๐ Daily Market Intelligence Report
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
7:00 AM CST
๐ Top-Line Summary
Spot market volume remains highly elevated with 188,818 available loads, driving the market average rate to a firm $2.47/mile. Capacity is facing severe structural constraints as the verified AAA diesel price surges to $5.068/gallon, forcing carriers to demand heavy fuel surcharges or park equipment rather than run low-yield freight. The flatbed and heavy haul sectors continue to dominate the landscape with over 124,000 combined open loads, while extreme heat across the Southwest and Southern California is driving urgent temperature-controlled demand. Concurrently, severe winds in Wyoming and flooding in the Midwest are complicating transcontinental routing, creating lucrative arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can secure reliable capacity in disrupted regions.
โฝ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Extreme Heat Wave (Southwest States (CA, AZ)): Temperatures reaching 109 degrees are driving urgent reefer demand, increasing the risk of equipment breakdowns, and forcing carriers to demand premium rates for temperature-controlled freight.
- High Wind Warning (Wyoming (WY, North Snowy Range Foothills)): West winds gusting up to 65 mph are paralyzing I-80 transcontinental routing, creating severe blow-over risks for light and high-profile trailers, and trapping capacity in the region.
- Avalanche Warning (Washington (WA, Cascades)): High avalanche danger is disrupting the I-90 and I-5 corridors, tightening capacity in the Seattle and Spokane markets, and delaying freight movements across the Pacific Northwest.
- River Flooding (Midwest (IN, IL, Wabash River Valley)): Minor flooding is closing local river roads and forcing detours, complicating regional routing and tightening local capacity in the agricultural and manufacturing sectors.
โ๏ธ Weather Impact Cascade
- Immediate Operational Impact: The Wabash River Valley flooding zone is experiencing a dangerous transition this morning, with rain and snow mix at 32-33ยฐF in Gibson, Knox, and Posey counties creating black ice risk on local farm roads and state routes critical to agricultural equipment moves, before transitioning to light rain by mid-morning and clearing to sunny by mid-afternoon. Wyoming's I-80 corridor is under active high-wind warning with sustained west winds of 25-33 mph today, creating live blow-over risk for high-profile and empty trailers and requiring dispatchers to verify driver hold status before tendering loads through the North Snowy Range Foothills. California is sustaining 88ยฐF temperatures today with light winds, maximizing reefer unit thermal load and accelerating compressor wear on equipment that has been running continuously through the multi-day heat event.
- Secondary Market Effects: The Wyoming I-80 wind disruption is diverting transcontinental traffic onto I-70 through Denver and I-40 through Albuquerque, increasing per-load mileage by 150 to 300 miles and driving unexpected rate pressure on those alternative southern corridors as volume concentrates on lanes not priced for the surge. California's sustained 88ยฐF heat is pushing truck stop maintenance bays in the Central Valley and Inland Empire to capacity as reefer units require emergency repairs, reducing same-day carrier availability for loads that need immediate equipment substitution. The Midwest flooding clearance beginning Thursday will trigger a wave of delayed agricultural shipments entering the market simultaneously, creating a short-duration demand spike that will test LTL and partial consolidation networks across Indiana and Illinois.
- Regional Spillover Analysis: The PNW avalanche and $6.10 diesel combination is reducing carrier availability for loads originating in Nevada, Utah, and Idaho, as drivers who would normally backhaul through Seattle or Portland are instead repositioning south, tightening the intermountain region capacity beyond what direct weather impacts alone would indicate. The Arizona extreme heat event is pulling reefer capacity away from normal produce lanes serving Texas and New Mexico, creating secondary tightness in those markets as shippers compete for temperature-controlled equipment that has migrated toward the highest-premium Southwest corridors. Wyoming's persistent wind pattern is also trapping capacity east of the disruption zone in Nebraska and Iowa, temporarily softening outbound rates from those origins as equipment stacks up waiting for a window to move west.
