๐ Daily Market Intelligence Report
Sunday, March 29, 2026
7:00 AM CST
๐ Top-Line Summary
The national spot freight market is navigating a complex weekend environment, with total available loads dipping slightly by 2.7% to 162,717, while the national average spot rate holds firm at $2.53/mile. Although the national average diesel price provides a baseline of $3.694/gallon, severe regional fuel price shocksโwith diesel eclipsing $5.89 to $6.00+ per gallon in markets like Pennsylvania and Arizonaโare devastating small carrier cash flows and creating highly localized capacity shortages. Compounding these financial pressures are significant weather disruptions, including severe flooding across Ohio and Indiana and freeze warnings in Kentucky, which are actively delaying routing and driving up protect-from-freeze (PFF) premiums. Brokers must capitalize on the stable national rate environment while tactically navigating regional fuel and weather volatility to secure reliable capacity.
โฝ Diesel Price Analysis
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe River Flooding (Ohio and Indiana (OH, IN)): Multiple flood warnings are causing significant routing delays and capacity avoidance along the I-71 and I-65 corridors, forcing carriers to detour and demanding higher rates for regional transit.
- Northern Plains Flooding (Minnesota (MN, Kittson and Marshall counties)): Ice jams and snowmelt are driving river flooding, disrupting I-29 freight flows and tightening local capacity as drivers avoid inundated secondary roads.
- Late Season Freeze Warning (Kentucky (KY, Bourbon, Harrison, Nicholas counties)): Sub-freezing temperatures are triggering strict Protect-From-Freeze (PFF) requirements for sensitive freight, driving up regional reefer demand and rate premiums.
- Fire Weather Watch (Colorado (CO, Front Range and Plains)): High winds (gusts to 35 mph) and low humidity are creating rapid fire spread risks and crosswind hazards for high-profile trailers along the I-70 and I-25 corridors.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Flood relief window is narrower than it looks
Warmer, drier conditions through Monday should improve mainline speeds across Ohio and Indiana, but that is a dispatch window, not a full reset. Flooded secondary roads and river-adjacent customer locations will keep local service uneven, and Tuesdayโs high winds and thunderstorms in Indiana followed by renewed rain Wednesday in Ohio are likely to slow cleanup and keep appointment risk elevated into midweek.
- Late Sunday through Monday is the cleanest pickup window before weather risk builds again.
- Expect the longest delays on first-mile and final-mile moves, even where interstate traffic improves.
Weather Insight
Kentucky freeze premiums are front-loaded
The freeze threat in central Kentucky is primarily an early-day origin problem rather than a prolonged cold pattern. Protect-from freeze charges will hold most firmly on morning pickups and unattended trailers; once temperatures recover, the weather risk fades quickly, but reefer tightness can linger as equipment continues to reposition toward warmer Southeast produce markets.
- The strongest PFF leverage is on Sunday morning loading windows.
- Reefer scarcity can outlast the alert by 48 to 72 hours as southbound reload demand absorbs trucks.
๐ฐ Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Extreme regional volatility in fuel markets is overshadowing the stable national average, with geopolitical tensions driving localized diesel spikes that threaten small carrier solvency.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small fleets and owner-operators are facing a severe cash flow crisis; the inability to absorb $5-$6/gallon regional fuel costs while waiting 30-60 days for freight payment is accelerating market exits.
- Economic Indicators: Industrial and construction sectors continue to show resilience, directly supporting the robust flatbed load volumes observed in current market data.
๐ฐ Impactful News Analysis
-
Small Carriers Face Survival Crisis Amid Regional Fuel Spikes ๐:
With diesel hitting $6.04 in Arizona and $5.89 in Pennsylvania, small carriers operating on the spot market are seeing their margins erased. Brokers must anticipate sudden capacity tightening in these regions as owner-operators park their trucks. Strict carrier vetting is essential to ensure financial stability before dispatching loads.
