THE LOADED BOX · DTB MONTHLY EDITION

DTB Monthly - February 2026

A monthly structural diagnosis of why cargo receiving windows moved this month, and what it means for commit timing.

Published March 1, 2026 · DTB Monthly (Loaded Box)

DTB Monthly · February 2026

Reader's narrative

The instinct at this point in the quarter is to look for compression - windows narrowing as the planning horizon shortens. February 2026 did not show that pattern at the network level. The median cargo receiving window measured 129 hours at T-4w and 137 hours at T-0d. The aggregate widened, not narrowed.

The mechanism is paired ERD and CY Cut activity - Sustained Churn. 44.6% of February 2026's voyages with movement showed both fields revising together. Only 5.2% showed the two fields moving in opposite directions. The failure mode is not synchronization breakdown. It is sustained mid-horizon movement that does not collapse into a stable plan.

57.0% of revision events arrived beyond T-7 - outside the 72-hour compression zone the system is built to catch. The mass of schedule movement sat between T-14 and T-7, which is the same window where rail commits and drayage dispatch are being finalized. The schedule moved while the plan was being committed.

And the activity was not evenly distributed. 5 of the post-suppression top-activity voyages departed from USSAV Garden City - Savannah's primary container terminal. EVER FAVOR 022W (EGLV), MSC LUCY MZ605 (MSCU), EDISON TUGZN (CMDU) all recorded paired ERD and CY Cut activity from the same terminal. The mechanism is cross-carrier but terminal-specific.

The illustrative case is EVER FAVOR 022W (EGLV) at USSAV Savannah, departure February 12, 2026. 34 CRW revisions across the voyage. Total absolute motion: 1,512 hours. The exporter who committed drayage at T-4w against the published window committed against a plan the schedule had not finished drawing.

The commit horizon is wrong.

Exporters committing drayage, rail, and appointment decisions at T-4w to T-2w faced a schedule that took its final shape between T-14 and T-7 in February 2026. The decision shift is to move the commit window inward where operational constraints allow - accept the smaller planning horizon, commit against a plan that's real. Where the commit window can't move, treat T-7 as a mandatory replanning checkpoint, not an observational one.

A methodology note carries forward from DTB Monthly Dec 2025: the MAEU/USORF Norfolk pipeline artifact remains under engineering review. 5 MAEU voyages at Norfolk appear in residual top-activity lists with CY Cut activity that does not reflect underlying terminal behavior. Norfolk concentration findings are deferred in this edition.

The operator's problem isn't too many vessels at once. It is no stable point to act.

DTB Monthly

February 2026

February 2026 did not settle into a stable plan. The window kept moving inside the planning horizon.

Published May 05, 2026 · Framework TradeLanes DTB Monthly v1.1 · Status Operator-facing


1. Opening

Layer 1 · Headline · Opening Frame

The instinct at this point in the quarter is to look for decay - windows compressing as the planning horizon shortens. February 2026 does not show that pattern at the network level. The median cargo receiving window measured 129 hours at T-4w and 137 hours at T-0d. The aggregate widened, not narrowed.

What grew was volume. The month produced 4,197 CRW revision events across 670 voyages, with 57.0% of those events arriving beyond T-7 - well outside the 72-hour compression zone. Only 24.3% of events landed inside T-3.

A methodology note covering the carrier-terminal data pipeline artifact first identified in DTB Monthly Dec 2025 (MAEU at Norfolk's primary container terminal) appears in Section 4. The artifact remains under engineering review in this edition.

Two things were true in February. The aggregate story (median window widened from 129h to 137h) beside the voyage story (top-activity voyages recorded 39 or more revisions). The contradiction is the story.


2. The Mechanism

Layer 2 · Pattern · Terminal anchor

The mechanism is paired ERD and CY Cut activity - Sustained Churn. 44.6% of February 2026's voyages with movement showed both fields revising together (co-moving), the largest class in the dual-signal breakdown. 20.3% showed CY Cut activity alone, 17.0% ERD alone, 12.8% held flat, and only 5.2% showed the two fields moving in opposite directions. The failure mode is not the two signals diverging. It is both signals continuing to move together while the planning horizon closes.