- Recovery Timeline: The Indiana and Illinois flooding zone will see meaningful road condition improvement beginning Thursday morning as temperatures reach 54-69ยฐF and precipitation fully clears, with normal local routing restored by Thursday afternoon based on the forecast trajectory. Wyoming winds remain operationally challenging through the full five-day forecast at 18-33 mph through Saturday, meaning I-80 will not return to full unrestricted operations until at least early next week, and brokers should plan around this disruption as a persistent week-long constraint. Washington state faces its worst conditions of the forecast period on Friday with 0.6 inches of precipitation at a 75% probability and temperatures of 46ยฐF, meaning Cascades disruptions will intensify before clearing Saturday, with full PNW operational normalization unlikely before Sunday at the earliest.
๐ฐ Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Global geopolitical tensions and refinery disruptions are keeping middle distillate futures highly elevated, indicating that the $5+ diesel environment will persist and continue to erode carrier margins.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small to mid-sized fleets are facing severe liquidity crises as rapid fuel spikes outpace their ability to collect surcharges, leading to an acceleration in Chapter 11 filings and capacity exits.
- Economic Indicators: Industrial production remains robust, supporting the massive volume of flatbed and heavy haul freight, while retail inventory replenishment drives steady van demand despite inflationary pressures.
๐ฐ Impactful News Analysis
-
Carrier Bankruptcies Accelerate Amid Rising Costs ๐:
The Chapter 11 filing of a Wisconsin-based carrier highlights the severe financial strain on fleets from $5+ diesel and rising operational costs. Brokers must intensify carrier vetting processes to avoid stranded freight, monitor FMCSA authority closely, and leverage strong relationships with financially stable partners to ensure reliable execution.
-
Regional Fuel Spikes Disrupt Pacific Northwest Capacity ๐:
With Washington state diesel hitting $6.10/gallon, carriers are altering fueling routes and demanding massive outbound premiums to operate in the region. Brokers must proactively adjust pricing on PNW lanes, prepare customers for significant fuel surcharges, and target carriers with efficient equipment to secure reliable capacity.
-
Ocean Carriers Implement Emergency Fuel Surcharges ๐:
Global fuel volatility is forcing ocean carriers to implement emergency surcharges, driving shippers to seek urgent domestic transloading and drayage solutions to control costs. Brokers can capitalize on this by offering expedited port recovery services, securing dedicated drayage capacity, and capturing premium rates on outbound coastal lanes.
-
Strict Insurance Verification Critical in Tight Market ๐:
As capacity tightens and high-value freight moves to the spot market, strict insurance verification is paramount. Brokers must ensure carriers have adequate cargo and liability coverage, especially for reefer and specialized loads, to mitigate risk, protect customer relationships, and prevent costly claims in a volatile operating environment.
News Impact Timeline
- Immediate Operational Reality: Carrier bankruptcy risk is an active operational threat today, as Chapter 11 filings and FMCSA authority revocations can occur with no advance warning, requiring dispatchers to run real-time authority verification on every carrier assignment before releasing load details and freight access. Ocean carrier emergency fuel surcharges are already converting international shippers to domestic alternatives, generating urgent transload and drayage demand at Los Angeles, Long Beach, Seattle, and Tacoma ports that is competing directly with existing inland freight for scarce coastal capacity.
- 3-Day Market Implications: By Friday, the Pacific Northwest faces compounding pressure as Washington's most significant precipitation event of the week arrives simultaneously with existing avalanche closures, likely creating the tightest outbound capacity environment in the region this year and driving emergency spot rate requests from shippers who failed to pre-book. The Midwest warming trend reaching 76ยฐF in Illinois and 70ยฐF in Indiana by Friday will activate delayed construction and agricultural freight in volume, adding meaningful flatbed demand to a national market already carrying 83,644 open loads and pushing rates further above the current $2.81 average.
