📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Friday, February 20, 2026
12:36 PM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The spot market is currently navigating a complex web of regional disruptions, with real-time data showing 213,166 available loads and a total market opportunity of $271.2M. While overall load volumes have cooled slightly from mid-week peaks, the national average rate remains healthy at $2.28/mile. The most critical operational threats today stem from a massive Northeast winter storm threatening the I-95 corridor, severe freeze warnings in California's Central Valley driving urgent reefer demand, and the escalating fallout from the FMCSA's crackdown on hundreds of CDL schools. This regulatory action is severely compounding the capacity vacuum in the Midwest that began with yesterday's Illinois CDL audits. Brokers must pivot immediately to secure vetted capacity in these high-risk zones, as the spread between posted and paid rates indicates carriers are successfully demanding premiums to operate in disrupted regions.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Northeast Heavy Winter Storm (Northeast Region (NY, VT, NH, ME)): Heavy snow accumulations of 5-10 inches with rates up to 2 inches per hour will severely disrupt travel on I-87, I-89, and I-91. Expect immediate capacity avoidance, delayed deliveries, and localized rate spikes for inbound freight.
- Central Valley Freeze (Central California (CA, Fresno, Kern, Tulare counties)): Sub-freezing temperatures dropping to 28 degrees are threatening sensitive crops, triggering an urgent surge in outbound reefer demand and tightening temperature-controlled capacity across the West Coast.
- Ohio Valley Flooding (Ohio (OH, Fairfield, Licking, Greene counties)): Minor to moderate river flooding is impacting local routes and access ramps near I-70 and Route 725, causing localized detours and delaying pickup/delivery operations in regional manufacturing hubs.
- Mississippi River Basin Flooding (Arkansas (AR, Jackson, Woodruff counties)): Flooding along the Cache River is overtaking state highways (SH 37, SH 18), disrupting agricultural freight flows and forcing carriers to utilize longer alternative routes.
⛈️ Weather Impact Cascade
- Immediate Operational Impact: The most acute operational disruptions today are concentrated in New Hampshire and New York. New Hampshire is experiencing a heavy snow storm with an 87% precipitation probability and 0.2 inches of precipitation possible, generating immediate carrier avoidance of I-89 and I-91 corridor routes. New York is seeing rain and snow with 0.4 inches of precipitation possible and a 70% occurrence probability, disrupting I-87 access and I-95 approach routes. These conditions are causing immediate tender rejection spikes and pickup and delivery delays at Northeast facilities today. Ohio conditions are currently favorable — sunny with temperatures in the low 50s — with the flooding impact being localized to county-level road access in Fairfield and Licking counties rather than major interstate disruption, suggesting the Ohio Valley situation is less operationally severe today than the Northeast event.
- Secondary Market Effects: Carrier avoidance of the Northeast is producing a secondary market effect in the Midwest: outbound Chicago and Columbus capacity is simultaneously being absorbed by urgent shipper demand while being structurally constrained by the CDL audit driver shortage. This convergence creates a bidding war dynamic for a shrinking pool of compliant, available trucks. In California, the freeze warning is pulling temperature-controlled equipment westward and leaving Midwest and Northeast reefer markets undersupplied. The Arkansas flooding area — Jackson and Woodruff counties — is showing improving conditions based on current partly sunny skies and a weekend forecast trending toward clearing, which may reduce the routing disruption pressure on SH-37 and SH-18 as the weekend progresses, though specific road closure resolution timelines are not confirmed in available data.
- Regional Spillover Analysis: The Northeast storm's primary spillover effect is on the Midwest outbound market, as carriers decline Northeast-bound tenders and shippers escalate urgency for remaining compliant capacity. A secondary spillover is occurring in the Southeast, as carriers repositioning away from the Northeast and Midwest flow south toward Atlanta and surrounding markets, temporarily adding supply to an already relatively loose Southeast capacity environment. The California freeze-driven reefer hoarding in the West is creating a spillover shortage of temperature-controlled equipment in the Midwest and Northeast — a deficit that may persist through the early part of next week before California reefer capacity begins dispersing eastward as the freeze urgency diminishes.
