๐ Daily Market Intelligence Report
Friday, April 10, 2026
7:00 AM CST
๐ Top-Line Summary
The national spot freight market is experiencing a slight end-of-week volume contraction, with total available loads dropping 6.9% overnight to 177,566, though the market average rate remains robust at $2.70/mile. Capacity networks are fracturing under the weight of a punishing $5.683/gallon national diesel average, compounded by extreme regional fuel spikes surpassing $8.00 in California. Flatbed continues to dominate the market with nearly 80,000 loads at a lucrative $3.18/mile paid rate, while reefer volumes expanded by 5.9% as early produce season collides with severe weather disruptions. Brokers must prioritize aggressive fuel surcharge negotiations and secure capacity early, particularly for routes traversing flooded transcontinental corridors in the Midwest and winter-impacted passes in the Sierras.
Insight
A short operating window is open before early-week disruption reloads
The market is splitting into a workable Friday-Saturday shipping window and a more volatile Sunday-Tuesday reset. Rain eases just enough across parts of the Midwest to move some backlog this weekend, but renewed Michigan rainfall, strong south winds across Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin, and another round of thunderstorms by Tuesday should keep turn times slow and push fresh spot demand into early next week. Freight that can load before Sunday evening is positioned to avoid the next rate step-up.
โฝ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe River Flooding (Midwest (MI, IL, IN, IA, WI)): Major flooding is inundating the Midwest, severely disrupting I-80, I-39, and I-96 corridors. Carriers are actively avoiding the region or demanding massive detour premiums, rapidly tightening local capacity.
- Heavy Winter Storm (Sierra Nevada (CA, NV)): Heavy snow accumulations of 12-28 inches and 90 mph wind gusts are expected to make travel impossible over Sierra passes, effectively paralyzing the I-80 transcontinental corridor and trapping capacity on the West Coast.
- River Flooding (East Texas (TX)): Minor to moderate flooding along the Angelina River is threatening local routes and tightening capacity across East Texas as carriers navigate around submerged access roads.
- Lake Flooding (Upstate New York (NY)): Elevated water levels on Cayuga Lake are threatening local infrastructure, prompting carriers to exercise caution and slightly tightening capacity in the immediate Upstate New York region.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Midwest flooding will outlast the heaviest rain
Even where precipitation backs off today and Saturday, the real bottleneck will be access roads, industrial park entrances and secondary river crossings in western Michigan, northern Illinois and southern Wisconsin. Sunday rain in Michigan and gusty southerlies across the region increase the odds of renewed ponding and slower reopenings, so capacity recovery should be viewed as partial through Monday rather than complete.
Weather Insight
Sierra disruption is setting up as a multi-day equipment trap
The West Coast issue is bigger than a single pass closure. Strong winds today give way to colder rain-and-snow conditions across Nevada from Saturday into Monday, raising the risk that I-80 capacity misses planned weekend reloads in both directions. California freight moving inland should be priced with reset risk, missed reload exposure and longer repositioning cycles already built in.
๐ฐ Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Global conflicts and supply shocks continue to drive extreme volatility in fuel markets, forcing carriers to implement aggressive, daily-adjusted fuel surcharges to survive.
- Carrier Financial Health: Undercapitalized carriers are facing an existential threat as the combination of $5.683 diesel and rising insurance costs forces fleets to park trucks rather than operate at a loss.
- Economic Indicators: Sustained high fuel costs are cascading through the supply chain, pushing global freight rates higher and fueling broader inflationary pressures across the retail and manufacturing sectors.
๐ฐ Impactful News Analysis
-
San Francisco Diesel Surpasses $8, Fracturing West Coast Capacity ๐:
With diesel hitting $8 per gallon in San Francisco due to global conflicts and state policies, West Coast capacity is effectively paralyzed. Brokers must prepare for massive rate rejections on outbound California freight as carriers refuse to operate in the state without exorbitant fuel surcharges. Shift sourcing strategies to carriers with fuel-efficient fleets or those utilizing alternative routing.
-
Freight Fraud Tactics Evolve from Physical Theft to Digital Identity Hijacking ๐:
As fraudulent email attempts surge 117%, brokers face severe liability risks. The shift from physical cargo theft to sophisticated digital identity hijacking means operations teams must implement rigorous, multi-step carrier vetting protocols. Do not rely solely on basic FMCSA data; verify contact information directly to prevent catastrophic misdirects.