-
Arizona Diesel Hits Record Highs, Pressuring West Coast Rates ๐:
A 65% surge in Phoenix diesel prices over the past month is forcing carriers to demand massive rate premiums for inbound and outbound Southwest freight. Brokers must adjust their pricing models immediately to account for these localized fuel costs, or risk severe tender rejections and load failures.
-
AI and Automation Reshaping Brokerage Back-Office Operations ๐:
Industry leaders are highlighting that the true value of AI lies in automating back-office friction, such as dispute resolution and document processing. Brokers who leverage technology to reduce administrative overhead will maintain a competitive advantage and protect margins during periods of rate volatility.
-
Ocean Carrier Profit Drops Signal Ongoing Global Supply Chain Shifts ๐:
Hapag-Lloyd's reported profit decline highlights the volatility in global shipping and port congestion. For domestic brokers, this unpredictability at the ports translates to urgent, high-paying transloading and drayage opportunities as shippers scramble to move delayed freight inland.
News Insight
Payment speed is becoming a capacity lever in fuel-shock markets
In Arizona and Pennsylvania, same-day fuel advances and quick-pay are increasingly as per suasive as another few cents per mile. Small carriers facing diesel near or above $6.00 are screening freight for cash conversion speed, which means reliable payment execution can secure trucks that price-only competitors lose at the last minute.
- Expect more late fallout on freight awarded to thinly capitalized carriers.
- Carrier quality checks matter more where fuel costs are forcing operators to choose loads day to day.
๐ Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Carriers are heavily scrutinizing posted rates versus paid rates, utilizing real-time data to demand premiums on lanes affected by flooding or regional fuel spikes.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is critically tight in the Ohio Valley due to flooding and in the Southwest due to extreme fuel costs; surplus capacity is largely confined to the Southeast where weather is stable.
- Technology Disruptions: The integration of automated carrier vetting and real-time fuel surcharge calculators is becoming mandatory for brokerages to survive the current environment of rapid regional cost fluctuations.
๐ฅ Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retailers are pushing urgent restock loads to bypass port delays, creating high-margin opportunities for expedited van and team transit.
- Manufacturing: Strong industrial output is sustaining the 70,000+ flatbed load count, with building materials and machinery driving consistent open-deck demand.
- Agriculture: The onset of Southern produce season is absorbing reefer capacity, while late-season freezes in the Midwest are forcing shippers to pay premiums for temperature-controlled protection.
- Automotive: Just-in-time auto parts networks in the Midwest are experiencing disruptions due to I-71 and I-65 flooding, requiring brokers to source alternative routing and expedited capacity.
๐บ๏ธ Regional & Lane Analysis
๐ Primary Region Focus: Midwest & Ohio Valley
The Midwest is currently the most volatile and strategic region for freight brokers today. A convergence of severe river flooding across Ohio and Indiana, late-season freeze warnings in Kentucky, and robust industrial flatbed demand is creating massive pricing disparities. Carriers are actively avoiding flooded corridors like I-71, forcing brokers to pay heavy premiums to secure reliable routing. Meanwhile, the freeze warnings are triggering sudden Protect-From-Freeze (PFF) requirements, absorbing standard van capacity into the reefer market. This volatility presents a prime arbitrage opportunity for brokers who can accurately price the risk and secure capacity ahead of the weather.
๐ฃ๏ธ Key Lane Watch
Columbus, OH โ Chicago, IL: This critical Midwest corridor is heavily disrupted by severe flooding in Ohio and Indiana, causing localized detours and slowing transit times. Van and flatbed demand remains high due to manufacturing output, but capacity is hesitant to commit without weather premiums. The current rate environment is highly elevated as carriers factor in the risk of delays and the necessity of alternative routing.
Louisville, KY โ Atlanta, GA: This North-South lane is experiencing a sudden shock due to moderate freeze warnings in Kentucky colliding with early produce season demand pulling capacity south toward Georgia. Reefer equipment is in extremely high demand to protect sensitive freight from the cold origin, while vans are seeing rate pressure due to the overall capacity drain.