- Week-Ahead Positioning: Brokers should pre-book reefer capacity through Sunday now, as California's five-day forecast shows no temperature relief with 82-86ยฐF through Saturday, ensuring that premium temperature-controlled rates will be sustained through the full forecast window with no demand softening catalyst in sight. The Wyoming wind disruption persisting through at least Saturday at 20-33 mph makes alternative southern routing a week-long operational requirement rather than a temporary workaround, and brokers who establish preferred carrier relationships on I-70 and I-40 this week will have a structural advantage over competitors still attempting to move freight through the disrupted northern corridor.
- Regulatory Compliance Impacts: The acceleration in carrier bankruptcies demands immediate protocol updates requiring same-day FMCSA authority and insurance certificate verification on every new carrier assignment, as financially distressed fleets may maintain active authority while being functionally insolvent and unable to complete loads. Arizona and California extreme heat conditions may trigger state-level hours-of-service exemptions for agricultural reefer drivers, but brokers must also ensure carriers are aware of posted weight restrictions on heat-softened asphalt routes in the Arizona desert, which can affect legal load configurations on flatbed and heavy haul moves.
๐ Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Real-time data shows a massive 83,644 flatbed loads dominating the boards, while reefer paid rates surge to $2.97/mile. Brokers leveraging this fresh data can confidently quote premiums on specialized and temperature-controlled freight.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is critically tight in the Pacific Northwest due to $6.10 diesel and avalanche disruptions, and in the Southwest due to extreme heat. Conversely, the Northeast is seeing slight capacity loosening as carriers seek to escape high-cost toll regions.
- Technology Disruptions: The integration of AI-driven route optimization is becoming essential for carriers attempting to navigate localized fuel spikes and weather disruptions, widening the efficiency gap between tech-enabled fleets and traditional owner-operators.
Demand Shift Indicators
- Regional Demand Predictions: Southwest reefer demand will intensify through the weekend as California sustains 82-88ยฐF temperatures with clear skies and no precipitation forecast through Saturday, keeping all available temperature-controlled equipment absorbed in the heat corridor. The Indiana and Illinois flooding zone, currently experiencing a rain and snow mix at 32-33ยฐF, will release significant pent-up agricultural and manufacturing freight demand beginning Thursday as temperatures climb to 54-69ยฐF and road conditions normalize, creating a mid-week Midwest demand surge. Specialized equipment demand, already up 6.8% overnight, will accelerate further as Midwest construction projects restart with the warming trend, compressing available open-deck inventory against a market already carrying 83,644 flatbed loads.
- Seasonal Transition Analysis: Mid-March traditionally marks the onset of produce season ramp-up in the Sunbelt, but the current extreme heat wave is pulling that demand forward by two to three weeks, flooding the reefer market with urgent freight volumes that normal seasonal models do not anticipate at this calendar point. Construction season demand, typically gradual through late March, is being compressed into a sharp mid-week activation event as the Midwest rapidly warms from freezing to the mid-70s by Friday, creating an artificial demand spike that will strain flatbed capacity faster than carriers can reposition. This seasonal acceleration across two equipment types simultaneously is a structural mismatch that will keep rates elevated well above historical March benchmarks.
- Economic Leading Indicators: The 6.8% overnight surge in specialized freight volume is a leading indicator of accelerating infrastructure and energy project startups, signaling that capex spending is outpacing available niche equipment and will continue driving rate premiums throughout Q2. Industrial production supporting 124,000-plus combined flatbed and heavy haul loads reflects durable goods manufacturing strength that is unlikely to soften in the near term, sustaining the structural floor under open-deck rates. However, the acceleration of small carrier bankruptcies from $5.068 diesel is a lagging indicator of capacity destruction that will tighten supply-side constraints over the coming weeks even as demand remains robust.
- Capacity Flow Predictions: Equipment will continue exiting the Pacific Northwest through the week as carriers flee $6.10-per-gallon diesel, with van and reefer units gravitating toward the Sacramento, Las Vegas, and Phoenix markets where fuel economics are substantially more favorable. Midwest capacity frozen by the Wabash River Valley flooding will begin repositioning Thursday morning as Indiana roads clear and temperatures rise toward 54ยฐF, creating a brief 36-to-48-hour window of loosening capacity in the Chicago and Indianapolis markets before construction demand absorbs it. Wyoming wind disruptions will force transcontinental equipment onto I-70 and I-40 southern corridors, increasing loaded miles per move and reducing the effective supply of available trucks for shippers with time-sensitive deliveries on the northern tier.