-
Global Fuel Shocks Push Freight Rates Higher Across the Board ๐:
The collision of Middle East turmoil and muted demand is creating a volatile pricing environment where fuel costs, rather than volume, are dictating freight rates. Brokers must proactively communicate these macroeconomic pressures to shippers to justify necessary rate hikes and secure sustainable margins.
-
Surging Demand for Chicago Warehouse Capacity Signals Midwest Freight Bottlenecks ๐:
The acquisition of CSI Materials Handling by Wolter Inc. highlights a massive surge in demand for warehouse capacity in the Chicago metro area. For brokers, this signals increased transloading and regional distribution activity. Expect higher volumes of short-haul, regional freight radiating from Chicago, presenting excellent margin opportunities for van and LTL consolidation.
News Insight
Fraud risk climbs when weather and fuel force late carrier swaps
Digital identity hijacking is especially dangerous on a day like this, when hot freight, rejected tenders and after-hours recoveries create pressure to accept a replacement truck quickly. Any last-minute change to dispatch contact, banking instructions or check-call phone numbers on weather-sensitive freight should be treated as a stop-ship event until verified through a known-good contact path.
๐ Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Carriers are heavily scrutinizing posted rates versus paid rates, utilizing real-time market transparency to reject loads that fail to account for the $5.683 national diesel average.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is critically tight in the Midwest due to flooding and in California due to $8 diesel and impending Sierra blizzards. Conversely, the Southeast is seeing balanced capacity outside of produce hubs.
- Technology Disruptions: The rapid adoption of AI-driven identity verification tools is becoming mandatory for brokerages to combat the 117% surge in digital freight fraud and carrier identity hijacking.
๐ฅ Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retailers are aggressively pushing spring inventory, but high fuel costs are forcing a shift from full truckload to LTL consolidation to protect margins.
- Manufacturing: Industrial manufacturing is driving massive flatbed demand, with nearly 80,000 loads available as spring infrastructure projects absorb specialized equipment.
- Agriculture: Early produce season is colliding with extreme fuel costs, driving reefer rates to a premium $2.78/mile as carriers demand heavy compensation to run cooling units.
- Automotive: Auto parts networks are experiencing localized disruptions in the Midwest due to severe flooding, requiring expedited routing and premium pricing to maintain just-in-time assembly lines.
๐บ๏ธ Regional & Lane Analysis
๐ Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest is currently the most volatile and opportunistic freight region in the country. Severe, widespread river flooding across Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin is severing key transcontinental corridors (I-80, I-39), forcing carriers into lengthy detours. Simultaneously, the region is experiencing a massive surge in warehouse capacity demand (particularly in Chicago) and dominating the national flatbed market. This collision of weather disruptions, high industrial volume, and $5.683 diesel is creating massive rate volatility and arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can secure reliable capacity.
๐ฃ๏ธ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL โ Minneapolis, MN: This critical Midwest lane is currently heavily disrupted by severe flooding across Illinois and Wisconsin, forcing carriers to abandon standard I-90/I-94 routing. Van and reefer volumes are steady, but capacity is rapidly evaporating as drivers refuse to navigate the flooded zones without significant hazard pay.
Grand Rapids, MI โ Columbus, OH: The Grand Rapids market is currently ground zero for severe flooding along the Grand River, severely hampering local loading operations and tightening outbound capacity. Despite the weather, industrial and manufacturing demand remains high, pushing flatbed and van rates upward.
Regional Insight
Chicago to Minneapolis is now a service-risk lane, not just a premium-rate lane
Northbound coverage out of Chicago remains vulnerable even if primary routing is intermittently passable, because flooded secondary roads and weekend wind will keep empty repositioning and final-mile access uneven across Wisconsin and into Minnesota. The safest freight profile is Friday pickup or early Saturday pickup with flexible Monday delivery, while hard appointment freight should carry separate detour and layover protection.
- Prioritize carriers already positioned in Chicagoland over trucks deadheading in from Wisconsin or Minnesota.
- Treat Monday delivery commitments as conditional unless routing and receiver access are confirmed same day.