Regional Insight
Columbus-Chicago is shifting from weather pricing to service pricing
On Columbus-to-Chicago, the best margin is increasingly in execution rather than raw linehaul rate. As flood detours gradually ease, the lane is likely to trade on missed-appointment risk and transit variability, especially for receivers that keep tight delivery windows; carriers with credible alternate routing and dependable tracking will continue to command a premium through Tuesday.
- Late Sunday and Monday tenders are the strongest coverage window before Indiana weather turns more disruptive.
- Extra transit time is easier to sell up front than a recovery fee after a weather-driven miss.
๐จ Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Outbound Ohio and Indiana (Flooding delays)
- Outbound Arizona and Pennsylvania (Extreme regional fuel price shocks)
- Kentucky to Southeast (PFF reefer demand)
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Severe shortages of Reefer equipment in the Ohio Valley due to sudden freeze warnings, and multi-axle Heavy Haul equipment nationally.
Opportunity Zones:
- Southeast inbound lanes (Carriers seeking produce season positioning)
- LTL consolidation on lanes affected by high full-truckload fuel surcharges
๐ฏ Strategic Recommendations for Today
๐ผ For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Educate customers that while the national diesel average appears stable, severe regional fuel spikes and Midwest flooding are creating localized capacity crises that require premium pricing to ensure reliable service.
Action: Proactively reach out to customers with freight in OH, IN, and KY to offer guaranteed capacity solutions before weather delays impact their supply chains.
๐ For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Prioritize sourcing reefer carriers in the Midwest willing to run PFF freight, and target flatbed operators positioned outside the OH/IN flood zones.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the stable $3.694 national diesel average to negotiate rates on long-haul lanes that avoid the $6/gallon regional fuel traps in the Southwest and Northeast.
Strategic Insight
Two-tier pricing will outperform single-quote spot offers this week
A single spot quote is leaving money on the table across the Ohio Valley. The stronger approach is a standard option with wider appointment flexibility and a premium guaranteed option that includes detours, PFF handling where needed, and faster carrier pay; shippers with urgent freight are already separating on service tolerance, and pricing can follow that split.
- Use full truckload capacity for appointment-critical freight and push flexible freight into partial or LTL where possible.
- Sell southbound reload potential on Kentucky and Ohio origins to offset elevated origin-side risk.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Late Sunday through Monday is the best dispatch window for Ohio and Indiana before midweek weather reintroduces disruption.
- Kentucky PFF exposure is strongest on early pickups, but reefer tightness can per sist after the freeze alert expires.
- Fast-pay and fuel advances are now practical coverage tools in Arizona and Pennsylvania, not just back-office options.
- On Midwest lanes, the biggest margin is in guaranteed appointment per formance, not the highest posted rate.
๐ Executive Signal Summary
This is a controlled weekend contraction, not a soft-market reset.
- Total available loads sit at 162,717, down 2.7% from 167,186 yesterday.
- The national average rate is still $2.53/mile versus $2.55/mile yesterday.
- When load count slips faster than rate, the message is usually freight selection, not broad-based demand weakness.
Reefer is the only mode showing a true execution premium.
- Reefer paid is $2.96/mile versus $2.82/mile posted, a +$0.14 spread.
- That is the clearest sign on the board that actual covered freight is tighter than advertised freight.
- With Kentucky freeze exposure and Southern produce pull, reefer is where brokers can lose money fastest if they quote lazily.
Everything outside reefer is a qualification market, not a panic-buy market.
- Van paid is $2.31 versus $2.36 posted.
- Flatbed paid is $2.85 versus $2.92 posted.
- Heavy haul paid is $2.85 versus $2.94 posted.
- Specialized paid is $2.31 versus $2.77 posted.
- Those negative spreads mean the board is asking more than the market is consistently payingโbut only on clean, well-specified freight.
Open-deck still deserves the majority of broker attention.
- Flatbed + Heavy Haul + Specialized = 123,409 loads, or 75.8% of the total board.
- If a desk is spending most of its time on generic van freight today, it is misallocating effort.
Fuel is a negotiation tool nationally and a service risk regionally.
