š Daily Market Intelligence Report
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
7:00 AM CST
š Top-Line Summary
The spot market is currently navigating a highly complex environment characterized by a massive volume floor of 155,903 available loads and a $191.0M market opportunity, even as the national average rate cools slightly to $2.25/mile. Flatbed freight is completely dominating the board with over 70,800 available loads, driven by an early surge in construction and energy sector staging. However, the most critical development for brokers today is the combination of severe carrier attrition and regulatory crackdowns. Industry forecasts now project spot rates to surpass contract rates in the near future as the FMCSA aggressively targets non-domiciled CDLs and training mills, structurally shrinking the active driver pool. Compounding these capacity constraints are severe 75-80 mph crosswinds paralyzing transcontinental routes along the I-80 and I-90 corridors. With tender rejections holding at an elevated 13.49%, routing guides are fracturing, creating massive arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can secure reliable capacity in a tightening market.

ā½ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
š¦ļø Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe High Winds (70-80 mph) (Wyoming and Montana (WY, MT - I-80, I-90, I-25 corridors)): Extreme blow-over risk for light and high-profile vehicles is forcing van and reefer carriers to park or take massive detours. This is severely disrupting transcontinental transit times and creating localized capacity vacuums.
- Heavy Mountain Snow (Colorado Rockies (CO - Above 9000ft, Rabbit Ears Pass)): Additional accumulations of 5-11 inches and 50 mph wind gusts are creating hazardous travel conditions, triggering chain laws, and significantly slowing East-West freight movement through the central Rockies.
- Fire Weather Watch (Southeast Wyoming and Nebraska Panhandle (WY, NE - I-80 corridor)): Westerly winds up to 45 mph combined with 15-20% humidity are creating critical fire risks. Brokers should monitor for sudden highway closures and visibility issues due to smoke along this major freight artery.
āļø Weather Impact Cascade
- Immediate Operational Impact: Today, Wednesday February 25: Colorado is experiencing light snow with approximately 0.3 inches of accumulation possible and an 82% precipitation probability, with winds up to 48 mph. Wyoming is seeing light rain with winds up to 42 mph WNW. Montana continues with westerly winds of 16-35 mph. These conditions are collectively maintaining the disruption to I-80 and I-90 transcontinental corridors that was identified in the first-layer analysis. Flatbed and high-profile van carriers should be considered unavailable for westbound dispatch through Colorado and Wyoming mountain passes today.
- Secondary Market Effects: The rerouting of transcontinental freight to southern corridors (I-40, I-10) is likely increasing demand and rate pressure on those alternative lanes. Carriers running southern alternatives are capturing weather premiums, which may incentivize additional equipment to migrate southward ā creating a secondary capacity tightening on I-80 as that equipment repositions. Short-haul and regional freight within Nebraska, which is forecasting sunny and mild conditions through Friday, may see relatively good capacity availability as local carriers avoid the mountain corridor disruptions.
- Regional Spillover Analysis: Wyoming's clearing forecast ā sunny Thursday and Friday with winds dropping to 21-30 mph from today's 26-42 mph ā is the most significant weather development to monitor. If conditions clear as forecasted, the Wyoming segment of I-80 should see meaningful improvement in transit viability by Thursday. However, Colorado's snow forecast through Thursday (with lingering overcast through Saturday) means mountain passes may remain challenging even as the plains segments improve. Montana's forecast showing gusts up to 59 mph on Thursday before moderating to 20-42 mph Friday and 6-17 mph Saturday suggests the northern corridor has a rougher recovery timeline. Shippers and brokers should treat the Wyoming and Montana corridors as having different clearing windows ā Wyoming likely improving Thursday, Montana not fully normalizing until the weekend.
- Recovery Timeline: Based on the provided forecast data, a phased recovery appears probable: Wyoming I-80 segment may see improved transit conditions beginning Thursday, with Friday looking more operationally viable based on sunny skies and reduced winds (21-27 mph WSW). Colorado mountain passes may remain challenging through Thursday before improving Friday-Saturday. Montana's I-90 corridor appears to face the most prolonged disruption, with elevated winds persisting through Thursday and only moderating to near-normal levels by Saturday. Full corridor normalization across all three states is uncertain but may occur by the weekend if forecast conditions hold. Language of certainty should be avoided ā these are forecast-based projections subject to change.
š° Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Fuel markets remain volatile as regional refinery issues and geopolitical tensions keep middle distillate futures elevated. Carriers are highly sensitive to deadhead miles, demanding higher rates to cover repositioning costs.
- Carrier Financial Health: The market is experiencing the most significant structural change to the carrier base in decades. Following the loss of over 19,000 operating authorities in recent years, remaining carriers are migrating to dedicated lanes, leaving the one-way spot market increasingly vulnerable to capacity shocks.
- Economic Indicators: The ATA Truck Tonnage Index rose 0.4% in January, indicating that freight volumes have lifted off their recent bottom. This modest demand recovery, colliding with a shrinking supply side, is setting the stage for a rate inflection point.
š° Impactful News Analysis
-
Spot Rates Forecasted to Surpass Contract Rates Amid Capacity Squeeze š:
Industry analysts project that truckload spot rates will soon exceed contract rates due to a vulnerable carrier capacity environment. For brokers, this is a critical pivot point: shippers will increasingly experience routing guide failures, pushing lucrative freight to the spot market. Brokers must shift from a volume-chasing strategy to a margin-protection strategy, as securing reliable capacity will become more difficult and expensive.
-
FMCSA Crackdown on CDL Mills Threatens to Shrink Driver Pool š:
The FMCSA is moving to end the self-certification process for driver training schools after finding massive non-compliance. This regulatory overhaul will structurally shrink the entry-level driver pipeline and force bad actors out of the market. Brokers must implement stricter carrier vetting processes immediately, as capacity will tighten further and the liability risks of utilizing unverified carriers will skyrocket.
-
Tender Rejections Hold Near 13.5% as Contract Carriers Pivot to Dedicated š:
With tender rejections sitting at 13.49% (up over 800 basis points year-over-year), large carriers are abandoning one-way over-the-road freight in favor of multiyear dedicated contracts. This structural shift leaves shippers highly exposed. Brokers should aggressively target enterprise shippers right now, offering guaranteed spot capacity as a relief valve for their failing routing guides.
-
Truck Tonnage Shows Modest Growth, Signaling Demand Floor š:
The ATA's Truck Tonnage Index increased 0.4% recently, confirming that freight volumes are stabilizing. Because this recovery is colliding with reduced overall truck capacity, brokers should anticipate increased rate volatility. Sales teams should use this data to warn customers that the era of cheap, abundant capacity is ending, justifying higher contracted rates for the upcoming bid season.
News Impact Timeline
- Immediate Operational Reality: The FMCSA CDL mill crackdown is an active, ongoing process ā not a future event. Brokers should assume today that some portion of their existing carrier base may include drivers whose credentials are under scrutiny or whose operating authorities could be affected by ongoing audits. Carrier vetting processes should be reviewed and tightened immediately. Tender rejections at 13.49% mean that on any given day, enterprise shippers with large routing guide volumes are experiencing load bounces that need to be covered ā creating real-time spot market demand that brokers can capture today.
- 3-Day Market Implications: Within 72 hours, as Wyoming weather clears and delayed freight attempts to move, the spot market will likely see a concentrated demand pulse on westbound lanes. Brokers who have pre-positioned carrier relationships and secured capacity commitments today will be able to service this demand at premium rates rather than scrambling. Additionally, as industry news about spot rates surpassing contract rates circulates further, expect shipper inquiries about spot market solutions and routing guide relief to increase ā sales teams should be proactively reaching out now rather than waiting for inbound calls.
- Week-Ahead Positioning: By next week, the combination of improving weather conditions, the accumulated backlog of delayed freight, and deepening Q1 construction demand is likely to keep rate pressure elevated above pre-disruption levels. The structural driver pool reduction from CDL regulatory actions will not reverse on any near-term timeline ā this is a permanent reduction in available capacity. Brokers should be using this week's disruption as a catalyst for converting spot customers to longer-term capacity agreements, using current market conditions as evidence of the value of guaranteed access.