๐จ Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Outbound California lanes (driven by $8.00 diesel)
- Midwest transcontinental routes (I-80/I-39) affected by flooding
- Reefer lanes originating in early produce markets
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Flatbed capacity is critically scarce nationwide (79,817 loads), while van and reefer capacity is severely constrained in the flooded Midwest and winter-impacted Sierra Nevada passes.
Opportunity Zones:
- Short-haul regional lanes in the Ohio Valley
- Inbound freight to Chicago to support surging warehouse demand
- LTL consolidation in the Southeast
๐ฏ Strategic Recommendations for Today
๐ผ For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Educate shippers on the compounding effects of the $5.683 national diesel average and severe Midwest flooding. Emphasize that securing reliable capacity right now requires premium pricing, as carriers are actively rejecting freight that doesn't cover elevated operating and detour costs.
Action: Proactively reach out to customers with freight moving through the Midwest or California to adjust rate expectations and secure extended lead times.
๐ For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Focus entirely on securing flatbed capacity for the booming construction sector, and prioritize carriers with fuel-efficient fleets or those willing to run alternative routes around the Midwest floods.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the impending Sierra blizzards and Midwest floods to negotiate favorable rates on freight moving *away* from these hazard zones, offering carriers a safe repositioning opportunity.
Strategic Insight
Reprice volatile lanes daily and separate fuel from detour exposure
Long-haul pricing is moving too fast to bury everything inside one all-in number. Cleanest execution this weekend comes from breaking quotes into linehaul, fuel and weather-driven route variance so customer approvals can keep pace with changing conditions.
- Reset Monday pricing Sunday night or early Monday morning on Midwest flood lanes and California outbound freight.
- Use explicit detour language on freight touching the flooded Midwest corridor or Sierra crossings to reduce post-load margin erosion.
- Push optional pickups into Friday or Saturday where possible; early-week replacement capacity will cost more.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Move discretionary Midwest freight before Sunday evening; early next week still points to backlog-driven tightening.
- Price California and Sierra-linked freight for multi-day repositioning, not one-day weather delay assumptions.
- Use Ohio Valley destinations to pull trucks out of western Michigan before the next round of rain slows loading again.
- Treat late carrier swaps on hot freight as a fraud trigger until contacts and payment details are re-verified.
๐ Executive Signal Summary
This is a tighter execution market than the headline load drop suggests. Total available loads fell to 177,566 from 190,781 (-6.9%), but the national average rate is still $2.70/mile, and total loads moved this morning climbed to 76,696 from 70,294 yesterday. That tells me the market shed some lower-priority freight, while urgent and executable freight is still clearing faster.
Fuel and weather are doing more pricing work than raw demand. With national diesel at $5.683/gallon and extreme West Coast spikes above $8.00 in San Francisco, carriers are pricing off pump pain, detour risk, idle time, and reload certaintyโnot just posted miles.
Open-deck still controls the richest part of the board. Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized combine for 137,288 loads, or roughly 77.3% of all posted opportunity. If your desk is not leaning hard into industrial, project, machinery, and niche trailer freight today, you are working around the money.
Specialized is the quiet margin story. The largest paid-versus-posted spread today is specialized: $3.01 paid vs. $2.87 posted (+$0.14/mile). That usually means competitors are still under-scoping trailer fit, commodity detail, securement, or unload requirements.
The Midwest is a service-risk market first, a rate market second. Flooding across Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, and Wisconsin is hurting not only interstate flow but also yard access, industrial park entrances, and secondary road reliability. Brokers who price only linehaul will get picked apart later by dwell, detour, and missed appointment damage.
There is a real but short operating window before the next reset. Freight loading Friday into early Saturday has a chance to avoid the more disorderly Sunday-through-Tuesday environment. That is especially true on Midwest industrial freight and California eastbound freight tied to Sierra routing.
๐ What the market is really saying beneath the surface
Lower volume is not translating into cheaper trucks.
- Today: 177,566 loads, $2.70/mile
- Yesterday: 190,781 loads, $2.69/mile
- One week ago: 220,488 loads, $2.65/mile
- One month ago: 182,154 loads, $2.36/mile
The important read: the market has meaningfully fewer loads than one week ago, yet rates are higher. That is a classic sign of a supply-side tight market. Trucks are not scarce everywhere, but usable trucks on the right lanes, with the right routing, at the right time, are scarce.
Execution velocity improved even as headline volume fell.