- Recovery Timeline: Based on available forecast data, New York shows some improvement potential Saturday with partly sunny conditions expected, though the same forecast indicates renewed snow shower potential Sunday with 0.2 inches possible and a 40% probability, and additional snow potential Monday with a 40% chance. This suggests the Northeast disruption may not fully normalize until Tuesday or later — and even then, it is contingent on forecast accuracy. New Hampshire faces similar continued snow risk Saturday through Monday. Ohio flooding-related disruptions appear to be easing given current favorable conditions, though Sunday's forecast for Ohio includes snow shower potential with 0.1 inches possible at a 35% probability, which may complicate pickup operations at the start of next week. The FMCSA CDL enforcement administrative backlog is expected to sustain Midwest capacity disruption into next week on a timeline independent of weather, with no weather-dependent resolution pathway.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Energy markets are pricing in slight upward momentum for middle distillates, suggesting fuel costs will remain a persistent headwind for carrier profitability through the end of Q1.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small to mid-sized carriers in the Midwest are facing existential threats as the FMCSA's sweeping CDL school audits force immediate driver sidelining, severely impacting fleet utilization and cash flow.
- Economic Indicators: Delays in Trans-Pacific service contract negotiations indicate importers are hesitant to lock in long-term rates, which will likely result in extended reliance on the spot market for West Coast drayage and transloading.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
FMCSA Crackdown on CDL Schools Creates Massive Capacity Risk 🔗:
Building on yesterday's Illinois CDL audits, the FMCSA has found hundreds of driver training providers in violation nationwide. Brokers must implement hyper-vigilant carrier vetting protocols immediately. This regulatory purge will sideline thousands of drivers, creating severe, localized capacity shortages—particularly in major training hubs like Chicago and Atlanta. Expect sudden fall-offs and rate spikes as fleets scramble to replace disqualified drivers.
-
FMCSA Rolls Back 12 'Burdensome' Regulations 🔗:
The removal of obsolete regulations, including spare fuse requirements and specific rear impact guard labeling, provides minor operational relief to carriers. For brokers, this slightly reduces the risk of carriers being placed out-of-service for trivial violations during roadside inspections, marginally improving on-time delivery reliability in an otherwise constrained market.
-
Importers Stall Trans-Pacific Contracts, Prolonging Spot Volatility 🔗:
With retailers holding back on 2026-2027 ocean service contracts in hopes of lower rates, freight brokers handling port drayage and transloading should prepare for extended spot market activity. The lack of predictable, contracted volume from the ports means domestic outbound routing from Los Angeles and Long Beach will remain highly volatile and dependent on vessel arrival schedules.
-
Global Container Spot Rates Continue to Soften 🔗:
The 1% drop in the World Container Index and an increase in blank sailings signal weaker-than-expected import demand. For domestic freight brokers, this indicates that the anticipated post-Lunar New Year volume surge may be muted, meaning competition for outbound freight from major coastal distribution centers will intensify, potentially driving down outbound truckload rates in the coming weeks.
News Impact Timeline
- Immediate Operational Reality: Today, the FMCSA CDL school crackdown is the single most impactful structural operational event. Carrier operations in the Midwest are being disrupted in real time as fleets audit their own driver rosters for CDL compliance exposure. Brokers should treat every Midwest carrier assignment as a mandatory compliance verification event rather than a routine booking. Simultaneously, the Northeast storm is generating immediate tender rejection spikes as contracted carriers refuse loads into storm-affected zones to capture spot market premiums — a pattern the first-layer analysis confirms is occurring at elevated rates in both the Northeast and Midwest today.
- 3-Day Market Implications: Within the next 72 hours through Monday, the market is likely to see: continued rate pressure on Midwest-to-Northeast lanes as storm conditions in New York and New Hampshire may persist through the weekend per current forecast data; a potential brief capacity concentration in New Jersey and Northeast terminals as delayed trucks converge to unload once storm conditions ease; the beginning of California reefer market normalization as Central Valley temperatures warm significantly through the weekend; and sustained Midwest van and flatbed capacity tightness as the CDL audit administrative process continues regardless of weather outcomes.
