The decline in manufacturing and other economic activity in China eased in April. (WSJ)
Inflation in the eurozone accelerated to an annual 8.1% rate in May. (WSJ)
Canadian economic growth slowed sharply to 3.1% in the first quarter as declining trade volumes offset surging household income. (MarketWatch)
A survey of consumer confidence in the U.S. slipped to the lowest level in three months. (MarketWatch)
A measure of U.S. home prices rose to a record level in March. (WSJ)
Digital freight platform Freightos plans to go public through a merger with a special purchase acquisition company. (Dow Jones Newswires)
U.S. aviation safety regulators rejected Boeing’s request to perform certain regulatory tasks on its own for five years. (WSJ)
Contract manufacturer Foxconn raised its quarterly and annual outlook on improving supply-chain stability in China. (Nikkei Asia)
Food services supplier Sysco is shifting its workers, including truck drivers and warehouse staffers, to a four-day workweek to improve retention. (Transport Dive)
The White House named Stephen Lyon, a retired general who led the U.S. Transportation Command, as its port and supply chain envoy. (Supply Chain Dive)
Ocean Network Express ordered 10 mid-sized container ships to be powered by ammonia and methanol. (Maritime Executive)
Spot rates for liquefied natural gas tankers are up more than 50% over the past year. (Lloyd’s List)
Swedish tanker owner Stena cut its quarterly loss by about a quarter to $76 million. (TradeWinds)
Maersk Line became the first foreign carrier to move international shipping containers between ports in China. (Seatrade Maritime)
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