- Regulatory Compliance Impacts: Brokers must immediately review their carrier onboarding and vetting procedures. As the FMCSA accelerates enforcement against non-compliant CDL holders and training mills, the liability exposure of utilizing carriers with questionable credentials increases significantly. Brokerages that have invested in advanced identity verification and carrier monitoring technology are positioned to gain competitive advantage ā both in risk mitigation and in the ability to credibly represent carrier quality to enterprise shippers who are increasingly concerned about supply chain liability.
š Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Real-time metrics show flatbed dominating the board with over 70,000 loads, while van and reefer volumes remain steady but competitive. The spread between posted and paid rates is narrowing, indicating that brokers are having to pay up to secure trucks, particularly on reefer freight where paid rates are currently beating posted rates.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is critically tight across the Mountain West due to severe wind events along I-80, and in the Midwest where the CDL regulatory crackdown is sidelining drivers. Conversely, outbound capacity in the Northeast remains relatively loose as carriers look to escape post-storm conditions.
- Technology Disruptions: The integration of AI-driven fraud detection in carrier onboarding platforms is accelerating. As the FMCSA cracks down on chameleon carriers and CDL mills, brokerages utilizing advanced identity verification tech are gaining a significant competitive advantage in shielding themselves from liability and cargo theft.
Demand Shift Indicators
- Regional Demand Predictions: The Midwest is expected to sustain elevated outbound demand pressure through at least the end of next week. As the Wyoming I-80 corridor begins to clear Thursday-Friday per forecast data, a meaningful volume of freight that has been staged or delayed will attempt to move simultaneously, creating a concentrated demand surge on westbound lanes. Simultaneously, the Columbus-to-Dallas flatbed corridor is likely to see continued volume acceleration as construction season preparations deepen into Q1. The Southeast reefer market may also begin drawing down Midwest-based temperature-controlled equipment as early produce season preparations intensify, further tightening overall capacity in the region.
- Seasonal Transition Analysis: The current market is exhibiting an atypically aggressive early-season flatbed surge ā over 70,800 loads nationally is elevated for late February, suggesting construction and energy sector staging is running ahead of historical pace. Normally, this level of flatbed demand would not materialize until mid-to-late March. This compressed seasonal timeline, colliding with a structurally smaller carrier base, is producing rate dynamics more consistent with peak season than late winter. The reefer market is also showing early-season tightness consistent with an accelerated produce calendar in southern growing regions.
- Economic Leading Indicators: The ATA Truck Tonnage Index's 0.4% January increase is a meaningful signal ā it confirms that freight volumes have stabilized and are beginning to recover from their recent trough. This recovery, even if modest, is highly impactful because it is occurring against a supply side that has contracted significantly. The loss of over 19,000 operating authorities in recent years means the market is structurally less able to absorb demand increases without rapid rate escalation. The convergence of modest demand recovery with reduced supply is a textbook setup for a rate inflection point, consistent with industry forecasts projecting spot rates to surpass contract rates.
- Capacity Flow Predictions: As weather clears on the Wyoming I-80 corridor Thursday-Friday, expect a significant wave of carrier repositioning eastbound as equipment that was parked or diverted seeks to backhaul from the Mountain West. This may create a brief window of improved westbound capacity availability Thursday-Friday before the delayed freight backlog is absorbed. Nebraska's favorable forecast through the week ā sunny, mild temperatures, winds easing to 12-18 mph by Friday ā supports relatively smooth transit on the central corridor during this window. Montana's elevated winds persisting through Thursday suggest the northern I-90 corridor will remain disrupted longer than the I-80 Wyoming segment.
š„ Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Spring staging is beginning to accelerate, driving steady van volumes. Shippers are highly sensitive to routing guide failures and are increasingly relying on 3PLs to handle surge capacity as contract carriers reject loads.
- Manufacturing: Industrial output is driving massive flatbed demand, particularly in the Midwest and Sunbelt. Heavy machinery and raw materials are moving at a premium as specialized equipment availability tightens.
- Agriculture: Early produce season preparations in the Southeast and West Coast are absorbing temperature-controlled capacity. 'Protect From Freeze' requirements in the northern half of the country are adding a layer of complexity and cost to food and beverage shipments.
- Automotive: Just-in-time automotive freight is experiencing localized disruptions due to weather events in the Midwest and Mountain West, forcing expeditors to utilize team drivers at significant rate premiums to keep assembly lines running.