๐ฅ Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retailers are heavily utilizing the spot market to position inventory ahead of spring demand, though high fuel surcharges are forcing them to consolidate shipments into partials where possible.
- Manufacturing: Sustained industrial output is driving the massive 124,000+ open loads in the flatbed and heavy haul sectors, with shippers willing to pay premium rates to secure scarce specialized equipment.
- Agriculture: Early produce staging in the Sunbelt and extreme heat in the Southwest are creating intense competition for temperature-controlled equipment, pushing reefer rates near $3.00/mile.
- Automotive: Just-in-time auto supply chains are facing disruption from transcontinental weather events, driving demand for expedited and team-transit solutions to prevent line shutdowns.
๐บ๏ธ Regional & Lane Analysis
๐ Primary Region Focus: West Coast / Pacific Northwest
The Western region is currently the most volatile and profitable market for freight brokers. A convergence of extreme heat in California and Arizona (up to 109 degrees), massive localized diesel spikes ($6.10/gallon in Washington), and severe weather disruptions (Cascades avalanches) has fractured regional capacity. Carriers are demanding massive premiums to enter the Pacific Northwest due to fuel costs, while extreme heat in the Southwest is absorbing all available temperature-controlled equipment. This structural imbalance is creating unprecedented arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can navigate the routing complexities and secure reliable capacity.
๐ฃ๏ธ Key Lane Watch
Spokane, WA โ Los Angeles, CA:
High fuel costs in WA ($6.10/gal) and avalanche disruptions in the Cascades are severely restricting outbound capacity, while extreme heat in LA drives inbound reefer demand. Carriers are demanding heavy fuel surcharges to leave the PNW, and the route down I-5 is fraught with operational challenges.
Phoenix, AZ โ Seattle, WA:
Extreme heat in Phoenix (up to 108 degrees) is creating urgent outbound cooling demand, while carriers face high fuel costs and weather disruptions heading into the PNW. The transition from extreme heat to potential freezing/avalanche conditions in the Cascades requires premium equipment.
๐จ Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Outbound Washington state (all equipment) due to $6.10/gal diesel
- Inbound/Outbound Southern California and Arizona (Reefer) due to extreme heat
- Transcontinental lanes crossing Wyoming (I-80) due to severe wind events
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Critical shortages in specialized and heavy haul equipment nationwide (124k+ open loads), and severe reefer shortages in the Southwest due to extreme heat.
Opportunity Zones:
- Southwest reefer markets (CA/AZ) for high-margin temperature-controlled freight
- Midwest partial consolidation lanes to offset high full-truckload fuel costs
- Coastal port markets for urgent transload/drayage recovery
๐ฏ Strategic Recommendations for Today
๐ผ For Customer Sales:
Narrative: The spot market is experiencing severe structural constraints driven by $5.068/gallon diesel and extreme regional weather events. We are proactively securing capacity and managing routing to protect your supply chain from these disruptions.
Action: Initiate immediate conversations regarding fuel surcharges and extended transit times for freight moving through the West Coast and Wyoming corridors. Secure volume commitments now before rates climb further.
๐ For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Aggressively source reefer capacity in the Southwest and flatbed/heavy haul equipment nationwide. Prioritize carriers with strong financial health and well-maintained equipment.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the promise of consistent freight and quick-pay options to secure carriers who are struggling with cash flow due to rapid diesel price spikes.
๐ Executive Signal Summary
This is still a replacement-cost market, not a โbig board = cheap trucksโ market.
Total available loads are 188,818, just -0.3% from 189,310 yesterday, but the national average rate increased to $2.47/mile from $2.44/mile, and loads moved jumped to 62,292 from 56,750. That combination tells you execution is tightening even though headline volume looks stable.
Open-deck remains the center of gravity for brokerage effort.
