📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Saturday, February 07, 2026
2:31 PM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
Spot market volume has stabilized significantly heading into the weekend, with total available loads holding steady at 108,108 and a solid market opportunity of $140.4M. While overall volumes are down slightly from yesterday's pre-weekend surge, the paid rate environment remains resilient, particularly in the reefer sector where paid rates ($2.79/mile) are outperforming posted averages by $0.11/mile. A major freeze event across the Southeast (Florida/Georgia) is the primary disruptor today, driving urgent demand for temperature-controlled capacity to protect produce. Simultaneously, severe wind and cold in the Northeast are tightening capacity as drivers avoid the I-95 corridor north of Philadelphia. Brokers should focus on securing reefer capacity in the Southeast immediately and leverage the loosening flatbed market in the Midwest.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Hard Freeze & Frost Conditions - Southeast (Northern Florida, Southeast Georgia (FL, GA)): Critical risk to crops and temperature-sensitive freight. Expect surge in reefer demand for 'protect from freeze' service.
- Extreme Cold & Wind Chill - Northeast Corridor (New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Massachusetts (NY, NJ, PA, CT, MA)): Dangerous wind chills (25-30 below zero) and high winds affecting I-95 and I-80. Equipment freeze-ups and reduced driver willingness to run north.
- High Wind Warning - Wyoming (Southeast Wyoming (WY, I-25 corridor)): Gusts up to 65 mph creating extreme blow-over risk for light trailers and empty flatbeds. Likely closures on I-25 and I-80.
- Heavy Freezing Spray - Great Lakes (Lake Superior, Michigan Coast (MI)): Hazardous conditions for regional transport near coastlines; potential delays on northern routes due to ice accumulation risks.
- Storm Warning - Mid-Atlantic Coast (New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland Coasts (NJ, DE, MD)): Severe winds and hazardous conditions affecting port operations and coastal transit routes.
⛈️ Weather Impact Cascade
- Immediate Operational Impact: Saturday-Sunday (Feb 7-8): Hard freeze in Northern Florida/Georgia creates urgent reefer demand. Extreme cold and wind in Northeast (wind chills 25-30 below zero in CT/NJ/PA/NY/MA) is reducing driver willingness to run I-95 north of Philadelphia. High wind warning in Wyoming (gusts up to 65 mph) is creating blow-over risk for light trailers. These conditions are creating immediate capacity constraints in reefer and Northeast van markets.
- Secondary Market Effects: Monday (Feb 9): As Northeast extreme cold begins to clear (temps rising to 24-30°F in CT/NJ/PA), drivers will resume normal routing on I-95. This will increase Northeast capacity availability and potentially reduce demand for alternative Midwest-bound routes. Simultaneously, freeze conditions in Southeast persist, keeping reefer demand elevated. This creates a 24-48 hour window where both reefer and Northeast capacity are tight—a rare dual-constraint scenario.
- Regional Spillover Analysis: Northeast capacity tightness (extreme cold through Sunday) is pushing freight demand southward and westward. Shippers who normally use Northeast carriers are seeking alternative routes through Atlanta and the Midwest. This is artificially elevating demand in Atlanta-to-Chicago and Jacksonville-to-Atlanta lanes. Once Northeast capacity normalizes Monday (Feb 9), this spillover demand will diminish, potentially loosening Midwest-bound lanes by mid-week.
- Recovery Timeline: Northeast extreme cold clears by Monday (Feb 9) with temps rising to 24-30°F. Full Northeast capacity recovery expected by Tuesday (Feb 10) as wind chills moderate and drivers resume normal operations. Southeast freeze conditions persist through Monday (Feb 9) with warming trend starting Tuesday (Feb 10). Full Southeast reefer demand normalization expected by Wednesday (Feb 11) when Georgia temps reach 73°F. Wyoming wind warning is short-duration (Saturday-Sunday only based on alert structure). Overall market normalization expected by Wednesday (Feb 11) with return to seasonal patterns.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Diesel futures remain relatively stable but sensitive to cold weather demand, keeping carrier fuel surcharges firm.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small carriers in the reefer sector are seeing a temporary cash flow boost from freeze-protection premiums, while flatbed carriers face continued rate pressure.