šŗļø Regional & Lane Analysis
š Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest is currently the epicenter of the freight market's structural shifts. The region is experiencing a massive influx of flatbed demand driven by early construction and energy projects, while simultaneously facing a severe capacity shock due to the FMCSA's aggressive audits of CDL training mills (particularly in Illinois). Furthermore, the region serves as the gateway to the wind-battered transcontinental routes of the Mountain West. Carriers are highly reluctant to take westbound freight into the 75-80 mph crosswinds of I-80, forcing brokers to pay massive premiums to move loads out of the Midwest toward the West Coast. This combination of regulatory driver attrition, weather-driven routing shifts, and surging industrial demand is creating extreme rate volatility and highly profitable arbitrage opportunities for well-connected brokers.
š£ļø Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL ā Denver, CO:
This lane is currently experiencing extreme upward rate pressure. Carriers are actively avoiding dispatch into the Mountain West due to the 75-80 mph crosswinds and heavy mountain snow affecting I-80 and I-76. Combined with the shrinking driver pool in Illinois due to CDL audits, capacity is exceptionally scarce.
Columbus, OH ā Dallas, TX:
This lane is seeing a massive surge in flatbed and specialized freight volume as manufacturing and construction materials move from the Rust Belt to the booming Sunbelt. Capacity is tightening as the national flatbed load count surpasses 70,000.
šØ Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Midwest to Mountain West (Chicago to Denver/Salt Lake City) due to severe wind events
- Southeast outbound reefer lanes due to early produce season prep
- National flatbed lanes, particularly out of the Rust Belt to the Sunbelt
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Severe shortages of flatbed equipment nationwide (over 70k available loads). Reefer capacity is critically tight in agricultural zones. General van capacity is shrinking in the Midwest due to CDL regulatory audits.
Opportunity Zones:
- Inbound to the Northeast (carriers looking for high-paying freight to enter the region)
- Short-haul flatbed routes in the Sunbelt
- Expedited freight bypassing the I-80 corridor via southern routes
šÆ Strategic Recommendations for Today
š¼ For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Inform customers that the freight market is experiencing a structural shift. With tender rejections hitting 13.5%, spot rates projected to surpass contract rates, and the FMCSA actively shrinking the driver pool, the era of cheap capacity is over. Position ETA as their reliable safety net.
Action: Proactively reach out to enterprise accounts today to ask about their routing guide compliance. Offer to take on their 'problem lanes' immediately, particularly anything heading into the Mountain West or requiring flatbed equipment.
š For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Prioritize securing flatbed capacity in the Midwest and South. For van/reefer, focus on building relationships with carriers willing to run alternative transcontinental routes (I-40 or I-10) to avoid the severe winds on I-80.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the promise of consistent, high-quality freight to negotiate with carriers. In a market where the FMCSA is cracking down on bad actors, emphasize that ETA only works with compliant, top-tier carriers, offering them priority access to our best loads.
š Customer Communication Scripts
Rate Increase Justification
Opening Script: "Good morning, this is [Name] from ETA. I wanted to reach out personally because the market shifted significantly overnight and it directly impacts your freight. Nationally, tender rejections are sitting at 13.49% ā that's up more than 800 basis points from this time last year ā which means contract carriers are rejecting loads at a historically elevated rate. On top of that, severe high winds across the Wyoming and Montana corridors are forcing carriers to park or reroute entirely, pulling active capacity off the board right now. I want to make sure your freight doesn't get caught in a last-minute capacity crunch."
Value Proposition: By locking in capacity with ETA today, you're insulating your supply chain from routing guide failures that are already impacting enterprise shippers across the Midwest and Mountain West. Our pre-vetted carrier network is already positioned to move your freight on alternative corridors.
Urgency Creator: The wind event affecting I-80 and I-90 through Wyoming and Montana is ongoing today and Montana forecast shows elevated westerly winds of 30-59 mph persisting through Thursday. Every hour that passes, more carriers are parking or repositioning away from westbound dispatch, shrinking the available pool further.