- Today loads moved: 76,696
- Yesterday loads moved: 70,294
- That tells you the market is favoring freight with real urgency, complete information, and credible pay.
Posted-to-paid spreads still show where first offers are too light.
- Van: $2.48 paid vs. $2.42 posted = +$0.06
- Reefer: $2.78 paid vs. $2.74 posted = +$0.04
- Flatbed: $3.18 paid vs. $3.10 posted = +$0.08
- Heavy haul: $3.20 paid vs. $3.16 posted = +$0.04
- Specialized: $3.01 paid vs. $2.87 posted = +$0.14
- LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload / Partial): $1.75 paid vs. $1.75 posted = $0.00
The best interpretation by mode:
- Flatbed: still strong and still repricing higher
- Heavy haul: disciplined, but not irrational
- Specialized: underquoted the most
- Van: selective, not soft
- Reefer: premium but currently being quoted more honestly up front
- LTL/Partial: useful as a cost-defense tool, not a service miracle
๐ Equipment-by-equipment playbook for today
๐ง Flatbed
- Market read: 79,817 loads at $3.18/mile paid
- What matters: Spring construction and infrastructure freight are still absorbing open-deck equipment, even after the -9.0% overnight volume drop.
- Broker edge today:
- Prioritize freight with complete securement requirements
- Favor shippers with known loading speed
- Target loads with visible reload geography
- Avoid vague โeasy steelโ or โbasic building materialsโ descriptions
- Why this works: Carriers are not just chasing rateโthey are chasing fast turn time and reload confidence. The broker who can explain both wins the truck.
๐ซ Heavy Haul
- Market read: 36,088 loads at $3.20/mile paid
- What matters: This remains a planning market, not a panic market.
- Broker edge today:
- Quote only after confirming exact dimensions, weight, axle need, permit path, and escort requirements
- Pre-clear alternate routes around Midwest flood corridors
- Secure capacity earlier than normal for Monday freight
- Best insight: Heavy haul carriers will still move if the load is clean. They punish spec ambiguity more than they punish normal price resistance.
๐ช Specialized
- Market read: 21,383 loads at $3.01/mile paid
- What matters: This is the most underappreciated repricing pocket on the board.
- Broker edge today:
- Validate trailer type before quoting
- Confirm unload method
- Confirm commodity dimensions and securement
- Ask whether appointment times are hard or soft
- Why this matters: A +$0.14/mile spread means a lot of freight is still being quoted by people who are buying โsomething close enough.โ That is where good brokers take share.
๐ Dry Van
- Market read: 21,198 loads at $2.48/mile paid
- What matters: Van is not loose; it is selective.
- Best use cases today:
- Short regional turns
- Ohio Valley freight
- Inbound Chicago freight
- Appointment-sensitive replenishment
- Rescue freight leaking from contract due to rising OTRI (Outbound Tender Rejection Index)
- Broker edge today:
- Sell speed and simplicity
- Avoid underpricing long-haul freight without fuel breakout
- Use regional carriers already positioned near the shipper
๐ง Reefer
- Market read: 8,363 loads at $2.78/mile paid
- What matters: Early produce, reefer unit fuel burn, and weather routing are keeping this market tight.
- Broker edge today:
- Book only with washout status confirmed
- Confirm temperature set point and continuous-run expectations
- Price cooling fuel separately in your internal buy logic
- Pre-cover produce-adjacent lanes before the afternoon
- Best interpretation: Reefer is expensive for a reason. Any shipper trying to buy it like van today will either get a rejection or a weak truck.
๐ฆ LTL/Partial
- Market read: 10,717 loads at $1.75/mile paid
- What matters: This is a relationship-protection tool in a high-fuel market.
- Best use cases today:
- Retail replenishment
- Cost-sensitive manufacturing support
- Freight that can tolerate wider transit windows
- Southeast consolidations outside produce pressure pockets
- Broker edge today:
- Offer it as a structured alternative, not a downgrade surprise
- Be explicit about touches, transit variability, and appointment limits
๐ง๏ธ Regional playbook: where the real risk and money are
๐ Midwest flood belt
- Core truth: This is not just a rain story anymore. It is a recovery and access story.
