The calendar says everyone’s back. The data says otherwise.
We looked at what actually happened across regions in the first week back from the holidays.
Short version: Asia-Pacific hit the ground running. Europe took its time. Everyone else landed somewhere in between.
Let’s look at the numbers.
What We Looked At
We analyzed over 1.3 million WebCargo quote and booking records from freight forwarders across all regions, comparing:
- Baseline: Average daily activity in October 2025
- Winter break: December 20, 2025 – January 4, 2026
- Snap-back day: January 5, 2026 (first day back from holidays)
This is real quoting and booking behavior, not survey answers or wishful thinking.
The Reality: Asia-Pacific Snapped Back Hardest
On January 5, the first real workday back, activity didn’t just return – it diverged fast by region.
Snap-back ratios (Jan 5 vs October daily average):
- Asia-Pacific: 1.15× baseline (15% above normal)
- Americas: 0.90× baseline
- Europe: 0.79× baseline
- Middle East & Africa: 0.66× baseline
Asia-Pacific didn’t ease back in. It overshot October by a healthy margin. Europe – the largest market – came back at just under 80% of normal. The Middle East & Africa took the longest to get moving.
If it felt like some regions were already in full swing while others were still shaking off jet lag, that feeling checks out.
What Happened During Winter Break (The Calm Before the Snap)
The break itself tells an important part of the story.
Average daily activity during winter break (vs October baseline):
- Asia-Pacific: 51%
- Americas: 41%
- Europe: 29%
- Middle East & Africa: 20%
Asia-Pacific never fully shut down. Half the normal activity kept flowing through the holidays. Europe, despite being the biggest market overall, dropped to less than a third of baseline. Middle East & Africa went even quieter.
Translation: the regions that stayed semi-online during the holidays were much better positioned to snap back fast.
The Regional Patterns (No Surprises, But Still Useful)
Asia-Pacific
The clear winner in the snap-back race. Strongest return (1.15× baseline) and the most activity during the break. These teams came back ready and didn’t leave everything for January.
Europe
Biggest market, slowest return. A more complete holiday shutdown shows up clearly in the data. And with January 6 still a holiday in several countries, the comeback started – but didn’t fully land on day one.
Americas
Middle of the road. Didn’t disappear during the break, didn’t surge immediately either. A steady, fairly predictable return.
Middle East & Africa
The quietest during the break and the slowest to snap back. These markets took their holidays seriously – and needed more time to ramp back up.
Why This Matters (And Why January Feels Uneven)
This isn’t just interesting trivia. It affects real decisions.
- For procurement teams:
A “global” return date isn’t actually global. Asia-Pacific was already running hot on January 5, while Europe was still well below baseline. Planning capacity without regional nuance is how bottlenecks sneak up on you. - For operations:
Asia-Pacific wasn’t easing in – it was sprinting. Europe and MEA were warming up. Expect uneven workloads across teams, even on the same calendar day. - For capacity planning:
Regions that stayed active during the break snapped back faster. Regions that shut down more completely needed more runway. This pattern is remarkably consistent.
What To Do About It (Besides Another Coffee)
A few practical takeaways:
- Segment by snap-back speed
- Asia-Pacific: plan for above-normal volume immediately
- Americas: expect ~90% of baseline
- Europe & MEA: plan for 65–80% on day one
- Use holiday behavior as a signal
Regions that kept moving during the break came back strongest. This isn’t random – it’s predictive. - Plan for staggered recovery
Don’t assume every office is fully back just because your office is. Make sure teams know who’s live, who’s ramping, and who’s still half-offline. - Be kind to the handoff
Nothing breaks workflows faster than relying on someone who is technically “back” but mentally still in holiday mode.
The Bottom Line
The post-holiday snap-back is real – and it’s very regional.
Asia-Pacific came back hardest, running 15% above baseline on January 5. Europe, the largest market, returned at 79%, with Middle East & Africa even lower at 66%.
Regions that stayed active during the holidays snapped back faster. Regions that shut down more completely took longer to find their rhythm.
Plan for regional differences, not a uniform global restart. And if you’re working Asia-Pacific lanes in early January, buckle up – they’re already moving.
Regional Snapshot (TL;DR before the spreadsheets)
- Asia-Pacific: Strongest snap-back (1.15× baseline); stayed half-active during the break (51%).
- Americas: Moderate return (0.90×); steady but not rushed.
- Europe: Biggest market, slowest restart (0.79×); more complete holiday shutdown (29%).
- Middle East & Africa: Quietest during the break (20%) and slowest to ramp back (0.66×).
Raw Data
Regional Snap-Back Metrics (Jan 5 vs October Baseline)
| Region | Baseline Daily Avg. | Jan 5 Activity | Snap-Back Ratio | Winter Break Daily Avg | Winter Break Ratio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asia-Pacific | 791.5 | 913.0 | 1.15x | 401.2 | 0.51x |
| Americas | 1,968.6 | 1,775.0 | 0.90x | 801.1 | 0.41x |
| Europe | 10,888.3 | 8,637.0 | 0.79x | 3,117.2 | 0.29x |
| Middle East & Africa | 2,705.4 | 1,785.0 | 0.66x | 529.0 | 0.20x |
Never miss data drops like these again.
“*” indicates required fields