The terminal anchor is USSAV Savannah. 5 of the post-suppression top-activity voyages departed from Garden City, Savannah's primary container terminal - including EVER FAVOR 022W (EGLV), MSC LUCY MZ605 (MSCU), EDISON TUGZN (CMDU). The mechanism is cross-carrier but terminal-specific.

The three-element read

Contradiction. The network median widened across February 2026's planning horizon - and 670 voyages produced 4,197 revision events. Both readings are true because the aggregate hides where the mechanism operates.

Operator implication. The plan committed at T-4w faced 57.0% of revision activity arriving between T-14 and T-7 - exactly the window where rail commits and drayage dispatch are being finalized.

Failure mode. Clustered revisions arrive mid-horizon. The window reshapes. Stability doesn't come. The commit deadline arrives. The exporter commits against the latest shape - which is overtaken by the next revision before the truck reaches the gate.


3. Bridge to Evidence

Layer 2 → Layer 3 · From claim to patterns

If mid-horizon Sustained Churn is the mechanism, three patterns must appear in the data:

  1. Revision activity concentrated inside the planning horizon, not at its endpoints.
  2. A non-trivial share of voyages with sustained instability rather than directional drift.
  3. That share concentrating at specific terminals, not distributed across the network.

Here's what February 2026 showed.


4. Quantified Proof

Layer 3 · Three findings that anchor the mechanism

57.0% of February 2026 revision events arrived beyond T-7. The mass of schedule movement sat between T-14 and T-7 (25.6%) and beyond T-14 (31.4%). Only 24.3% of events landed inside T-3. This locates the mechanism outside the 72-hour boundary and inside the planning horizon.

Paired ERD and CY Cut activity is the dominant signature. 44.6% of voyages with movement showed both fields revising together. Only 5.2% showed the two fields moving in opposite directions. The mode is sustained, not divergent.

Volume sits at 4,197 events across 670 voyages. 23 distinct carriers, 10 U.S. ports, 344 distinct vessels. The activity is broad-based, not isolated to one carrier or one alliance.


5. The Illustrative Case

Layer 3 · The mechanism in one voyage

EVER FAVOR 022W at USSAV Savannah (carrier EGLV, departure February 12, 2026). 34 CRW revisions. Total absolute magnitude: 1,512 hours. Paired ERD and CY Cut activity: 20 ERD revisions, 14 CY Cut revisions across the same voyage. The terminal pushed the whole window forward as a single unit through 34 revisions.

This voyage carried roughly 44 hours of CRW motion per revision on average - the single-voyage signature of February 2026's mid-horizon Sustained Churn pattern. The exporter who committed drayage at T-4w against the published window committed against a plan the schedule had not finished drawing.

The window didn't break. It kept moving.


6. Concentration and Repeat Offenders

Part A - Concentration

Where Sustained Churn operated at scale in February 2026

USSAV Garden City - the mechanism in detail.

Vessel · Voyage Carrier n_events n_ERD n_CY Total magnitude (h)
EVER FAVOR · 022W EGLV 34 20 14 1,512
MSC LUCY · MZ605 MSCU 37 20 17 1,440
EDISON · TUGZN CMDU 25 13 12 1,392
MSC SINDY · NO606 MSCU 31 16 15 1,320
MSC GIOVANNA VII · IV551 MSCU 25 14 11 1,248

3 distinct carriers represented in the February 2026 USSAV concentration cluster. The signature is cross-carrier paired activity at one terminal.

USORF - deferred pending methodology review.

5 MAEU vessels at Norfolk appear in February 2026's residual top-activity list by CY Cut activity. The CY Cut signature follows the same pipeline-artifact pattern first identified in DTB Monthly Dec 2025 - alternation between adjacent candidate timestamps independent of underlying terminal activity. These voyages are documented in the methodology note (Section 4) and are not used to support a Norfolk concentration finding in this edition. A concentration finding at Norfolk may be warranted once the underlying data can be validated independently.