- National diesel is $3.694/gallon.
- That supports firmer carrier math on long-haul, non-weather-affected freight.
- But in regional fuel shock markets, carrier behavior is being driven by cash conversion speed and trip quality, not just cents per mile.
In Ohio and Indiana, the risk is now service reliability more than raw transit speed.
- Interstate conditions may improve faster than dock access, local road access, and appointment reliability.
- The best brokers will sell service certainty, wider delivery windows, and documented accessorial terms, not just a linehaul number.
๐ What the board is really saying
Daily signal:
- Total loads: 162,717
- Average rate: $2.53/mile
- Yesterday: 167,186 loads and $2.55/mile
- Read: slightly less freight, nearly same pricing floor
Weekly signal:
- One week ago: 149,151 loads at $2.50/mile
- Today versus last week shows more freight and slightly firmer pricing
- Read: the market is not rolling over
Monthly signal:
- One month ago: 167,676 loads at $2.25/mile
- Todayโs load count is near that level, but rates are materially higher
- Read: capacity discipline is stronger than it was a month ago
Mode signal:
- Van: 22,077 loads, $2.36 posted / $2.31 paid
- Reefer: 7,130 loads, $2.82 posted / $2.96 paid
- Flatbed: 70,435 loads, $2.92 posted / $2.85 paid
- Heavy Haul: 35,784 loads, $2.94 posted / $2.85 paid
- Specialized: 17,190 loads, $2.77 posted / $2.31 paid
- LTL/Partial: 10,101 loads, $1.71 posted / $1.52 paid
Interpretation:
- Reefer: true scarcity
- Van: negotiable if clean
- Flatbed: firm but not irrational
- Heavy Haul: precise quoting required
- Specialized: biggest buy-side opportunity, highest spec risk
- LTL (Less Than Truckload)/Partial: useful margin valve when customers resist full truckload pricing
๐ง Where margin lives today
Service segmentation beats one-price quoting.
- Use two-tier pricing:
- Standard option: flexible pickup/delivery, broader appointment tolerance
- Guaranteed option: includes detour tolerance, tighter service controls, faster carrier pay handling, and stronger recovery planning
- Shippers are already separating by urgency tolerance. Your pricing should reflect that split.
The board is over-asking on several modes.
- The biggest example is Specialized, where paid trails posted by $0.46/mile.
- That usually means some combination of:
- stale postings
- poorly defined trailer needs
- unrealistic deadhead assumptions
- freight that sounds specialized but is not truly scarce
- Discipline wins here. No aggressive quote until specs are fully qualified.
Reefer is where underpricing hurts fastest.
- A +$0.14 paid-versus-posted spread tells you that the board is understating actual replacement cost.
- That is classic weather-and-commodity collision behavior: PFF (Protect From Freeze) plus produce pull plus repositioning drag.
Appointment-sensitive Midwest freight should be sold on risk, not mileage.
- On lanes touching Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky, the margin comes from:
- verified facility access
- realistic appointment buffers
- detention clarity
- driver communication quality
- Extra transit time sold up front is cheaper than a service failure explained afterward.
๐ Mode-by-Mode Trading Plan
๐ Dry Van
โ๏ธ Reefer
๐๏ธ Flatbed
๐๏ธ Heavy Haul
๐งฉ Specialized
๐ฆ LTL/Partial
๐ฃ๏ธ Corridor and Lane Tactics
๐ง๏ธ Ohio / Indiana
๐ง Kentucky to Southeast
๐ Columbus, OH โ Chicago, IL
๐ Louisville, KY โ Atlanta, GA
๐ผ Customer-Facing Playbook
Message to shippers: National stability does not mean local stability
- $2.53/mile national average and $3.694 diesel are not enough to describe todayโs real market.
- Explain that flooding, freeze exposure, and regional fuel shocks are creating ZIP-code-level pricing and service variance.
Best sales angle today: Buy certainty before disruption gets repriced
- Reach out first to customers with freight in:
- Ohio
- Indiana
- Kentucky
- Arizona
- Pennsylvania
- Focus on coverage reliability, not fear-selling.