Objection Handler: If your customer says 'your rates are too high': 'I completely understand the sticker shock ā rates have moved significantly. Here is the context: the national flatbed market currently has over 70,800 available loads competing for a shrinking pool of drivers. The FMCSA is actively auditing and shutting down CDL training mills, which is structurally removing drivers from the market ā not temporarily. The carriers who remain are in a position of leverage, and the data confirms it: paid rates are already exceeding posted rates on reefer freight. What I'm quoting you today reflects the real cost of securing a truck that will actually show up.'
Capacity Shortage Communication For Westbound Flatbed Freight
Opening Script: "I'm calling because I want to flag a critical capacity issue before it becomes your problem. We're tracking active high-wind warnings across Wyoming and Montana right now ā gusts up to 59 mph in Montana through Thursday ā and that is effectively removing flatbed and high-profile van equipment from the I-80 corridor. If you have any construction materials, steel, or oversized freight staged in the Midwest heading west, I need to know about it today so we can get ahead of it."
Value Proposition: ETA has carrier relationships on southern alternative corridors ā I-40 and I-10 ā that can absorb westbound freight and bypass the disrupted northern routes entirely. Securing this capacity now means your freight moves on schedule while your competitors are scrambling.
Urgency Creator: Based on the forecast, Wyoming winds are expected to ease Thursday-Friday, but Montana continues with elevated conditions through at least Thursday. The backlog of delayed freight that accumulates during this window will create a secondary surge in demand when conditions clear ā meaning capacity gets even tighter before it gets better.
Objection Handler: If your customer says 'we'll just wait it out': 'That is a valid approach, but here is the risk: when the winds ease in Wyoming on Thursday, every shipper in the Midwest who has been waiting will hit the market simultaneously. That demand surge on top of a structurally shrinking driver pool will push rates higher than they are right now and capacity will be even harder to find. Moving now or pre-booking for Thursday pickup gives you the best of both ā better availability and a rate we can hold today.'
š Executive Signal Summary
- Flatbed and Reefer hold the leverage; Van is the tactical buy
- Flatbed: 70,800 loads; paid $2.53/mi > posted $2.45/mi
- Reefer: 7,135 loads; paid $2.61/mi > posted $2.58/mi
- Van: 20,806 loads; paid $2.09/mi < posted $2.17/mi
- Capacity shock + weather shock = routing guides fracturing
- OTRI (Outbound Tender Rejection Index) 13.49% and Iā80/Iā90 high winds are pushing premium freight to spot and southbound detours (Iā40/Iā10).
- Diesel is a firm rate floor
- AAA diesel $3.749/gal; carriers will defend linehaul and enforce FSC, especially on long-haul reroutes.
- Immediate arbitrage windows
- Midwest ā West (avoid Iā80) premiums; Northeast inbound buys; Sunbelt shortāhaul flats; Southeast reefers with early produce and PFF (Protect From Freeze).
š National Market Anchors
- Spot overview
- Total loads: 155,903 | Loads moved today: 48,660 | Market opportunity: $191.0M
- Market avg rate: $2.25/mi (range $1.44ā$2.61/mi) | Diesel (AAA): $3.749/gal
- Posted vs Paid spreads (buy/sell cues)
- Van: $2.17 vs $2.09 ā buy with discipline
- Reefer: $2.58 vs $2.61 ā carriers negotiating up; preābook
- Flatbed: $2.45 vs $2.53 ā pay for schedules/safety; lock trusted decks
- Heavy Haul: $2.53 vs $2.54 ā plan time/permits; margin in schedule control
- Specialized: $2.37 vs $2.25 ā posted rich; push rates down with strict vetting
- LTL/Partial: $1.49 vs $1.44 ā margin via density and dwell control
š¦ 24ā72h Capacity and Weather Playbook
- Mountain West wind belt (WY/MT/CO)
- Risks: 70ā80 mph gusts (Iā80/Iā90/Iā25), blowover, chain laws, closures, HOS (Hours of Service) burn, fallāoffs.
- Actions:
- Reroute transcon via Iā40/Iā10 with written detour adders and firm ETA buffers.
- Set wind thresholds on RC (Rate Confirmation): suspend openādeck and highācube van dispatch when gusts >45ā50 mph; preāauthorize safe parking.
- Pad 24ā48h through CO passes; treat WY improvement likely ThuāFri; MT normalizing by weekend.
- Great Lakes maritime weather
- Risks: Heavy freezing spray ā port/intermodal slippage into truck.