- What is happening:
- Flood warnings are active across parts of Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, Indiana, and Iowa
- I-80, I-39, I-96, and related secondary access roads are under pressure
- Even where rain eases, dock access and empty repositioning stay unreliable
- What to do today:
- Move discretionary freight before Sunday evening
- Call the shipper and receiver directly to verify access
- Build detour and dwell protection into every quote
- Treat Monday delivery promises as conditional until same-day route and facility status are confirmed
๐๏ธ Chicago, IL โ Minneapolis, MN
- Best read: This is a service-risk lane, not just a premium-rate lane.
- What to do:
- Prioritize carriers already sitting in Chicagoland
- Avoid depending on deadhead trucks coming down from Wisconsin or Minnesota
- Sell Friday or early Saturday pickup with flexible Monday delivery
- Add layover and detour language before the truck is dispatched
๐ญ Grand Rapids, MI โ Columbus, OH
- Best read: The linehaul is only half the risk; loading access is the other half.
- What to do:
- Confirm whether the facility yard, employee entrance, and truck route are open
- Use Ohio destinations to help carriers escape western Michigan exposure
- Prefer carriers with a reload plan in Ohio or Indiana
๐จ๏ธ California and Sierra-linked freight
- Core truth: This is shaping into an equipment trap, not a one-day weather headline.
- What is happening:
- Sierra passes face heavy snow and strong winds
- West Coast capacity is already stressed by extreme diesel prices
- Missed weekend reloads can distort Monday and Tuesday pricing
- What to do today:
- Price California outbound with multi-day repositioning risk
- Do not quote eastbound freight as if the truck will turn normally
- Pre-book before the carrier starts adding โstorm mathโ to the lane
- Use carriers with known inland routing discipline
๐ Inbound Chicago and Ohio Valley regional freight
- Best near-term opportunity: This is where a broker can still create margin without buying chaos.
- Why:
- Chicago warehousing demand supports short-haul and transload activity
- Regional carriers prefer faster turns in a $5.683 diesel market
- What to do:
- Pitch short-haul reload loops
- Bundle same-day or next-day freight for repeat carrier usage
- Use these lanes to keep core van carriers warm while long-haul exposure is unattractive
๐ Upstate New York and East Texas
- Best read: More dwell risk than full corridor shutdown.
- What to do:
- Confirm receiver flexibility
- Protect detention in writing
- Do not promise tight appointment precision unless the facility verifies normal operations
๐ฌ How to sell this market to shippers without losing credibility
Lead with replacement cost, not market drama.
- Best framing: โWe can cover this, but todayโs truck is pricing fuel, route variance, and reload riskโnot just loaded miles.โ
Break volatile quotes into components.
- Linehaul
- Fuel
- Weather/detour exposure
- Detention/layover
Why this works: Shippers resist one inflated all-in number. They accept a transparent structure more often because it feels operationally justified, not emotional.
Offer three choices instead of one disputed rate.
- Premium truckload: highest service confidence
- Flex truckload: wider pickup/delivery window for a lower price
- LTL/Partial: lower cost, less transit precision
This matters because: when markets get noisy, customers want control, not just a quote.
Separate urgent freight from ordinary freight.
- Urgent freight: buy now, protect service
- Ordinary freight: widen the window, lower the cost
A lot of margin gets destroyed when brokers treat all freight as equally urgent.
Use short quote validity windows.
- Especially on:
- California outbound
- Midwest flood-affected freight
- Flatbed
- Same-day van
- Reason: carrier psychology moves faster than shipper approval chains in weather-and-fuel-driven markets.
๐ค How to buy trucks today without donating margin
Buy positioned capacity, not theoretical capacity.
- Best trucks today are already near the freight
- The farther the empty move, the more the driver thinks about fuel, weather, and reload uncertainty
Ask sharper dispatch questions before you book.
- Where is the truck right now?
- What was the last delivery?
- Which route will the driver actually run?
- What is the reload plan after this load?
- Do Hours of Service (HOS) support the commitment?
- Is the trailer truly correct for this commodity?
Sell roundtrip logic to the carrier.
- In a high-fuel market, the carrier cares about:
- Empty miles
- Time to next load
- Pump cost
- Cash-turn speed
- If you can describe the next logical reload area, you often reduce what looks like rate resistance.
Pay for certainty, not optimism.
- Named dispatcher
- Verified routing
- Real appointment understanding
- Agreed accessorials
The cheap truck that guesses is more expensive than the solid truck that knows.
