Trade Volatility Is Changing What Shippers Need From 3PLs and Forwarders
Tariff volatility has become a lasting source of supply chain cost, complexity, and risk. As shippers rethink sourcing, routing, inventory placement, and customs timing, they need logistics partners who can do more than execute freight moves. They need forwarders and 3PLs that can help them protect working capital, preserve optionality, and build supply chains that can adapt quickly when trade conditions change.
STG Logistics’ Built for Disruption: 2026 Shipper Strategy Playbook found that tariff disruption pushed importers to front-load cargo, diversify sourcing, renegotiate carrier contracts, and explore tools such as bonded storage, FTZs, port diversification, and flexible routing. The takeaway is clear: shippers are not waiting for stability to return. They are redesigning supply chains to operate through volatility.
What Shippers Need Now
When tariffs shift quickly, logistics decisions become financial decisions. Clearing goods too soon, routing through the wrong gateway, or holding inventory in the wrong place can increase duty exposure, strain cash flow, or create inventory imbalance. At the same time, waiting too long without the right infrastructure can cause congestion, missed delivery windows, and higher transportation costs.
That is why shippers are placing greater value on bonded storage, FTZ access, port diversification, flexible inland routing, visibility, and exception management. These capabilities give customers more control over when goods move, where inventory sits, and how quickly they can respond to tariff, capacity, or market changes.
How Forwarders and 3PLs Can Respond
- Build flexible import strategies: Help customers evaluate alternate ports, inland gateways, modes, and storage locations before disruption hits.
- Use bonded storage strategically: Give shippers time to defer duties, preserve cash flow, and hold inventory closer to demand while market conditions evolve.
- Evaluate FTZ options: Identify when FTZs make sense for high-value goods, re-export activity, manufacturing, assembly, or complex customs scenarios.
- Diversify ports and inland routing: Reduce dependence on a single gateway or lane and support efficient port-to-door execution.
- Improve inventory placement: Help customers avoid the cost and cash-flow strain of broad front-loading by positioning freight closer to demand.
- Build mode flexibility: Enable shifts between truckload, intermodal, LTL, transload, and warehousing based on cost, urgency, capacity, and risk.
- Strengthen visibility and exception management: Provide clearer insight into freight status, availability, delays, and required decisions.
The STG Logistics Advantage
For forwarders and 3PLs, the opportunity is to move from vendor to strategic advisor. By partnering with STG Logistics, they can offer customers a broader port-to-door network without building every asset or service themselves. STG supports integrated solutions across CFS, transloading, bonded warehousing, drayage, intermodal, warehousing, LTL, truckload, and managed logistics.
In an unpredictable trade environment, shippers need more than capacity. They need options, visibility, and a partner who can help them move with confidence. STG Logistics helps forwarders and 3PLs deliver all three. Let’s talk! https://www.stgusa.com/contact/