- Week-Ahead Positioning: By mid-next week, the market may bifurcate meaningfully. The Northeast storm disruption is forecast to potentially resolve by Tuesday based on available forecast patterns, which could release trapped carrier capacity from that region. However, the Midwest CDL enforcement situation is structural and administrative in nature, likely keeping outbound rates elevated on a timeline that does not track with weather recovery. Brokers who develop strong Southeast-bound carrier relationships this week will be well-positioned to offer backhaul reload opportunities to carriers stranded in the Northeast post-storm — creating a cross-regional arbitrage that benefits both carrier repositioning needs and Southeast shipper demand.
- Regulatory Compliance Impacts: The FMCSA's concurrent actions — the CDL school crackdown and the rollback of 12 previously burdensome regulations — create a mixed compliance environment requiring nuanced operational adjustments. The CDL enforcement action represents additive, elevated risk requiring immediate carrier vetting protocol enhancements for all Midwest bookings. The regulation rollback, which eliminates requirements such as spare fuse mandates and specific rear impact guard labeling, provides minor but real relief on out-of-service risk during roadside inspections, which may marginally improve on-time delivery reliability for carriers who previously faced inspection delays on those items. Brokers should update carrier onboarding and vetting checklists to reflect both changes simultaneously.
🔍 Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: The current spread between paid and posted rates (e.g., Flatbed paid at $2.49 vs posted at $2.47) indicates that brokers who rely solely on automated pricing algorithms are losing freight. Human negotiation and premium authorizations are required to secure trucks in today's disrupted environment.
- Capacity Alerts: Critical capacity shortages are emerging in the Midwest (due to CDL audits) and the Northeast (due to winter storms). Conversely, the Southeast remains relatively loose, offering brokers a safe harbor for margin generation.
- Technology Disruptions: The integration of real-time weather routing APIs into carrier dispatch software is accelerating. Carriers are now preemptively rejecting loads into storm paths hours before traditional weather alerts are broadcast, forcing brokers to increase lead times for weather-impacted freight.
Demand Shift Indicators
- Regional Demand Predictions: The Midwest is expected to remain the highest-demand region for brokered spot capacity through at least mid-next week. The FMCSA CDL enforcement backlog will sustain artificial capacity tightness beyond the current Northeast weather event, as the administrative process for clearing suspended CDLs is expected to extend into next week regardless of weather normalization. As the Northeast storm potentially eases by mid-week per forecast trajectories, pent-up freight that was delayed or held back by storm avoidance may surge to market, creating a secondary demand spike on outbound Northeast lanes around Sunday through Tuesday. Simultaneously, the Columbus-to-Southeast corridor is likely to see increased demand pressure mid-week as Ohio manufacturing shippers accelerate outbound freight to compensate for flood-related delays accumulated this week.
- Seasonal Transition Analysis: The current market is exhibiting unusual structural characteristics for late February. Normally, late Q1 represents a moderate seasonal trough before the spring building-season surge. However, the simultaneous FMCSA enforcement action and weather disruptions are artificially compressing the compliant driver pool in ways that mask what would otherwise be a stable-to-modestly-softening demand environment. The underlying load-to-truck fundamentals are being distorted by regulatory capacity removal rather than genuine freight volume growth — total national load volumes are noted to be cooling slightly from mid-week highs. Brokers should be cautious about treating current elevated rate levels as a new sustainable baseline, as a rate correction in Midwest markets is possible once the regulatory situation begins normalizing.
- Economic Leading Indicators: The continued stalling of Trans-Pacific service contracts by importers signals that West Coast import-driven domestic freight demand will remain volatile and spot-dependent in the near term. The softening World Container Index and increased blank sailings suggest the anticipated post-Lunar New Year volume surge may be more muted than expected, which could modestly soften outbound truckload rates from major coastal distribution centers in the coming weeks. Diesel prices at $3.69 per gallon continue to apply upward pressure on carrier cost floors, supporting rate levels broadly but also compressing carrier margins — particularly on longer hauls with weather-related delays extending fuel burn.
