📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Friday, February 06, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The freight market has entered a state of high volatility described as 'chaos mode,' with tender rejection rates skyrocketing from 9.8% to over 14% in just two weeks. While the 8-day spot market trend shows decreasing rates—currently averaging $2.27/mile—this data lags behind the operational reality of yesterday's massive volume surge to 207,223 loads. A disconnect currently exists where contract carriers are rejecting loads at a high rate due to capacity constraints and weather disruptions in the Northeast and Great Lakes, yet spot rates have not yet fully corrected upward. Brokers have a brief window to secure capacity before spot rates likely jump to match the rejection intensity.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Extreme Cold & High Winds - Mid-Atlantic (Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey (DE, MD, NJ, New Castle, Kent, Salem counties)): Dangerously cold wind chills and gusts up to 60 mph. High profile vehicle risks and potential power outages affecting facility operations.
- Heavy Freezing Spray & Gales - Great Lakes (Lake Michigan & Superior Regions (MI, WI, Charlevoix, Manistee)): Severe icing conditions and gale force winds disrupting regional transit. Hazardous for light loads and open deck equipment.
- Freeze Warning - Southeast (Northern Florida & Southeast Georgia (FL, GA, Alachua, Ware, Clinch counties)): Sub-freezing temperatures requiring Protect From Freeze (PFF) protocols. High demand for reefer capacity for non-perishable sensitive goods.
- Storm Warning - Coastal Northeast (New Jersey & Delaware Coast (NJ, DE, Cape May, Sussex)): Storm force winds and hazardous conditions impacting I-95 coastal corridors and port access.
⛈️ Weather Impact Cascade
- Immediate Operational Impact: Friday-Saturday: Storm Warning (WXAF458B6B) in NJ/DE with wind gusts up to 60 mph and Extreme Cold Warning (WX42C48353) in MD with wind chills to 23°F are actively grounding capacity. High-profile vehicles (vans, reefers) are at risk on I-95 coastal corridors. Flatbed operations are effectively halted due to freezing spray warnings in the Great Lakes (WX1B83E858). Facilities in NJ/DE may experience power outages, creating unexpected warehouse closures. Carriers are actively avoiding the region, creating a 'push' effect toward southbound lanes. Saturday's forecast shows worsening conditions: NJ wind gusts up to 37 mph (feels like 7°F), Delaware wind gusts up to 41 mph (feels like 3°F), Michigan snow showers with winds up to 34 mph. This will intensify the capacity crunch through Saturday evening.
- Secondary Market Effects: Sunday: Storm Warning expires in NJ/DE, but Extreme Cold Warning persists. Carriers will begin repositioning northbound to assess damage and clear the backlog. However, the backlog of rejected loads from Friday-Saturday will be substantial, creating a surge in spot volume Monday morning. This will create a 'squeeze' effect where shippers are desperate to move freight and carriers are selective about which loads they accept. Reefer demand will remain elevated through Sunday due to the freeze warning in Florida, but will soften Monday-Tuesday as Florida warms to 71-78°F. Southbound lanes will see a brief window of softer rates Monday-Tuesday as carriers reposition out of the Northeast, then rates will firm again Wednesday as the backlog clears.
- Regional Spillover Analysis: The Northeast weather disruptions will create spillover effects in adjacent regions. Midwest carriers (OH, IN, IL) will be pulled northbound to clear the backlog, creating a temporary shortage of capacity in the Midwest. This will push Midwest shippers to use alternative routes (southbound through TN/GA, westbound through KS/CO) or accept longer transit times. Great Lakes region (MI, WI) will experience persistent capacity constraints through Sunday due to freezing spray warnings, then gradual improvement Monday-Tuesday. Southeast will see elevated reefer demand through Sunday, then normalization Monday-Tuesday. By Wednesday, as the Northeast backlog clears and capacity repositions, regional markets should begin to normalize.
- Recovery Timeline: Immediate recovery (Sunday-Monday): Storm Warning expires, but backlog hits spot market. Expect continued high rates and tight capacity through Monday evening. Short-term recovery (Tuesday-Wednesday): Backlog clears, capacity repositions, rates begin to soften. Expect rates to decline 5-10% from weekend peaks. Medium-term recovery (Thursday-Friday): Weather impacts fully clear, capacity normalizes, rates return to baseline. Expect rates to approach the $2.27 national average by end of week, though likely 5-10% above pre-disruption levels due to diesel price increases and lingering carrier leverage. Long-term outlook: If weather volatility persists through mid-February, elevated rates and tight capacity may become the new normal for 2-3 weeks.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Diesel prices are showing slight upward movement, ending a period of decline, which may embolden carriers to hold firmer on rates.
- Carrier Financial Health: The spike in tender rejections suggests carriers are regaining leverage and are willing to turn down contract freight to chase higher-paying spot opportunities or avoid weather risks.
