Cybercrime is no longer confined to data breaches and ransomware it’s now moving trucks, rerouting shipments, and stealing millions in physical goods.
A new warning from U.S. authorities highlights a growing trend where hackers infiltrate logistics systems and impersonate legitimate companies to hijack cargo shipments in transit. The result: nearly $725 million in stolen goods across the U.S. and Canada in 2025, marking a dramatic escalation in cyber-enabled supply chain attacks.
This emerging threat blurs the line between cybercrime and organized logistics fraud creating a new risk category that businesses worldwide can no longer ignore.
How the Attacks Work
According to insights reported by Recorded Future’s news platform, The Record, cybercriminals are targeting freight brokers, carriers, and logistics platforms specifically online “load boards” where shipping jobs are posted and accepted.
Here’s how the attack typically unfolds:
- Hackers gain unauthorized access to broker or carrier systems
- They impersonate legitimate companies using stolen credentials
- Fake shipment listings are posted on freight platforms
- Real carriers accept the jobs, unaware they are fraudulent
- Shipments are redirected to attacker-controlled locations
- Cargo is collected and disappears into black markets
In more advanced cases, attackers use a tactic known as “double-brokering”, inserting themselves into the delivery chain and silently rerouting goods without raising suspicion.
A Rapidly Growing Criminal Industry
The scale and profitability of these attacks are accelerating:
- Cargo theft increased 60% year-over-year
- The average value per theft rose by 36%
- Individual incidents have reached millions of dollars in losses
One documented case involved a company losing $1 million worth of products in a single hijacking operation. Meanwhile, automotive dealers have reported repeated incidents of stolen vehicles during overseas shipments.
Even more concerning, some attackers are now demanding ransom payments after stealing cargo blending traditional ransomware tactics with physical theft.
Why This Matters for Businesses
This trend represents a major shift in cyber risk:
- Cyberattacks now directly impact physical supply chains
- Logistics, manufacturing, retail, and automotive sectors are prime targets
- Trust-based systems like freight platforms are being weaponized
- Victims often remain unaware until the cargo is already lost
Attackers are also manipulating official records – such as updating carrier contact and insurance details – making detection even more difficult.
Global Implications for the Industry
Although these incidents have been heavily reported in North America, the threat is global by design.
Any region with growing logistics ecosystems – including Africa, the Middle East, Europe, and Asia – is exposed to similar risks as digital freight platforms expand.
For emerging markets, this creates a critical challenge:
– Securing digital logistics infrastructure before attackers scale operations globally.
10 Critical Security Actions for Organizations
To mitigate this growing threat, organizations should take immediate action:
- Implement multi-factor authentication (MFA) across all logistics platforms
- Monitor load board activity for unusual listings or behavioral anomalies
- Verify carrier and broker identities manually for high-value shipments
- Restrict and audit access to freight management systems
- Use endpoint detection and response (EDR) to detect system compromise
- Encrypt sensitive logistics and operational data
- Train staff to identify phishing and impersonation attempts through awareness programs
- Establish strict shipment verification protocols before dispatch
- Collaborate with cybersecurity experts like Saintynet Cybersecurity to strengthen defenses
- Develop incident response plans specifically for supply chain and cargo theft scenarios
Expert Insight: The Rise of Hybrid Cybercrime
This new wave of attacks highlights the evolution of cybercriminals from data thieves to operational disruptors.
By combining social engineering, system compromise, and logistics manipulation, attackers are exploiting the weakest link in modern supply chains: trust.
For more insights on evolving cyber threats and supply chain security, explore related analysis.
Conclusion
The FBI’s warning underscores a critical shift in the cyber threat landscape—where digital breaches translate directly into physical and financial losses.
As cybercriminals continue to innovate, organizations must rethink how they secure not just their data, but their entire operational ecosystem.
The message is clear:
👉 In today’s interconnected world, cybersecurity is supply chain security.




