion euros to just 924 million euros. And their EBIT, their core operating profit, dropped to 1.0 billion euros.

SPEAKER_01

It's a massive drop.

SPEAKER_00

It's like a wildly popular restaurant, right? It's packed to the brim every single night. But because the cost of ingredients skyrocketed and you had to drop your menu prices to compete, you're making half as much money while doing way more work.

SPEAKER_01

That's a perfect analogy. Because operational costs are rising fuel, rerouting around the Red Sea, but freight rates are falling as the market normalizes from the pandemic highs.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, so they can't charge the crazy premium prices they did in 2021 anymore.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. But Hopak Lloyd's operational performance remains stellar. Their Gemini cooperation with Maersk hit an industry benchmark 90% schedule reliability.

SPEAKER_00

90% on time and ocean freight is insane.

SPEAKER_01

It's basically unheard of right now. And despite these squeezed margins, stock investors actually have some hope. The upcoming U.S. employment report, plus encouraging reports from FedEx and Delta Airlines, are giving the market some optimism amid all this geopolitical dread.

SPEAKER_00

People are still buying, things are still moving.

SPEAKER_01

Adaptability is working.

SPEAKER_00

So we've covered a lot of ground. We're looking at a global system under immense macro stress wars.$5.38 diesel, political shutdowns, tariffs, but it's demonstrating incredible micro resilience. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_01

AI, logistics, batch code tracking, rural networks.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly.

SPEAKER_01

And for you, listening right now, whether you're ordering a Kit Kat or waiting in a TSA line or tracking a package to a rural address, you are interacting with the very tip of this massive shifting geopolitical iceberg.

SPEAKER_00

And I want to leave you with the final thought to mull over. If FedEx is embedding AI into 50% of its workflows by 2028, and Amazon is spending$4 billion to reach rural America in 24 hours, how long until the concept of supply chain delays becomes a thing of the past entirely? How long until they're replaced by systems that fix problems before human beings even know they exist?

SPEAKER_01

That's the real question.

SPEAKER_00

It is. Thank you for joining us on this deep dive into the source material. We will catch you on the next one.