- Economic Indicators: Steady spot market volumes despite the weekend suggest resilient underlying economic demand, particularly in essential goods.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
Weak Demand & Capacity Exits: Market Recovery Signals 🔗:
While the market feels 'fragile' with inelastic capacity, the slight uptick in tonnage suggests a slow recovery. Brokers should monitor carrier stability as exits continue, potentially tightening capacity unexpectedly.
-
FMCSA Reviewing Return to Paper Logs Request 🔗:
A potential regulatory shift regarding paper logs could impact driver tracking and HOS compliance. Brokers should ensure carriers are compliant with current ELD mandates while this is under review.
-
Spotter AI Launches New TMS for Efficiency 🔗:
New tech adoption by carriers could lead to better operational efficiency and faster load matching. Brokers utilizing digital freight matching may see improved responsiveness from tech-enabled fleets.
-
FMCSA Revocation of ELDs Affecting Safety 🔗:
Recent revocations of certain ELD devices may force some carriers out of service or onto paper logs temporarily. Verify carrier eligibility and safety ratings carefully during onboarding.
News Impact Timeline
- Immediate Operational Reality: FMCSA ELD revocation (Alert 7) is affecting carrier eligibility immediately. Brokers should verify carrier safety ratings and ELD compliance during onboarding this week. Some carriers may be temporarily out of service or on paper logs, reducing available capacity. This is a hidden capacity constraint that's not visible in load board data.
- 3-Day Market Implications: By Monday (Feb 9), carriers affected by ELD revocations will either be back in service with compliant devices or will have exited the market. This creates a 48-72 hour window of reduced capacity as carriers transition. Brokers should prioritize carriers with confirmed ELD compliance to avoid service disruptions. The Spotter AI TMS launch (Alert 4) may improve carrier responsiveness by mid-week as tech-enabled fleets optimize operations.
- Week-Ahead Positioning: By Wednesday (Feb 11), the market will have adjusted to ELD compliance requirements and Spotter AI adoption will be creating efficiency gains for early adopters. Brokers using digital freight matching platforms may see improved responsiveness from tech-enabled carriers. The paper logs review (Alert 3) is still under FMCSA review and unlikely to create immediate operational changes, but brokers should monitor for regulatory shifts that could affect HOS compliance.
- Regulatory Compliance Impacts: Current ELD mandate compliance is critical. Brokers should verify that all carriers in their network have compliant devices. The potential return to paper logs is unlikely to occur in the next 7 days, but brokers should ensure carriers understand current ELD requirements. Any carriers operating on revoked ELD devices should be immediately flagged and removed from active sourcing until they achieve compliance.
🔍 Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Paid rates for reefer freight are currently exceeding posted rates by ~4%, indicating a hidden layer of urgency not immediately visible in load counts alone.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is extremely tight in Northern FL/Southern GA for reefer units. Conversely, flatbed capacity is loose in the Midwest, offering negotiation leverage.
- Technology Disruptions: Digital brokerage platforms are likely algorithmically increasing rates in freeze-impacted zones; human brokers can win by offering confirmed capacity over automated pricing.
Demand Shift Indicators
- Regional Demand Predictions: Southeast reefer demand will remain elevated through Monday (Feb 9) as freeze conditions persist. Georgia forecast shows warming trend starting Tuesday (Feb 10), which will trigger rapid demand normalization. Expect reefer demand to shift from 'emergency freeze protection' to 'standard temperature control' by Wednesday (Feb 11). Van demand in Atlanta will remain stable through mid-week as carriers avoid Northeast weather disruptions. By Thursday (Feb 13), Northeast capacity will normalize and van demand may shift northward, potentially loosening Atlanta sourcing.