- Actions: Shift to OTR with 6ā12h receiving flexibility; route inland to avoid lake-effect delays.
- Capacity flow expectations
- Near-term: South corridors firm as freight detours; Midwest stays tight due to FMCSA driver attrition and demand.
- Recovery pulse: As WY improves ThuāFri, expect westbound demand surge from delayed freight; preāposition carriers now.
š§ Near-Term Opportunity Map (24ā72h)
- Highāyield lanes to sell
- Chicago, IL ā Denver/Salt Lake City (Van/Flat): Extreme premium; sell southern re-routes or preābook Thu/Fri with safety adders.
- Columbus, OH ā Dallas, TX (Flat/Specialized): Construction/energy surge; win via firm windows and return plans.
- Southeast outbound Reefer: Early produce + PFF; book 48ā72h out, lock setpoints and temp checks.
- Arbitrage buys
- Inbound to Northeast (Van/Flat): Relatively loose; carriers will enter on price; build reloads out.
- Shortāhaul Sunbelt Flats: Calendar control = margin; pay securement time, capture density.
- Where to avoid sameāday gambles
- Midwest ā Mountain West openādeck during active wind windows.
- Northern Iā90 lanes until winds taper (MT recovery later than WY).
šµ Pricing Guardrails and Corridor Adders
- Anchor to paid; layer fuel, weather, time, and compliance
- Van (paid $2.09/mi)
- Iā40/Iā10 detour: +$0.06ā$0.14/mi or $175ā$425/trip (miles and fuel at $3.749/gal justify it).
- Midwest compliance premium (IL/IN/OH origin): +$0.05ā$0.10/mi for fully vetted fleets.
- Reefer (paid $2.61/mi)
- PFF/early produce: +$0.20ā$0.45/mi; document setpoint, pulp checks, fuel cap minimums.
- Mountain West weather: +$0.08ā$0.15/mi + 24ā48h pad.
- Flatbed (paid $2.53/mi)
- Wind/tarp exposure: +$0.10ā$0.20/mi; pay securement/load time; define safeāpark protocols.
- Construction/energy surge: +$0.07ā$0.15/mi for window flexibility and return pairing.
- Heavy Haul (paid $2.54/mi)
- Permits/pilots/winter ops: +$0.05ā$0.12/mi; margin via schedule and standby clarity.
- Specialized (paid $2.25/mi vs posted $2.37/mi)
- Buy under posted; require gear photos, spec sheets, and safety history; donāt lift rates without proof of value.
- LTL/Partial (paid $1.44/mi)
- Density design: 2ā4 stop milkāruns; cap dwell; photo-confirm cube; goal $1.65ā$1.85/mi truckāavg.
š Carrier Procurement Tactics
- Build microāpools where scarcity bites
- Flatbed MW/Sunbelt: 3ā5 day calendars, wind thresholds, paid securement; promise reloads.
- Reefer South/SE: 48ā72h lead, PFF SOPs, prefer teams for JIT food/bev.
- Negotiation levers that work today
- Safety + predictability: āWe wonāt dispatch into 50 mph gusts; weāll pay waiting and reroute fuel.ā Carriers trade cpm for certainty.
- Return plans on RC: Publish next load; carriers will concede ~5ā10 cpm for guaranteed miles.
- Operational hygiene
- Geoāfenced checkācalls, ELD ping windows, and seed codes on BOLs to curb doubleābrokering/cargo theft.
- Photo/timeāstamp at pickup for openādeck and partials.
- Daily authority/insurance checks via FMCSA before dispatch; autoāalerts for any revocation.
- Driverālevel verification: CDL/MVR ā¤30 days, med card, ELD make/model, VIN/plate match, and documented English proficiency for complex lanes.
- Highārisk geos: Extra scrutiny on IL nonādomiciled CDLs; maintain auditable verification trail.
- Fraud controls: No bank/factoring changes via email; callback to file; validate cell numbers; watch ātooāgoodā rate offers on scarce equipment.