Flatbed + Heavy Haul + Specialized = 144,882 loads, which is about 76.7% of total board volume. Those same segments account for 51,787 moved loads, or about 83.1% of moved volume. If your desk is not heavily tilted toward flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized, you are misallocating time.
Reefer is the sharpest scarcity trade on the board.
Reefer paid $2.97 vs. posted $2.65 = +$0.32/mile, the strongest spread in the market. That is the cleanest signal that posted ask is not the true replacement cost on temperature-controlled freight.
Van is tighter than many brokers will assume.
Van paid $2.36 vs. posted $2.23 = +$0.13/mile on 24,331 loads. That is not a soft van market. It is a selective van market, especially on longer-haul and weather-exposed freight.
Your real negotiation pockets are narrower today.
Specialized and LTL (Less Than Truckload) / Partial are still the clearest places to press, because paid is below posted in both. Everywhere else, you should assume actual buy cost is above the visible ask unless the lane is dense, reload-friendly, and operationally clean.
Weather is now a pricing variable, not just an ops note.
Southern California heat, Wyoming I-80 wind risk, Cascades avalanche disruption, and Midwest flooding all directly change route economics, transit confidence, and carrier willingness. Brokers who price by national average today will get punished.
๐ What the board is really saying
Stable load count, higher rate, stronger clearing = tightening execution.
- Total loads: 188,818
- Yesterday: 189,310
- Average rate today: $2.47/mile
- Yesterday: $2.44/mile
- Loads moved today: 62,292
- Yesterday: 56,750
The hidden signal most brokers miss:
A flat board with a higher average rate and materially higher moved volume usually means bad freight has been filtered out and real freight is clearing faster. That is a quality-tightening market, not a loose one.
Compared with one week ago, the market is firmer.
- One week ago loads: 182,154
- Today: 188,818
- One week ago average rate: $2.36/mile
- Today: $2.47/mile
Compared with one month ago, supply looks less abundant even though rates are materially higher.
- One month ago loads: 198,639
- Today: 188,818
- One month ago average rate: $2.29/mile
- Today: $2.47/mile
Translation:
We are not looking at a pure demand spike. We are looking at carrier selectivity, fuel pressure, weather friction, and segment-specific scarcity pushing real clearing prices above casual expectations.
๐ Equipment-by-equipment trading map
๐ Van: tighter than the load count suggests
- Data: 24,331 loads, +4.5%, $2.23 posted, $2.36 paid
- Read: The +$0.13/mile spread matters. Van is not falling apart; it is becoming lane-selective.
- Best use today:
- Negotiate only on dense regional freight with short deadhead and strong reload confidence
- Protect margin on longer-haul van, transcon van, and anything touching the West or northern weather corridors
- Do not quote off posted alone on must-cover van freight
๐ฅฌ Reefer: todayโs most urgent buy-side segment
- Data: 8,866 loads, +2.5%, $2.65 posted, $2.97 paid
- Read: +$0.32/mile is a serious scarcity signal. In practical brokerage terms, that means late buying gets expensive fast.
- Why:
- Extreme heat increases demand and claims risk at the same time
- Reefer carriers are pricing fuel burn, maintenance exposure, pre-cool time, and breakdown risk
- Best use today:
- Pre-cover food, grocery, produce, and any strict-temp freight before quoting
- Confirm setpoint, washout, seal, reefer fuel, and breakdown protocol
- Shorten quote validity windows
๐๏ธ Flatbed: broadest revenue pool on the board
- Data: 83,644 loads, -1.2%, $2.73 posted, $2.81 paid
- Read: The spread is only +$0.08/mile, but scale matters. This is still the largest concentration of executable revenue in the market.
- Best use today:
- Prioritize clean, site-ready freight with complete securement details
- Charge for ambiguity around tarps, chains, loading method, and receiver unload time
- Pre-source before quoting on project freight and weather-exposed lanes
๐๏ธ Heavy Haul: leverage still belongs to qualified carriers
- Data: 41,051 loads, -5.1%, $2.77 posted, $2.82 paid
- Read: The +$0.05/mile spread is not explosive, but in heavy haul that is enough to tell you the right truck still has leverage.