- Seasonal Transition Analysis: February typically shows seasonal softness in produce movement, but the freeze event is creating an artificial demand spike that masks underlying seasonal trends. This is not a sustainable demand level—it's a weather-driven anomaly. Once freeze risk clears, the market will revert to seasonal patterns with softer produce demand. Brokers should not assume elevated reefer rates will persist beyond the freeze window.
- Economic Leading Indicators: Steady spot market volumes (108,108 loads) despite weekend slowdown suggest resilient underlying economic demand. The fact that total market opportunity is $140.4M indicates shippers are willing to pay for service, not just seeking lowest cost. This suggests economic fundamentals are stable, not deteriorating. Diesel holding firm at $3.646/gallon indicates no immediate fuel cost shock, which supports carrier stability.
- Capacity Flow Predictions: Equipment will reposition northward starting Monday (Feb 9) as Northeast extreme cold clears. Carriers currently avoiding I-95 will resume normal routing, which will increase Northeast capacity and potentially loosen Midwest-bound capacity. Reefer units currently concentrated in Southeast will begin dispersing to other regions by mid-week as freeze demand normalizes. Expect flatbed capacity to remain loose through mid-week as construction demand remains soft.
👥 Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Replenishment volume remains steady; focus on on-time delivery for weekend stocking.
- Manufacturing: Flatbed demand for industrial materials is softer; expect standard shipping patterns.
- Agriculture: URGENT: Freeze event in Southeast is the primary driver. High demand for thermal protection for crops.
- Automotive: Standard production flows; no major disruptions reported specifically for auto parts.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast (Florida/Georgia)
The Southeast is the critical region today due to the Freeze Warning (Alert WX6D13D202) impacting Northern Florida and Georgia. This weather event creates an immediate, high-margin opportunity for brokers to source reefer capacity for 'protect from freeze' loads. While general freight volumes are stable, the specialized need for temperature control creates a distinct imbalance where carriers hold the leverage.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Jacksonville, FL → Atlanta, GA:
This short-haul lane is critical for moving produce out of the freeze zone into distribution centers. Capacity is tight as local carriers prioritize high-paying rescue loads. Rates are elevated well above the national reefer average of $2.79/mile.
Atlanta, GA → Chicago, IL:
A traditional backhaul lane that is seeing increased volume as freight moves north. While rates are generally lower, the demand for reliable service into the Midwest is steady. Van capacity is available.
🚨 Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Outbound Northern Florida (Reefer)
- Outbound Southern Georgia (Reefer)
- Lanes into the Northeast (Hazard Pay)
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Severe shortage of Reefer units in FL/GA border region. Shortage of drivers willing to run I-95 North into New England.
Opportunity Zones:
- Atlanta, GA (Van sourcing)
- Midwest (Flatbed negotiation)
- Southeast (Reefer margins)
🎯 Strategic Recommendations for Today
💼 For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Advise customers with temperature-sensitive freight in the Southeast of the freeze risks. Proactively offer 'protect from freeze' services even for goods that are marginally sensitive.
Action: Call produce shippers in FL/GA immediately to offer capacity assistance.
🚛 For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Prioritize Reefer carriers in the Southeast. For Vans, focus on building relationships with carriers avoiding the Northeast.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the loosening flatbed market data ($2.33 paid vs $2.38 posted) to push back on rate increases in that sector.
📞 Customer Communication Scripts
Reefer Capacity Urgency - Southeast Freeze Protection
Opening Script: "I'm calling because we're tracking a hard freeze warning across Northern Florida and Georgia right now, and our market data shows reefer capacity is tightening fast. We've got confirmed access to thermal-protected units, and I wanted to make sure your temperature-sensitive freight doesn't get caught without service."
Value Proposition: Guaranteed capacity availability during peak demand when competitors are scrambling. Your freight moves protected while others face delays.