- Capacity Flow Predictions: Expect a meaningful southward migration of van and flatbed capacity from the Midwest and Ohio Valley toward the Southeast over the next several days, as carriers seek favorable weather and abundant reload opportunities in Atlanta and surrounding hubs. This repositioning flow will temporarily inflate Southeast capacity supply, potentially creating modestly softer inbound Southeast rates by mid-next week. Reefer capacity concentrated in California for freeze-emergency protective service moves is likely to begin dispersing as Central Valley temperatures are forecast to warm substantially — from 49 degrees Friday to approximately 58 degrees Saturday and into the low-to-mid 60s Sunday through Monday — reducing the urgency of westward reefer concentration and gradually releasing temperature-controlled equipment back into the broader market.
👥 Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retailers are heavily reliant on the spot market for inventory repositioning as they delay signing long-term ocean contracts, creating lucrative but unpredictable project freight opportunities from coastal ports.
- Manufacturing: Ohio Valley flooding is disrupting just-in-time manufacturing supply chains, forcing shippers to utilize expedited and team transit to make up for localized road closures and pickup delays.
- Agriculture: The Central California freeze is creating a panic-shipping environment. Produce shippers are paying massive premiums for immediate reefer capacity to move sensitive crops before temperatures plummet further.
- Automotive: Auto parts suppliers in the Midwest are facing severe outbound capacity constraints due to the sudden reduction in available drivers stemming from the FMCSA's CDL school crackdown.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest is currently the most volatile and strategically critical region for freight brokers. A 'perfect storm' of regulatory and environmental factors is severely constraining capacity. The FMCSA's nationwide crackdown on CDL schools, which heavily impacts Chicago-based training hubs, has sidelined a significant portion of the regional driver pool. Simultaneously, flooding in the Ohio Valley is disrupting local routing. Despite total national load volumes cooling slightly, the sheer lack of available, legally compliant drivers in this region is driving up paid rates and creating massive arbitrage opportunities for brokers who have deep, thoroughly vetted carrier networks.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL → Newark, NJ:
This lane is currently a pressure cooker, combining the massive capacity vacuum in Illinois caused by the FMCSA CDL school crackdown with severe winter storm conditions hitting the Northeast destination. Shippers are desperate to move freight before the weekend storm shuts down receiving facilities, but carriers are extremely reluctant to take the load.
Columbus, OH → Atlanta, GA:
Flooding across the Ohio Valley is disrupting local manufacturing outbound flows, while the destination market in Atlanta remains a stable, high-volume hub unaffected by severe weather. The lane represents a vital escape route for carriers trapped in the Midwest.
🚨 Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Midwest to Northeast (Weather + CDL shortage)
- Central California Outbound Reefer (Freeze warning urgency)
- Ohio Valley Outbound Flatbed (Flood detours)
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Severe driver shortages in the greater Chicago and Midwest regions due to FMCSA CDL school audits; Reefer equipment critically tight in Central California.
Opportunity Zones:
- Southeast inbound lanes (Carriers seeking weather safe harbors)
- Texas triangle (Stable rates, high volume, unaffected by current storms)
🎯 Strategic Recommendations for Today
💼 For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Educate customers immediately on the FMCSA CDL school crackdown. Explain that while total market volumes are stable, the pool of legally compliant drivers in the Midwest has shrunk overnight, requiring higher rates to secure safe, vetted capacity.
Action: Push for 48-72 hour lead times on all Midwest and Northeast freight, and secure pre-approvals for rate increases on loads moving into the Northeast storm zone.
🚛 For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Target carriers in the Midwest looking to escape to the Southeast. Prioritize locking in reefer capacity in California before the freeze warnings escalate.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the Northeast winter storm as leverage to negotiate lower rates on inbound freight to the Southeast, selling the value of favorable weather and abundant reloads.
