MARKETWIRE ALERTS
6/25 4:49 PM
MARKETWIRE ALERTS MARKETWIRE ALERTS MarketWire Afternoon News June 25th: Updated at 5:00 PM ET HEADLINES: -- BTS: North American Freight Up 19.4% in April -- EIA: US NatGas Storage Reports 76 Bcf Weekly Injection -- AAR: Petroleum Carloads Up 3.7% for Week Ended June 20 -- CEC: California Gasoline Stocks Rise 474,000 Bbl on Week -- CEC: California Diesel Stocks Climb 468,000 Bbl on Week -- BEA: US Q1 GDP Growth at 2.1% vs 1.6% Estimate NEWS: BTS: North American Freight Up 19.4% in April Cross-border freight activity between the United States, Canada and Mexico increased sharply in April, supported by higher volumes across transportation modes and stronger trade with Mexico, according to data published Thursday (6/25) by the Bureau of Transportation Statistics. Total North American transborder freight, which measures the value of goods moving across U.S. borders by truck, rail, pipeline, vessel and air, reached $150.8 billion in April, up 19.4% from April 2025. Freight flows with Mexico totaled $86 billion, rising 23.4% year over year, while trade with Canada increased 14.4% to $64.8 billion. Truck transportation remained the largest freight mode, carrying $98.4 billion in cross-border shipments during April, an increase of 18.8% from a year earlier. Other transportation modes also posted increases. Rail freight climbed 15.6% to $16.7 billion, vessel shipments rose 33.2% to $9.7 billion and pipeline movements increased 22.3% to $10.9 billion. Air freight recorded the largest percentage increase, surging 66.2% to $8 billion. For energy markets, pipeline and waterborne movements remained key components of cross-border trade. BTS identified Chicago, Port Huron and Minneapolis as the leading pipeline connection regions for U.S.-Canada energy freight flows, while El Paso, Hidalgo and Laredo led energy pipeline connections with Mexico. Among waterborne energy routes, Port of Houston, Port Arthur and Texas City ranked among the top southern border connections, underscoring the Gulf Coast's continued role in North American energy trade. Laredo, Texas, remained the largest overall freight gateway with $33.4 billion in total transborder trade during April. By commodity category, computer-related machinery and parts ranked first at $33.4 billion, followed by vehicles at $20.7 billion and mineral fuels, oils and waxes at $19.2 billion. The BTS TransBorder Freight program tracks monthly and annual cross-border freight flows between the United States, Canada and Mexico by transportation mode, commodity and geography. EIA: US NatGas Storage Reports 76 Bcf Weekly Injection Energy Information Administration data released midmorning Thursday (6/25) show a 76 billion cubic feet injection into U.S. natural gas storage to 2.835 trillion cubic feet in the week ended June 19. Natural gas in U.S. storage is 1.7% lower than last year and 5.7% above the five-year average of 2.683 Tcf. Regionally, EIA reports the East registered a 26 Bcf injection to 558 Bcf, 4.6% less than a year ago and 0.9% higher than the five-year average. Natural gas in storage in the Midwest increased 34 Bcf week-on-week to 672 Bcf, a 1.7% surplus compared to the same week a year ago and 5.2% higher than the five-year average. Mountain region natural gas in storage increased 1 Bcf, up 2.3% year-on-year to 24% above the five-year average. South Central storage rose 13 Bcf to 1066 Bcf, 6.2% less than in the same week last year and 0.4% above the five-year average. AAR: Petroleum Carloads Up 3.7% for Week Ended June 20 The Association of American Railroads (AAR) reports petroleum and petroleum product carloads totaled 11,644 during the week ended June 20, up 3.7% from a year ago. Year-to-date, cumulative petroleum and petroleum products carloads totaled 262,674, up 7.5% from the same period a year ago, an AAR report published on Wednesday (6/24) showed. Total weekly traffic for the profiled week reached 521,998 carloads and intermodal units, representing an increase of 7.1% from the corresponding week a year ago. Total carloads for the specific week ended June 20 reached 233,259, showing an expansion of 1.6% compared directly with the corresponding week of last year. Weekly intermodal volume for the period reached 288,739 containers and trailers, representing a clear increase of 12.1% from the corresponding week of the prior year. Year-to-date, cumulative U.S. railroad carloads reported for the first 24 weeks of the current year stood at 5,449,203, up 3.2% from the same point last year. Cumulative intermodal units over the same year-to-date timeframe reached 6,691,916 units, representing a solid improvement of 3.0% compared to the same period a year ago. Total combined rail traffic for the first 24 weeks of the year reached 12,141,119 carloads and intermodal units, expanding 3.1% compared to the prior year. CEC: California Gasoline Stocks Rise 474,000 Bbl on Week California Energy Commission data show statewide gasoline inventories increased in the week ending June 19, as the agency continues to report only statewide totals in its Weekly Fuels Report released on Thursday (6/25). Statewide gasoline stocks, including CARB reformulated, non-California, and blending components, climbed by 474,000 bbl to 9.872 million bbl but remained 10% below the same week last year. Statewide gasoline production increased by 54,000 bbl to 5.549 million bbl but remained 7% below the year-ago level. CEC: California Diesel Stocks Climb 468,000 Bbl on Week California Energy Commission data show statewide diesel inventories increased in the week ending June 19, as the agency continues to report only statewide totals in its Weekly Fuels Report released on Thursday (6/25). Statewide CARB diesel and other diesel fuel stocks climbed by 468,000 bbl to 2.640 million bbl and were 1% below the same week last year. Statewide diesel production increased by 137,000 bbl to 1.491 million bbl and was 5% above the year-ago level. BEA: US Q1 GDP Growth at 2.1% vs 1.6% Estimate The U.S. economy grew at an annualized rate of 2.1% in the first quarter of 2026, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis' (BEA) third and final estimate released on Thursday (6/25). This final reading beat market expectations of a 1.6% growth rate and marks an acceleration from the 0.5% expansion recorded in the fourth quarter. The upward revision suggests a stronger economic rebound from the late-2025 federal government shutdown than previously calculated, despite underlying shifts in domestic activity. The BEA reported that the 0.5 percentage point increase from the second estimate primarily reflected a downward revision to imports, which act as a subtraction in GDP calculations. However, this boost was partially offset by a downward revision to consumer spending, with real final sales to private domestic purchasers downshifting to a 1.7% growth rate compared to the previously reported 2.4%. On the inflation front, price pressures remained elevated and sticky through the start of the year. The PCE price index was revised slightly higher to a 4.6% increase for the first quarter, up from 2.9% in the fourth quarter, while the core PCE price index, excluding volatile food and energy costs, held steady at an elevated 4.4% growth rate. (c) Copyright 2026 DTN, LLC. All rights reserved.
 
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