Urgency Creator: Freeze conditions persist through Sunday (Feb 8) with Georgia temps at 60-61°F today but freeze risk remains for sensitive produce. Capacity window closes as other shippers activate emergency protocols.
Objection Handler: I understand rates are elevated—they're running $3.00+/mile on this lane versus the national reefer average of $2.79/mile. But here's the reality: we're seeing paid rates outperform posted rates by $0.11/mile because shippers are prioritizing service over price right now. One delayed load costs more than the premium you're paying for guaranteed protection.
Van Capacity Availability - Atlanta Sourcing Advantage
Opening Script: "Our capacity intelligence shows van availability is solid in Atlanta right now with 19,586 loads available nationally and paid rates holding steady at $2.22/mile. We can move your freight at competitive rates because we're not fighting the Northeast weather disruptions that are tightening capacity up there."
Value Proposition: Stable, predictable pricing on your Atlanta-to-Chicago corridor without the Northeast weather premium. You get reliable service at fair market rates.
Urgency Creator: Northeast extreme cold (wind chills 25-30 below zero in NY/NJ/PA/CT/MA through Sunday) is pushing capacity away from I-95. This creates a 3-4 day window where Atlanta-based capacity is abundant and rates are competitive before carriers reposition.
Objection Handler: Yes, rates are close to last week's levels at $2.22/mile. That's actually good news—it means we have capacity leverage. We're not seeing the rate spikes in van that we're seeing in reefer because the market is balanced. That stability protects your budget.
Rate Increase Justification - Market Fundamentals
Opening Script: "I want to be transparent about where we're seeing rate pressure. The Southeast reefer market is experiencing a legitimate supply-demand imbalance due to the freeze event, and diesel is holding firm at $3.646/gallon. Here's what that means for your costs..."
Value Proposition: Transparent pricing based on real market conditions. You understand exactly why rates are what they are, and you get priority access to capacity when it matters most.
Urgency Creator: Freeze conditions create a 48-72 hour window of peak demand (through Monday Feb 9). After that, rates normalize. If you need Southeast reefer service, this is the time to commit.
Objection Handler: I get that rates feel high compared to last month. But look at the market data: reefer paid rates are $2.79/mile versus posted at $2.68/mile—that's a $0.11/mile premium that reflects real scarcity. Flatbed is actually loosening (paid $2.33 vs posted $2.38), so we're not seeing across-the-board increases. This is targeted to where demand is urgent.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
- Two-track market: urgent Southeast reefer PFF (Protect From Freeze) premiums while Midwest flatbed is a buyer’s market
- Anchor reefer assets in JAX/SAV/ATL now; recycle short-hauls through the freeze window and pre-book Mon/Tue reloads
- Exploit Atlanta van availability; buy at/near posted and sell reliability while the Northeast stays weather-constrained
- Avoid I-95/I-80 high-risk corridors; route around WY winds and Great Lakes spray; price weather adders into NE-bound freight
- Hard-gate ELD compliance at onboarding; revoked devices create a hidden 48–72 hour capacity drain—use it to win shippers with certainty
📊 Market Snapshot (Spot + Spreads)
- Total loads 108,108; opportunity $140.4M; market avg $2.25/mi
- Van: 19,586 loads; paid $2.22 vs posted $2.20 (+$0.02) — stable, buyable where you avoid the NE
- Reefer: 8,534 loads; paid $2.79 vs posted $2.68 (+$0.11) — Southeast PFF premium is real; carriers hold leverage on immediates
- Flatbed: 42,382 loads; paid $2.33 vs posted $2.38 (−$0.05) — capacity loose; negotiate bundles aggressively
- Heavy: paid $2.41 vs posted $2.42 (≈flat) — buyer tilt unless specialized
- Diesel: $3.646/gal — keep FSC steady; push winterization/PFF into linehaul