Separate fuel from detour exposure in internal pricing.
- Do not bury everything inside a single all-in mental model
- If weather improves, detour risk can ease faster than fuel
- If weather worsens, fuel may stay constant while route cost explodes
๐ก๏ธ Fraud, swap risk, and compliance controls for today
Late carrier swaps are a major danger in this exact environment.
- Weather delays, rejected tenders, and hot freight create pressure to โjust cover itโ
- That is precisely when identity hijackers win
Treat any last-minute change as a stop-ship event until verified.
- Dispatch contact changed
- Banking instructions changed
- Check-call number changed
- Email domain changed
- Driver phone suddenly changed
Best practice: verify through a known-good contact path, not the new message you just received.
Use tighter Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) and internal verification discipline.
- Reconfirm the assigned driver
- Reconfirm operating authority
- Reconfirm pickup contact
- Match insurance and dispatch identity
- Critical loads should never be awarded solely because someone answered fastest.
๐ฏ Where the best money is in the next 24โ72 hours
๐ฎ Probability-weighted outlook for the next 24โ72 hours
Base case โ most likely
- Friday and early Saturday clear some backlog
- Midwest remains only partially recovered
- California stays unstable because Sierra disruptions distort turns
- Monday pricing resets higher on sensitive lanes
- Broker posture: cover early, widen windows, protect accessorials
Relief case โ less likely
- Some Midwest access improves enough to soften select regional van and short-haul freight
- Broker posture: buy quickly on ordinary freight, but do not discount premium lanes prematurely
Stress case โ meaningful risk
- Flood-related access problems persist
- Sierra closures trap more West Coast equipment
- More contracted freight leaks to spot as OTRI rises
- Broker posture: protect critical customers, use relationship carriers, escalate quote validity controls
โ
Priority action list for today
Cover weather-exposed Midwest freight before late morning.
- Especially freight touching Chicago, western Michigan, Wisconsin, and Indiana.
Requote volatile lanes using separate linehaul, fuel, and detour logic.
- Do this on California outbound, Midwest flood lanes, and any lane with hard appointments.
Push optional pickups into Friday or early Saturday.
- That is the cleanest way to avoid the likely Sunday-through-Tuesday reset.
Lean harder into open-deck and specialized freight.
- Flatbed remains strong, but specialized is where underquoted freight is most visible.
Use Ohio Valley and inbound Chicago freight to attract regional carriers.
- This helps secure trucks that want faster turns and lower fuel exposure.
Convert price-sensitive customers to LTL/Partial where service tolerance exists.
- Defend the account without pretending it is equal to dedicated truckload service.
Verify facility access before you dispatch on flood-affected freight.
- Highway open does not mean yard open.
Treat late truck substitutions as fraud alerts until verified.
- Especially on high-value, hot, or weather-sensitive freight.
Pre-build Monday backup coverage today on critical shipments.
- If the weekend slips, you want options already warmed up.
Have sales call customers before the market calls them.
- Customers accept premium pricing more often when you explain the logic before service fails.
๐ What a strong broker should measure by end of day
- Coverage speed on flatbed, specialized, and weather-exposed freight
- Booked-to-falloff rate
- Gross margin after detention, layover, and detour leakage
- Percent of quotes sent with linehaul/fuel separated
- Facility verification rate on Midwest shipments
- Number of loads converted to LTL/Partial to save the account
- Rate variance between posted and paid by equipment type
- Percent of critical loads awarded to known carriers versus last-minute spot replacements
๐ง Bottom line
Todayโs market is not broad-based hotโit is selectively unforgiving. The brokers who win are not the ones who quote the fastest. They are the ones who identify which freight is truly time-sensitive, price disruption honestly, buy trucks with reload logic, and refuse to let weather pressure create fraud or accessorial leakage.
Treat today as a buying deadline for sensitive freight, not a comfort signal from lower load counts.
๐
This Day in History
847: Election of Pope Leo IV following the death of Pope Sergius II.
1606: The Virginia Company of London is established by royal charter by James I of England with the purpose of establishing colonial settlements in North America.
1887: On Easter Sunday, Pope Leo XIII authorizes the establishment of the Catholic University of America.
๐ญ Quote of the Day
"Silence is the great teacher and to learn its lessons you must pay attention to it."
โ Deepak Chopra