The phenomenon, which Flexe analysts characterize as "warehousing stagflation," defies traditional economic expectations where rising vacancy typically suppresses rental costs. Logistics Managers' Index data supports this trend, showing that warehousing costs have remained elevated without entering contraction territory for four years. By offering a granular view of on-demand rates rather than static contract averages, the new index aims to replace the guesswork currently plaguing supply chain management.
Flexe CEO Karl Siebrecht argues that while freight shippers have long utilized spot-rate benchmarks to manage risk, warehousing has remained a blind spot for enterprise leaders. The index integrates a decade of transaction data to help companies calibrate between fixed real estate footprints and flexible, on-demand capacity. At the Chicago event, Siebrecht will detail how this shift from rigid constraints to agile distribution models allows Fortune 500 enterprises to treat their inventory storage as a variable strategic asset rather than a fixed liability.




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