- Economic Indicators: The disconnect between high volumes and low spot rates suggests a temporary market inefficiency that carriers will likely correct in the coming days.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
Tender Rejections Skyrocket: Market Enters 'Chaos Mode' 🔗:
This is the most critical indicator for brokers today. With rejection rates jumping from 9.8% to over 14% in two weeks, contract carriers are failing. This means brokers will see a flood of urgent, high-priority freight hitting the spot board. Expect difficult conversations with shippers who are losing their primary capacity, but this creates a massive opportunity for brokers to step in at higher margins if they can secure trucks before spot rates fully adjust.
-
Ocean Freight Rates Falling: Import Volume Implications 🔗:
Spot rates from the Far East to the US have dropped (e.g., -5% to US East Coast). While this indicates softening import demand, carriers are expected to 'blank sailings' (cancel trips) to artificially tighten capacity. For domestic brokers, this means drayage and transloading volume out of major ports (LA/LB, NY/NJ) might be inconsistent in the short term, but could see sudden spikes when blanked sailings resume or bunch up.
-
FMCSA Targeting 'Chameleon Carriers' 🔗:
Renewed focus on carriers that reincarnate to avoid safety scores means brokers must be hyper-vigilant with carrier vetting. Using automated compliance tools is non-negotiable right now to avoid liability, especially with the 'Chaos Mode' market potentially encouraging risky carrier behavior to capture high rates.
News Impact Timeline
- Immediate Operational Reality: Today (Friday): Tender rejections at 14% are actively impacting operations. Shippers are calling brokers to cover rejected contract loads. Spot volume is surging (207,223 loads yesterday). Carriers are selective about which loads they accept, prioritizing high-paying spot freight over contract loads. Brokers with real-time market visibility have a speed advantage in matching freight with available capacity.
- 3-Day Market Implications: By Monday (3 days): The backlog from this weekend's weather disruptions will hit the spot market. Shippers will be desperate to move freight, creating a surge in spot volume. Tender rejections may spike further as carriers continue to be selective. Spot rates will likely jump 10-15% from current levels as the market corrects for the disconnect between high volume and low rates. Brokers who secured capacity Friday-Sunday will have a competitive advantage Monday as rates spike.
- Week-Ahead Positioning: By Wednesday (5 days): The backlog will begin to clear, and rates will soften slightly. However, the tender rejection trend suggests that carrier leverage will persist for 2-3 weeks. Brokers should position for sustained elevated rates and tight capacity through mid-February. Customers should be prepared for premium rates to become the new normal. Carriers should be incentivized to commit capacity for the week ahead, as spot rates will likely remain elevated.
- Regulatory Compliance Impacts: FMCSA enforcement on 'Chameleon Carriers' (mentioned in news analysis) means brokers must be hyper-vigilant with carrier vetting. The current market volatility may encourage risky carrier behavior to capture high rates. Brokers should use automated compliance tools to verify carrier safety scores, FMCSA status, and insurance. The cost of using a non-compliant carrier (liability, shipper penalties) far exceeds the savings from using a cheaper carrier. This is especially critical in the current market where carriers are selective about loads and may be willing to cut corners to maximize revenue.
🔍 Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Real-time data shows a confusing signal: 'Decreasing' trends over 8 days versus a massive 1-day volume spike (207k loads). Smart brokers are ignoring the 8-day trend and bidding based on the immediate volume surge.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is extremely tight in the Mid-Atlantic (NJ/DE) due to the Storm Warning/Cold combination. Carriers are refusing to enter the region without significant premiums.
- Technology Disruptions: The rapid rise in tender rejections is being flagged by predictive market tools faster than load boards can reflect the rate changes, giving tech-enabled brokers a speed advantage.
Demand Shift Indicators
- Regional Demand Predictions: Northeast/Mid-Atlantic demand will spike Monday-Tuesday as the backlog from this weekend's weather disruptions hits the spot market. Shippers whose contract carriers rejected loads will flood brokers with urgent spot requests. Expect demand to be highest for southbound lanes (NJ-to-Atlanta, PA-to-Southeast) as shippers try to clear inventory out of the storm zone. By Wednesday, as the Extreme Cold Warning expires and capacity repositions, demand should normalize. Southeast demand will remain elevated through Sunday due to the freeze warning, then soften Monday-Tuesday as reefer capacity becomes available.
- Seasonal Transition Analysis: February typically shows softer demand as post-holiday restocking completes and pre-spring demand hasn't yet materialized. However, the current market is showing the opposite pattern: demand is spiking due to weather disruptions and tender rejections. This is a structural shift, not a seasonal pattern. The 207,223-load volume yesterday is 30-40% above typical February volumes, suggesting that shippers are accelerating freight movements to avoid further weather disruptions. This pattern may persist through mid-February if weather volatility continues.
- Economic Leading Indicators: Ocean freight rates falling (mentioned in news analysis) suggest softening import demand, which could reduce drayage volume out of ports (LA/LB, NY/NJ) in the coming weeks. However, carriers are expected to blank sailings to tighten capacity, which could create sudden spikes in drayage volume when sailings resume. For domestic brokers, this means inconsistent port-related volume in the short term, but potential for high-margin spot opportunities when blank sailings end. The tender rejection surge (14%) is a leading indicator of carrier leverage, suggesting that spot rates will remain elevated for 2-3 weeks until capacity rebalances.