- Best use today:
- Do not sell before dimensions, axle needs, permits, and route feasibility are confirmed
- Avoid fixed transit promises on any move with Wyoming or northern-tier exposure
- Use proven specialists, not cheapest visible capacity
๐งฉ Specialized: still a tactical negotiation pocket
- Data: 20,187 loads, +6.8%, $2.57 posted, $2.53 paid
- Read: Paid below posted by $0.04/mile means there is still room to negotiateโif the specs are complete.
- Best use today:
- Press rate down when loading specs are clean and routing is simple
- Add margin back when handling complexity is vague
- Move fast because rising volume can erase this pocket quickly
๐ฆ LTL / Partial: a margin-defense tool, not a universal answer
- Data: 10,739 loads, +2.0%, $1.61 posted, $1.58 paid
- Read: Paid below posted by $0.03/mile means density still wins. This is a good tactical answer for fuel-sensitive customersโbut only on lanes you can actually control.
- Best use today:
- Offer consolidation to customers trying to avoid full truckload fuel shock
- Keep stop count disciplined
- Do not build one-off partials with weak geography and loose service expectations
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather-to-rate conversion: where todayโs margin really comes from
๐ฌ๏ธ Wyoming I-80 wind risk
- Operational reality: Gusts up to 65 mph on the North Snowy Range Foothills corridor make high-profile equipment operationally fragile.
- Broker implication:
- Price uncertainty, not just miles
- Offer southern routing alternatives when service matters more than shortest path
- Add delay and detour protection in writing
๐ฅ Southern California heat
- Operational reality: Heat warnings calling for 96 to 104 degrees through Friday put reefer equipment under sustained stress.
- Broker implication:
- Service quality becomes more important than rate
- Cheap reefers become expensive claims
- Inbound and outbound temp-control quotes should be shorter-lived
๐๏ธ Pacific Northwest avalanche disruption
- Operational reality: Cascades restrictions tighten routing options and reduce carrier enthusiasm for PNW freight.
- Broker implication:
- Outbound PNW should be treated as premium freight
- Do not assume normal carrier participation
- Expect longer decision cycles and higher replacement cost
๐ Indiana / Illinois flood recovery
- Operational reality: Local access remains messy today, but recovery should release delayed freight into the market beginning Thursday.
- Broker implication:
- Today is the setup day
- Tomorrow can become the surge day
- Pre-book flatbed, specialized, and partial capacity now for Midwest recovery freight
๐ง The behavior pattern that matters most today
Shippers will see 188,818 loads and think the market is offering choice.
- They will assume higher supply means lower cost.
- That is the wrong read today.
Carriers are pricing survival and optionality.
- With diesel at $5.068/gallon, carriers care about:
- Fuel burn
- Deadhead
- Reload confidence
- Delay risk
- Whether the lane traps them in a bad market
Your edge is translation.
- The best brokers today will explain:
- Why posted rates are not executable rates
- Why lane-specific conditions matter more than national averages
- Why early commitment is cheaper than late panic
Best customer framing:
- โIf the shipment is flexible, we can work the market.โ
- โIf the shipment is urgent, we should buy certainty early.โ
- โIf the shipment touches the West, Wyoming, or temperature control, waiting may reduce options instead of price.โ
๐ฌ Customer sales posture that wins today
๐ฏ For shippers with urgent freight
- Sell certainty, not optimism
- Separate linehaul from FSC (Fuel Surcharge)
- Use short quote windows
- Put weather and route assumptions in writing
๐ For retail and consumer freight
- Push partials and consolidation where service windows allow
- Protect margin on any westbound or long-haul replenishment loads
- Avoid overpromising on transit through disrupted corridors
๐ญ For manufacturing and industrial accounts
- Lead with capacity planning, not just spot quoting
- Pre-negotiate for flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized
- Offer 48-hour buy strategy on critical project freight
๐ฅฆ For food and temp-control customers
- Explain that the load is buying refrigeration reliability, not just transportation
- Require clear handling details before final quote
- Move first on anything shipping before the heat breaks
๐ค Carrier desk tactics that create an edge today
๐ Change your call order
- Reefer carriers with strong maintenance history
- Flatbed carriers with clean site execution
- Heavy haul specialists with permit discipline
- Regional van carriers on dense loops
- Partial carriers with real network density
๐งพ Sell trip quality, not just rate
- Lead with:
- Commodity
- Weight
- Dimensions if applicable
- Load/unload method
- Appointment type
- Expected detention risk
- Reload direction
- In a high-fuel market, carriers often take a slightly lower rate for a clean trip with predictable turns.