🌦 Weather-to-Freight Playbook (Next 72 Hours)
- Now–Sun
- Southeast FL/GA freeze: spike in reefer PFF; nursery/produce/chemicals at highest risk
- Northeast deep cold/wind (I-95/I-80): driver avoidance; add hazard pay and extended ETAs
- WY high winds (I-25/I-80): blow-over risk; detour via NE/KS; prohibit empties/light flats
- Great Lakes freezing spray: avoid lakeshore routes; hold inland
- Mon
- NE cold easing: capacity returns to I-95; spillover into ATL/Midwest fades
- SE freeze persists: reefer remains tight through the day
- Tue–Wed
- SE warms: PFF evaporates quickly; reefer demand normalizes
- Market normalization: lanes revert to seasonal patterns; flatbed remains negotiable
🎯 Highest-ROI Plays (Next 24–72 Hours)
- Reefer PFF in FL/GA (top margin)
- Tactics: Short-haul triangles (150–350 miles) JAX/SAV/ATL; recycle assets 2–3 turns/day; photo temp logs
- Accessorials: Add PFF surcharge + heater verification; no-door-open >60s clause; fuel >3/4 at PU
- Atlanta Van Window
- Tactics: Source vans ATL-based while NE remains adverse; sell predictability and avoid NE weather premiums
- Pre-book: Mon/Tue NE/Midwest recovery at today’s softer ATL rates
- Midwest Flatbed Negotiation
- Tactics: Weekend bundles 2–3 loads per truck; include paid layover if weather-held; avoid WY/northern plains exposure
💵 Pricing Guardrails (All-in today)
- Dry Van
- Buy: Core Midwest 2.05–2.25/mi; ATL outbound 2.10–2.30/mi; NE-adjacent 2.30–2.55/mi (weather premium)
- Sell: Core 2.35–2.55/mi; ATL outbound 2.40–2.60/mi; NE-adjacent 2.60–2.95/mi
- Notes: Keep FSC static; offer tight PU windows to buy under posted
- Reefer
- PFF Buy (FL/GA): 3.20–3.60/mi + $150–$300 PFF surcharge
- PFF Sell: 3.60–4.20/mi with documented temp integrity (set-point, continuous, photos)
- Non-PFF Buy: 2.65–2.95/mi; Sell: 2.95–3.25/mi
- Notes: Require heater-capable units; preplan Mon/Tue headhauls north
- Flatbed
- Buy: South/Midwest 2.05–2.25/mi (add +$0.15–$0.30/mi for icy/windy corridors)
- Sell: South/Midwest 2.30–2.55/mi; risk corridors 2.55–2.85/mi
- Notes: Bundle weekend work to shave $0.05–$0.08/mi
🛣 Lane Plays & Bid Targets
- JAX, FL → ATL, GA (Reefer, PFF)
- Buy 3.40–3.90/mi + $150–$300 PFF; Sell 3.90–4.40/mi
- Require: set-point on BOL, continuous mode, temp photo at PU/first 50 mi/DEL, fuel > 3/4
- SAV, GA → CLT, NC (Reefer, PFF optional)
- Buy 3.10–3.50/mi (+$150 PFF if freeze-sensitive); Sell 3.50–4.00/mi
- ATL, GA → CHI, IL (Van)
- Buy 2.10–2.30/mi; Sell 2.45–2.65/mi
- Pitch reliability and weather-avoiding routing; pre-book CHI reloads back to SE
- CHI hub → IND/CMH/DTW (Van/Flat)
- Van Buy posted or −$0.05–$0.10/mi; Flat Buy 2.05–2.25/mi
- Keep away from lakeshore segments until spray warnings expire
- Avoid/Price-Up: Any van/reefer into New England via I-95 — add $150–$300 hazard pay and pad ETAs
⚠ Risk, Compliance, and Claims Prevention
- ELD Revocations (Immediate)
- Action: Confirm compliant ELD make/model on onboarding; verify recent inspection history; decline any revoked device users
- Messaging to shippers: “We’re filtering for compliant carriers during the transition—reduced fall-offs and audit-proof moves”
- Weather Clauses
- Insert “no punitive LDs for official closures,” pre-approved layover/detention, and documented reroutes
- Reefer SOP (PFF)
- BOL set-point + continuous mode; temp-photo cadence; seal and fuel levels captured; ambient temp noted on POD
- WY Winds / Great Lakes Spray
- Prohibit empties/high-profile across I-25/I-80 under warning; reroute via NE/KS; avoid lakeshore arterials until warnings clear
- Fraud Hygiene
- FMCSA callback to phone on file; lock banking changes; verify MC/DOT + VIN/plate at pickup on high-value loads
🤝 Customer & Carrier Micro-Scripts
- SE PFF Shipper (Produce/Nursery/Chem)
- “Freeze warnings in FL/GA have reefer paid>$2.79/mi nationally. We have heater-capable units with full temp logs in a 2–4 hour window. One freeze claim dwarfs today’s PFF premium—let’s lock coverage now.”