š Customer Sales Plays (scripts)
- Rate defense (routing guide fractures + weather)
- āWith tender rejections at 13.49% and Iā80/Iā90 winds sidelining trucks, contract carriers are bouncing freight. Locking vetted capacity today avoids sameāday premiums and fallāoffs. Weāll route via Iā40/Iā10 with clear detour adders and realistic ETAs.ā
- Westbound flatbed risk callout
- āWY/MT gusts to 70ā80 mph are removing openādeck capacity. If youāve got steel, building materials, or OS/OW staged, we should either preābook Thu/Fri with safety thresholds or reāroute south now before the backlog hits.ā
- Reefer scarcity positioning
- āReefer paid is beating posted ($2.61 > $2.58). Early produce and PFF are tightening equipment. If we lock 48ā72h out, we can hold todayās rate and guarantee setpoint compliance.ā
šŗ Regional Focus and Lane Targets
- Midwest (IL/IN/OH)
- Action: Preāaward outbound with midāsize compliant fleets; pay to lock today through Friday.
- Lanes: CHI ā DEN/SLC (price for southern detours); IND ā ATL, CMH ā DFW (flatbed calendars).
- South Corridors (Iā10/Iā20/Iā40)
- Action: Quote detour premiums upfront; insert buffer ETAs; teams on JIT.
- Southeast
- Action: Reefer 48ā72h preābooks; pair SE ā MW van backhauls for carrier stickiness.
- Northeast inbound
- Action: Buy capacity on price; upsell shippers on planned reloads to reduce linehaul.
š§® Ops Runbook: Next 8 Hours
- 1) Lock flatbed calendars MW/Sunbelt for D0āD3 with wind/tarp thresholds and paid securement time.
- 2) Reprice all transcon quotes with Iā40/Iā10 detour adders; get shipper signāoffs on ETAs and surcharges before tender.
- 3) Preābook reefer 48ā72h for SE PFF/produce; embed setpoint, pulp checks, and midātrip temp verifications on BOL/RC.
- 4) Build two partial milkāruns SEāMW today; cap dwell per stop; require loadātoācube photos to protect margins.
- 5) Compliance sweep: Live verify authority, insurance, CDL/MVR, ELD model on every dispatchāready truck.
- 6) Customer advisory blast: Oneāpager on FMCSA driver pipeline crackdown + Mountain West detours; request appointment flexibility and confirm force majeure language.
š EOD KPIs
- MW outbound preāawarded with vetted carriers: ā„85% for D0āD2
- Detour acceptance rate (Iā40/Iā10): ā„70% of transcon customers
- Reefer leadātime coverage: ā„70% of sensitive loads booked ā„48h prior
- Flatbed gross margin: +150ā250 bps via calendar/safety SOPs
- Zero compliance exceptions: 0 dispatches without live authority/CDL/MVR check logged
š® 24ā72h Outlook (probabilityāweighted)
- High (75%): Flatbed/Reefer retain pricing power; paid ā„ posted persists; sameāday premiums expand.
- High (70%): Midwest remains structurally tight from FMCSA actions; van spreads compress slightly into weekend as displaced capacity rebalances south.
- MediumāHigh (65%): WY improving ThuāFri triggers a westbound surge; temporary Thursday capacity window narrows quickly as backlog releases.
- Medium (55ā60%): Northeast inbound stays buyable; leverage this to engineer return legs into the Midwest/South.
š§ Veteran Edge
- Monetize safety and certainty: Put wind thresholds, detour rules, and setpoint SOPs on the RCāthis reframes ārateā as a riskāadjusted service and closes deals at premiums.
- Trade rate for calendars: Openādeck carriers will concede 7ā15 cpm for guaranteed windows, paid securement, and published reloads.
- Document fuel economics: At $3.749/gal, 150ā300 extra detour miles = ~$75ā$150 in fuel alone (6.5ā7.0 mpg); this supports your detour adder without debate.
š
This Day in History
1870: Hiram Rhodes Revels, a Republican from Mississippi, is sworn into the United States Senate, becoming the first African American ever to sit in Congress.
1951: The first Pan American Games are officially opened in Buenos Aires by Argentine President Juan Perón.
1986: People Power Revolution: President of the Philippines Ferdinand Marcos flees the nation after 20 years of rule; Corazon Aquino becomes the Philippines' first female president.
š Quote of the Day
"Intelligence is the ability to adapt to change."
ā Stephen Hawking