📞 Customer Communication Scripts
Rate Increase Justification — Fmcsa Cdl Crackdown Compounded By Northeast Winter Storm
Opening Script: "Good morning — I wanted to reach out proactively today because the market is moving very quickly against shippers in your position. The FMCSA has confirmed that hundreds of CDL training providers nationwide are in violation, and that's directly hitting driver availability in the Midwest right now — particularly in Chicago. At the same time, a significant winter storm is impacting the I-95 corridor through New York and New Hampshire today, with carriers actively avoiding the Northeast. What this means for your freight is that the pool of legally compliant, willing drivers for Midwest-to-Northeast moves has shrunk dramatically overnight. We are not raising rates arbitrarily — the market is repricing what it takes to get a verified, compliant carrier moving in these conditions, and paid rates are already clearing above posted averages nationally as brokers compete for the same shrinking pool of trucks."
Value Proposition: By working with us now, you are securing access to our pre-vetted carrier network — carriers whose CDL compliance we have already confirmed. In a market where one non-compliant carrier assignment can create serious liability exposure for your shipment, that compliance assurance carries real operational value. You are not just buying a truck — you are buying certainty of delivery from a legally qualified driver.
Urgency Creator: Forecast data for New York indicates rain and snow today with a 70% precipitation probability, and New Hampshire is experiencing a heavy snow storm with an 87% precipitation probability right now. Additional snow shower potential is indicated for New York and New Hampshire through the weekend and into Monday. Carriers who are willing to move into that corridor today are commanding the highest premiums, and every hour you delay narrows your options as available compliant carriers get booked by other shippers.
Objection Handler: If the customer responds with 'your rates are too high,' say: 'I completely understand the concern. Here is the reality: the national posted van average is $2.13 per mile, but paid rates are already clearing at $2.14 per mile and moving higher in the Midwest because available drivers are down significantly due to the CDL enforcement action. The premium you are seeing is not our margin — it is the market cost of a driver who has passed our CDL verification and is willing to accept a load into storm-affected New England. The alternative is waiting, and with the Northeast forecast showing snow shower potential Sunday through Monday, the cost of a delayed shipment may far exceed the rate difference you are looking at today.'
Capacity Shortage Communication For Midwest Manufacturing And Automotive Shippers
Opening Script: "I am calling because I want to give you advance warning before this affects your operations directly. The FMCSA's crackdown on CDL training schools is not a future risk — it is already removing drivers from the road in the Midwest today. Carriers in Chicago and surrounding areas are actively auditing their own driver rosters to identify which drivers may have trained at schools now under enforcement action. We are seeing the effect in real time: available, legally compliant capacity in your region is shrinking, and shippers who do not secure their trucks in the next 24 to 48 hours may face very difficult choices going into the weekend."
Value Proposition: Our team has been proactively verifying carrier CDL compliance since the Illinois audit news broke. We have a confirmed subset of carriers in the Midwest who are clear of this issue. Booking with us today means you are not taking a chance on a carrier who may be sidelined mid-transit by an enforcement action, leaving your freight stranded and your production line at risk.
Urgency Creator: The FMCSA's enforcement backlog means the administrative process to clear suspended CDLs is expected to stretch into next week. This is not a 24-hour weather disruption with a clean resolution window — structural capacity tightness in the Midwest is likely the reality through at least mid-next week, and automotive and manufacturing shippers with just-in-time requirements are the most exposed.
Objection Handler: If the customer says 'we will wait and see how this plays out,' respond with: 'That is a reasonable instinct, but the risk here is asymmetric. If you wait and capacity loosens, you have lost nothing except a small amount of time. If you wait and the CDL enforcement wave continues — which current regulatory indicators strongly suggest it will — you may find yourself competing for trucks at significantly higher rates with far fewer options, or worse, booking a non-compliant carrier and inheriting a compliance exposure your team is not equipped to manage. Given that scenario, securing confirmed capacity today is low-cost insurance against a high-consequence outcome.'
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
- Buy compliance and weather risk today in the Midwest and Northeast — FMCSA CDL-school crackdowns plus winter storms are removing “effective” trucks; price to paid anchors plus corridor premiums and widen appointment windows.
- Exploit Southeast stability for rounders and margin control — capacity is migrating south; stage reload-backed loops (ATL/CLT/JAX/BNA) to hold buys below anchor while others overpay in storm corridors.