๐บ๏ธ Use directional economics
- If a carrier is hesitant on a weather-affected or expensive origin, sell the next leg, not just the current one.
- Good brokers win today by pairing:
- Southbound reloads
- Dense triangle freight
- Backhaul certainty after premium outbound
๐ซ Avoid the two common buy-side mistakes
- Do not anchor to posted rate in reefer, van, or open-deck
- Do not assume a โcoveredโ truck is operationally viable until route and equipment fit are verified
๐ก๏ธ Risk controls that matter more in this market
๐ Probability-weighted 24โ72 hour outlook
๐ข Base case โ 60%
- Tight, selective conditions persist
- Open-deck remains the volume game
- Reefer remains the scarcity game
- Van stays firmer than customers expect
- Best posture: Buy early, shorten quote windows, protect westbound and temp-control margins
๐ Stress case โ 25%
- PNW and Wyoming disruption intensify or linger longer
- Southern reroute pressure builds
- Midwest recovery creates a sharper burst of delayed freight
- Best posture: Pre-book capacity before final customer approval when relationship strength allows
๐ต Relief case โ 15%
- Midwest recovery smooths out without a major demand spike
- Some van and specialized lanes become more negotiable
- Best posture: Take margin selectively on clean freight, but do not get loose on reefer or open-deck
โ
Highest-value actions before noon
Reprice every uncovered load with fresh fuel logic.
Diesel is $5.068/gallon. Old math is stale. Separate linehaul and FSC immediately.
Move broker time toward open-deck.
144,882 open-deck loads and 51,787 open-deck loads already moved tell you where todayโs real revenue pool sits.
Pre-cover reefer before quoting.
$2.97 paid vs. $2.65 posted means waiting is usually a losing strategy.
Treat van as selective, not soft.
The +$0.13/mile van spread says executable cost is running ahead of visible ask.
Use specialized and LTL / Partial as tactical relief valves.
Those are your cleaner negotiation pockets for customers who can accept flexibility.
Call Midwest industrial and ag customers today, not tomorrow.
Flood recovery can release delayed freight quickly, and the first brokers to secure capacity will win the cleanest margin.
Tighten compliance on every premium move.
High-rate, weather-stressed markets are where sloppy vetting turns into expensive claims and service failures.
๐งญ Bottom line
- The market is not exploding in volume; it is tightening in execution.
- 188,818 loads, $2.47/mile average, and $5.068 diesel tell you carriers are pricing cost, risk, and lane optionality.
- Open-deck is where the biggest revenue pool sits.
- Reefer is where the sharpest scarcity sits.
- Van has become meaningfully more selective.
- Specialized and LTL / Partial still offer tactical leverage if handled cleanly.
The brokers who outperform today will do three things better than everyone else:
- Buy certainty early
- Translate lane-specific reality clearly
- Refuse to confuse posted numbers with executable coverage
๐
This Day in History
1848: Revolutions of 1848: A rebellion arises in Milan which in five days of street fighting drove Marshal Radetzky and his Austrian soldiers from the city.
1865: American Civil War: The Congress of the Confederate States adjourns for the last time.
1996: A nightclub fire in Quezon City, Philippines kills 162 people.
๐ญ Quote of the Day
"It matters not who you love, where you love, why you love, when you love or how you love, it matters only that you love."
โ John Lennon