Most effective pricing structure:
- Option 1: standard service with flexible appointments
- Option 2: guaranteed service with stronger execution controls
- This protects margin while giving the customer a choice instead of a flat rejection.
Questions every rep should ask before quoting:
- Is the facility fully receiving?
- Are local access roads clear for trucks?
- Does the product truly require PFF or reefer?
- How much delivery flexibility exists?
- What is the real cost of a miss to the customer?
๐ค Carrier Desk Playbook
Start with reliable incumbents before shopping rate.
- In weather-disrupted markets, the cheapest fresh quote often becomes the most expensive recovered load.
- Favor carriers with:
- known dispatch quality
- verified equipment
- strong communication
- clean compliance history
Use diesel at $3.694 as a negotiation anchor on clean freight.
- Best targets:
- long-haul van
- clean flatbed
- non-urgent backhaul freight
- Do not press too hard in:
- reefer
- flood-affected destinations
- regional fuel shock lanes
Payment speed is a real coverage lever in fuel-shock markets.
- In Arizona and Pennsylvania, thinly capitalized carriers are making day-by-day decisions.
- Practical tools:
- fuel advances where policy allows
- fast documentation handling
- rapid dispatch clarity
- The key is reducing carrier uncertainty, not just adding rate.
Reconfirm harder than usual.
- Before dispatch and near pickup, verify:
- driver identity
- tractor/trailer details
- ETA (Estimated Time of Arrival)
- route awareness
- appointment understanding
- This is especially important where same-day truck swaps create service and liability risk.
๐ก๏ธ Risk Controls That Protect Margin Today
๐ฎ 24โ72 Hour Outlook
๐ข Base case โ 55%
- Van stays negotiable on clean freight
- Reefer remains elevated through the next 48-72 hours
- Flatbed stays seasonally firm
- Ohio/Indiana service risk continues even if interstate flow improves
๐ Stress case โ 30%
- Additional weather rebuilds Midwest delays midweek
- Flood cleanup lags local access recovery
- Appointment failures become more expensive than linehaul increases
๐ต Relief case โ 15%
- Freeze premium fades quickly
- Reefer assets normalize faster than expected
- Long-haul van and clean open-deck become the best margin-buy opportunities
๐ฏ Highest-Value Actions for Today
Pre-cover reefer that truly needs PFF or temperature protection.
- Do not trust posted pricing alone.
Work the open-deck book first.
- 123,409 loads and 75.8% of the board is too much concentration to ignore.
Quote Ohio and Indiana freight as service-risk freight.
- Sell appointment reliability, not just miles.
Exploit negative spreads where specs are clean.
- Van, flatbed, heavy haul, specialized, and LTL/partial all have buying room.
Use two-tier pricing on sensitive lanes.
- Standard flexible option
- Guaranteed execution option
Use national diesel at $3.694 to negotiate smarter, not blindly cheaper.
- Trade rate help for service terms and paperwork speed.
Tighten carrier confirmation discipline.
- The recovery cost of bad coverage is rising faster than the upfront savings of a cheap truck.
๐งญ Bottom Line
Todayโs market is not loose. It is selective.
The board is telling you that generic freight is negotiable, reefer is truly tight, open-deck still dominates, and Midwest weather is turning margin into an execution game.
The brokers who outperform today will:
- buy reefer carefully
- lean hard into open-deck
- sell service tiers instead of single-rate quotes
- verify facility access before awarding freight
- use fuel relief as leverage on clean lanes
- protect margin with written operational assumptions
๐
This Day in History
1792: King Gustav III of Sweden dies after being shot in the back at a midnight masquerade ball at Stockholm's Royal Opera 13 days earlier.
1847: MexicanโAmerican War: United States forces led by General Winfield Scott take Veracruz after a siege.
1941: The North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement goes into effect at 03:00 local time.
๐ญ Quote of the Day
"Believe in your infinite potential. Your only limitations are those you set upon yourself."
โ Roy T. Bennett