- Atlanta Van Sourcing
- “Capacity in ATL is strong and not exposed to I-95 risk. We can hold 2.40–2.60/mi service-consistent pricing into the Midwest while others chase NE hazard premiums.”
- Flatbed Negotiation (Midwest)
- “Paid is under posted (−$0.05/mi). Let’s bundle two loads through Monday for lower all-in and guaranteed turns; we’ll insulate you from WY/Great Lakes weather.”
⛽ Fuel and FSC Positioning
- Keep FSC steady at current tables (diesel $3.646/gal).
- Itemize PFF and winterization on linehaul to avoid FSC debates; show where risk capital is allocated.
📈 Ops Cadence & KPIs (Today → Monday)
- By mid-morning
- Cover ≥70% of SE PFF reefers with SOPs verified
- Pre-book ≥35–45% of Mon/Tue ATL-origin vans at today’s rates
- By early afternoon
- Secure 2–3 flatbed bundles IL/IN/OH/TN; issue weather advisories for NE/WY/Great Lakes
- By close of day
- Recycle ≥60% of reefer assets on short-hauls Sunday; Mon reloads confirmed
- Scorecard Targets
- GM%: Van 12–16%; Reefer PFF 14–20%; Flatbed 10–14%
- On-time ≥95%, Fall-offs ≤3%, Zero temp claims
🔮 Scenario Outlook (Probability-Weighted)
- Base (65%): SE PFF premiums persist through Mon; NE capacity normalizes Mon PM; national lanes stabilize by Wed
- Tighter (20%): WY winds linger + NE cold slows recovery; SE PFF extends into Tue with extra +$0.05–$0.10/mi
- Faster Normalize (15%): Rapid SE warm-up Tue; PFF fades early; van remains price-stable; flatbed stays soft
🧠 Broker Edge: Execution Psychology
- Sell certainty over cents: Shippers pay for temp integrity and compliant capacity during disruptions
- Short quote clocks (30–60 min): Prevents being re-shopped into algorithmic reprices
- Show the math: Paid>posted in reefers (+$0.11/mi) vs flatbeds paid
🗺 Fast Reference: Where to Lean In vs Lay Off
- Lean In: JAX/SAV/ATL reefers (PFF), ATL vans to Midwest, Midwest flatbed bundles
- Lay Off/Price-Up: I-95 north of PHL (hazard pay), WY I-25/I-80 (detours/layover), Great Lakes coastal crossings (delay risk)
📅 This Day in History
1981: A plane crash at Pushkin Airport kills 50 people, including 16 members of the Pacific Fleet.
1999: Crown Prince Abdullah becomes the King of Jordan on the death of his father, King Hussein.
2012: President Mohamed Nasheed of the Republic of Maldives resigns, after 23 days of anti-governmental protests calling for the release of the Chief Judge unlawfully arrested by the military.
💭 Quote of the Day
"Failure means you've now learned another valuable lesson that pushes you one step closer to success."
— Steve Harvey