Part B - Repeat Offenders

Prior-month qualifiers only · Temporal boundary rule

4 February 2026 vessels appeared in prior-month top-activity lists, qualifying as Repeat Offenders under the temporal boundary rule (qualification from prior months only):

  • ONE BLUE JAY · 040W (ONEY) at USSAV Savannah - prior-month qualifier 2025-11
  • YM UNANIMITY · 084W (ONEY) at USLAX Los Angeles - prior-month qualifier 2025-11
  • KINGSTON · 018E (ONEY) at USSAV Savannah - prior-month qualifier 2025-10
  • KINGSTON · 018E (ONEY) at USORF Norfolk - prior-month qualifier 2025-10

The repeat pattern is geographically consistent with this edition's concentration findings: 2 of 4 are at USSAV Savannah.


7. Decision and Cost

Part A - The Decision Shift

Layer 4 · Operator behavior change

The commit horizon is wrong.

Exporters committing drayage, rail, and appointment decisions at T-4w to T-2w faced a schedule that took its final shape between T-14 and T-7 in February 2026. 57.0% of revision events arrived beyond T-7. The schedule's information mass is mid-horizon, not late-horizon.

The decision shift: move the commit window inward where operational constraints allow. Defer the decision to the zone where the schedule has the highest information content - roughly T-7 to T-3 - even at the cost of tighter planning horizons.

Where the commit window can't move - and for many rail-dependent exports it structurally cannot - the alternative is to commit at T-4w but rebuild contingency at T-7. Treat T-7 as a mandatory replanning checkpoint, not an observational one.

Part B - Operational Cost Chain

Five steps from plan to cost - traced against EVER FAVOR 022W

  1. Plan. At T-4w, the exporter commits drayage against the published window for EVER FAVOR 022W at USSAV Savannah. Rail slot booked. Driver scheduled. Trucking appointment reserved.
  2. Churn. Through February 2026's mid-horizon, the terminal pushed ERD and CY Cut forward together across 34 revisions. Total absolute motion: 1,512 hours.
  3. Pressure. Smaller paired corrections arrived alongside the larger pushes. Every check against the terminal returned a different gate window.
  4. Commit. The commit deadline arrived. The driver was dispatched against the latest published window.
  5. Cost. Driver wait time, container dwell, appointment rebooking - receipts of a plan made against a schedule that hadn't finished moving.

The cost cascade doesn't fail at step 5. It fails at step 4 - when the commit has to be made against a schedule still in motion. Steps 1 through 3 produce the failure. Step 5 receipts it.

Don't move step 5. Move step 4. Commit inward - where the schedule has resolved.


8. System Statement + Forward Hook

Layer 4 → Close

February 2026 produced 4,197 CRW revision events across 670 voyages. 57.0% arrived beyond T-7. The pattern is consistent with the Sustained Churn framing introduced in DTB Monthly Dec 2025 - paired mid-horizon revision activity that does not collapse into a stable plan.

The operator's problem isn't too many vessels at once. It is no stable point to act.

Next edition will read March 2026's data against the same axis: whether the share of beyond-T-7 events holds, whether the terminal anchor concentrates further at USSAV, and whether the MAEU/USORF pipeline artifact resolves under engineering review.

TRADELANES · DTB MONTHLY · FEBRUARY 2026

tradelanes.co


Methodology

Sustained Churn cohort definition. Voyages with paired ERD and CY Cut activity (co-moving) form the umbrella cohort under the v0.4 voyage-level pattern taxonomy. Sub-modes are named in the framework appendix. Classification thresholds are not published.

Carrier-terminal suppression. A pipeline-level artifact in CY Cut revisions for Maersk vessels at Norfolk's primary container terminal - first identified in DTB Monthly Dec 2025 - remains active in February 2026's data. 5 MAEU/USORF voyages appear in residual top-activity lists with CY Cut activity that does not reflect underlying terminal behavior. These voyages are excluded from concentration findings and Norfolk band assignments in this edition. A fuller treatment will appear once engineering review resolves the underlying data.

Cohort window. February 2026 U.S. departures with observable schedule revisions. 4,197 events across 670 voyages.

Weekly Breakdown

The weekly DTB editions that make up this monthly diagnosis.