- Treat Central California reefer as a service play, not just a rate play — freeze warnings mean protect-from-freeze SOPs win (set-point, continuous-run, temp audits); lock capacity before tonight’s lows.
- Don’t anchor to posted—human negotiation is clearing freight — paid>posted in several classes; authorize premiums where carriers absorb storm/flood detours and CDL compliance risk.
📊 Live Market Anchors (Tradeable Today)
- Total available loads (Truckstop.com): 213,166 | Loads moved: 350,374 | Market opportunity: $271.2M | Market avg: $2.28/mi | Rate range: $1.54–$2.53/mi
- Diesel (AAA): $3.69/gal — enforce fuel surcharge discipline; de-risk long-haul with dwell buffers
- Van: 30,180 loads | Posted $2.13 vs Paid $2.14 (+$0.01)
- Reefer: 12,569 loads | Posted $2.49 vs Paid $2.46 (posted>paid; service is edge)
- Flatbed: 92,873 loads | Posted $2.47 vs Paid $2.49 (+$0.02)
- Heavy Haul: 43,941 loads | Posted $2.53 vs Paid $2.51 (posted>paid; win on permits)
- Specialized: 22,693 loads | Posted $2.36 vs Paid $2.52 (+$0.16)
- LTL/Partial: 10,910 loads | Posted $1.54 vs Paid $1.70 (+$0.16; consolidate for RPM lift)
How to use it:
- Anchor quotes to Paid and layer corridor risk for MW→NE, CA freeze, and flood detours. Leverage Southeast softness with reload guarantees to compress buys.
🌪️ Disruption Map (24–72h) → What To Do Now
Northeast snow (NY/NH/ME/VT)
- Action: Add +1 transit day and +$0.15–$0.45/mi on NE-bound. Avoid hard appointment promises; write weather clauses on RCs (rate confirmations).
- Why: Tender rejections spiking; carriers require premiums for I-87/I-89/I-91/I-95 exposure; rolling snow chances Sun–Mon slow normalization until Tue+.
Midwest regulatory shock (CDL audits)
- Action: Live-verify CDL status pre-dispatch; require driver license photo + medical card + state portal check; stage alternates 150–250 miles out.
- Why: Structural capacity removal in/around Chicago and training hubs; fleets self-auditing and sidelining drivers mid-weekend.
Central California freeze (San Joaquin Valley)
- Action: Front-load reefer buys before evening lows; price PFF (protect from freeze) +$0.15–$0.40/mi, sell SOPs; favor short-haul turns to maximize revenue/day.
- Why: Set-point discipline beats price in claims prevention; capacity hoarding in West tightens MW/NE reefers through early week.
Ohio Valley & AR flooding (routing)
- Action: Pre-route around SH-37/SH-18 (AR) and Little Miami/South Fork Licking (OH) pinch points; quote detour miles + layover risk on flat/van.
- Why: Localized closures = longer time-on-load and higher fuel burn; protect margin upfront.
Southeast softness (safe harbor)
- Action: Book rounders now (GA/TN/NC/FL) and print reloads on RCs; buy inbound SE at sub-anchor by selling fast reload certainty.
- Why: Southward migration of capacity temporarily inflates supply; perfect for margin defense and relationship building.
🧭 Tradeable Lanes + Pricing Guardrails (Anchor to Paid; Add Corridor Risk)
🛡️ Carrier Sourcing & Compliance SOPs (Zero-Fail Playbook)
📣 Customer Messaging Kits (Field-Ready)
Midwest + Northeast rate realism (Van)
- Open: “We’re in a dual disruption: FMCSA’s CDL crackdown is sidelining drivers in the Midwest, and the Northeast storm is pushing rejections. Today’s paid rates are clearing above posted in several classes; compliant capacity costs more because risk is higher.”
- Value: “We’re dispatching pre-verified, legally compliant carriers. That’s delivery certainty, not just a truck.”
- Close: “Approve revised pricing and a 2–4 hr window; we’ll hold a compliant truck and protect your delivery date.”
California Reefer PFF (Service > Price)
- Open: “Freeze warnings are triggering urgent produce moves. The way to win tonight is flawless temperature control.”
