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DHL Supply Chain CEO Cites ‘Business as Usual’ as Tariffs Kick In

Tariffs have been the talk of the town throughout the supply chain in recent months, but for DHL Supply Chain, it’s just another day at the office.

“Changes in tariffs and duties, and that kind of activity, is pretty frequent around the world, so it’s not new for us to deal with a tariff landscape,” said Patrick Kelleher, the CEO of DHL Supply Chain North America. “Our system, tools and especially people, are positioned to manage that on a day-to-day basis. We’re very much business as usual as it relates to managing what is the higher volume of change.”

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Headquartered in Bonn, Germany, DHL’s contract logistics wing operates in 50 countries across 1,600 warehouse locations worldwide, and is no stranger to facilitating product flow internationally, regardless of trade barriers imposed.

“I always use the analogy, ‘water finds its easiest way downhill,’” Kelleher said. “If there’s a tariff implemented—that’s a dam—the water will find a new way. And we’re about helping customers manage that change in the way that product is flowing.”

Kelleher chatted with Sourcing Journal at the Manifest supply chain and logistics conference on Feb. 12, discussing DHL Supply Chain’s direction in 2025 as well as other hot topics such as the state of the contract logistics market, the company’s recent returns acquisition and warehouse automation.

Sourcing Journal: In the wake of the Strategy 2030 launch, you consider 2025 a milestone year for DHL Supply Chain. What should we expect this year?

Patrick Kelleher: We’re going to continue to be a market leader in contract warehousing, domestic transportation, transportation management and supply chain orchestration.

From a product perspective, we are going to amplify our focus on e-commerce solutions and 4PL solutions. Returns is a big area of focus for us as well.

From an industry vertical perspective, we’re putting extra emphasis on life sciences and e-commerce/omnichannel—two market verticals that we’re really investing in significantly for accelerated growth.

SJ: Given we have a new presidential administration, which has been accompanied by a massive influx of imports into the U.S., how does this impact the contract logistics market in 2025?

PK: I do think contract logistics market is going to grow. The demand for warehouse space is continuing to increase, and we’re seeing that in the vacancy rates, in the big markets that we operate in.