- Value: “We commit set-point on the BOL, continuous-run, mid-route temp audits, and seal control—reducing claims risk to near-zero.”
- Close: “Authorize PFF accessorials and short-turn prioritization; we’ll move you ahead of the surge.”
Objection: ‘Your rate is too high.’
- Reply: “Posted is a suggestion; paid is reality. Today, storm routing and CDL compliance add real cost. The alternative is delay exposure into Sun–Mon when weather lingers—often more expensive than today’s delta.”
🧑🚀 8-Hour Execution Checklist
- Reprice MW→NE and CA PFF tenders to Paid anchors + corridor premiums; insert weather + accessorial clauses on every RC.
- CDL live-verify every Midwest driver; flag any training-school anomalies; stage alternates within 150–250 miles.
- Book 6–10 Southeast rounders with same-carrier reloads; print reload info on RC to lock buys.
- Route around OH/AR flood pinch points; price detours upfront to protect margin and prevent disputes.
- Throttle light/high-profile flatbeds in wind/snow belts; prioritize heavy/low-profile freight through weekend.
⚠️ Risk Dashboard → Mitigations
- Mid-route CDL disqualification
- Mitigation: Pre-dispatch doc capture + state portal check + backup truck staged; RC includes “alternate at no penalty if CDL invalid.”
- Storm closures and missed appointments
- Mitigation: Pre-negotiate appointment flexibility; add 1 buffer day on NE deliveries; proactive consignee reschedules during booking.
- Reefer temp excursions (claims)
- Mitigation: SOPs on BOL; require data logger photos at delivery; temp-check timestamps documented in TMS.
- Flood detour fuel burn
- Mitigation: Explicit detour miles on quote; FSC line item; pre-approve layover if closures persist >6 hrs.
🔄 Capacity Flow Outlook (48–96 Hours)
- North→South migration intensifies as carriers avoid storms; Southeast buys soften through mid-week; reloads abundant in ATL/CLT/JAX.
- Northeast normalizes gradually Tue+, then a brief capacity “dump” as delayed trucks arrive; sell NE→SE backhauls with guaranteed reloads.
- CA reefer tightness eases Sun–Mon as temps rise; equipment disperses east; MW/NE reefers remain snug until mid-week.
- Midwest tightness persists beyond weather due to CDL enforcement backlog; sustain elevated MW outbound pricing into next week.
📈 KPIs To Hit By EOD
- MW/NE time-to-cover: ≤ 90 minutes with pre-vetted fleets
- Carrier fall-offs in storm/reg zones: ≤ 2.5% with alternates pre-staged
- SE loop book-to-award: ≥ 40% with reload printed on RC
- Reefer PFF dwell reduction (CA short-hauls): ≥ 20% vs last week
- Appointment flexibility secured (storm lanes): ≥ 70% with 2–4 hr windows
🗺️ Lane Focus You Can Trade Now
- Chicago, IL → Newark, NJ (Van): +$0.25–$0.45/mi; backup truck; 1 buffer day; weather clause
- Columbus, OH → Atlanta, GA (Van): +$0.10–$0.20/mi; sell reload certainty; detour-aware routing
- Visalia/Fresno, CA → LA Basin/PHX (Reefer short-haul): +$0.20–$0.40/mi; strict PFF SOPs
- Cincinnati/Dayton, OH → Midwest (Flatbed): +$0.10–$0.25/mi; detour miles priced; weekend gate checks
- PA/NJ → GA/FL (Van/Flat): Backhaul sell; offer reloads to capture sub-anchor buys inbound SE
📅 This Day in History
1792: The Postal Service Act, establishing the United States Post Office Department, is signed by United States President George Washington.
1824: William Buckland formally announces the name Megalosaurus, the first scientifically validly named non-avian dinosaur species.
2015: Two trains collide in the Swiss town of Rafz resulting in as many as 49 people injured and Swiss Federal Railways cancelling some services.
💭 Quote of the Day
"You can avoid reality, but you cannot avoid the consequences of avoiding reality."
— Ayn Rand