- Capacity Flow Predictions: Carriers currently in the Northeast are likely to reposition southbound to escape the Extreme Cold Warning and Storm Warning. This will create a temporary surplus of capacity on southbound lanes (NJ-to-Atlanta, MD-to-Southeast) through Sunday, then a deficit as carriers move out of the region. By Monday, as the backlog hits the spot market, northbound capacity will tighten as carriers avoid returning to the Northeast. This repositioning cycle will likely persist through Wednesday, then normalize as weather improves. Flatbed capacity will remain constrained through Sunday due to freezing spray warnings in the Great Lakes, then gradually improve as conditions clear.
👥 Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retailers are scrambling to cover rejected contract loads; expect urgent spot requests for consumer goods moving into the Northeast.
- Manufacturing: Industrial shippers in the Great Lakes are facing delays due to freezing spray warnings; expect a backlog of shipments next week.
- Agriculture: Florida produce and nursery shippers are in emergency mode due to the freeze warning, absorbing all available reefer capacity in the Southeast.
- Automotive: Just-in-time automotive freight may face disruptions near the I-75 corridor in the Midwest due to weather impacts.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Mid-Atlantic & Northeast (NJ, PA, DE, MD)
This region is currently the epicenter of market disruption. A convergence of 'Extreme Cold' warnings, 'Storm Warnings' on the coast, and the national spike in tender rejections makes this the most volatile area. Carriers are avoiding the region due to wind risks and potential delays, while shippers are desperate to move freight before the weekend. The volume is there, but the trucks are not.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Elizabeth, NJ → Atlanta, GA:
This lane is seeing high demand as shippers try to move freight out of the storm-impacted Northeast into the Southeast distribution hubs. Capacity is tight outbound from NJ due to the Storm Warning (WXAF458B6B), but carriers are generally willing to head south to better weather.
Baltimore, MD → Columbus, OH:
Moving freight inland from the coast is challenging due to the Extreme Cold Warning (WX42C48353) affecting the origin. Shippers are facing high rejection rates on this lane as carriers prefer to stay in regional loops rather than cross the mountains in winter conditions.
🚨 Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Outbound New Jersey/Delaware due to Storm Warnings
- Reefer loads out of Northern Florida requiring Freeze Protection
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Flatbed capacity in the Great Lakes (MI/WI) is effectively grounded due to freezing spray. Van capacity in the Mid-Atlantic is tightening rapidly.
Opportunity Zones:
- Southbound lanes from the Northeast (Carriers want to leave the cold)
- Spot market recovery loads for shippers with high tender rejections
🎯 Strategic Recommendations for Today
💼 For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Tender rejections have hit 14% nationally—we are in a capacity crunch. The 'cheap' truck you used to get isn't available today. We can secure capacity, but we need to pay market rates to get drivers into these weather-impacted zones.
Action: Call customers with freight in NJ, DE, or MD immediately. Ask about their tender acceptance rates and offer spot backup.
🚛 For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Focus on finding carriers stuck in the Northeast who want to head South. Pitch the 'better weather' destination as a selling point.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the volume surge (207k loads) as proof that they have options, but emphasize that your load gets them out of the Storm Warning zone (Alert WXAF458B6B).
📞 Customer Communication Scripts
Rate Increase Justification For Northeast/Mid-Atlantic Freight
Opening Script: "I wanted to reach out because we're seeing something significant in the market right now. Tender rejections have jumped from 9.8% to over 14% in just two weeks—that's carriers actively turning down contract freight. Combined with the storm warnings hitting New Jersey and Delaware this weekend, the trucks that are available are commanding premium rates. We can still secure capacity for you, but the market has shifted."
Value Proposition: We have real-time visibility into carrier availability and can guarantee pickup in weather-impacted zones where other brokers are struggling. This means your freight moves on schedule, not delayed waiting for capacity.
Urgency Creator: The window to lock in capacity before Monday is closing. Once the backlog from this weekend hits the spot market early next week, rates will spike further. If you have freight moving out of NJ, DE, or MD this weekend or early next week, we need to secure trucks today.
Objection Handler: I understand rates are higher than last month. Here's what's changed: we went from 9.8% tender rejections to 14%—that's a 43% increase in carriers refusing loads. Your contract carrier likely rejected your freight, which is why you're calling us. The $2.27 national average you might be seeing is stale data from 8 days ago. Today's reality is that drivers won't enter the Northeast without a weather premium. We can quote you competitively, but we can't ignore what the market is actually paying.
Capacity Shortage Communication For Weekend Freight
Opening Script: "We're tracking a capacity crunch that's developing right now. Yesterday we saw 207,223 loads hit the market—that's a massive volume spike. At the same time, tender rejections are at 14%, which means contract carriers are parking trucks rather than accepting loads. For you, this means the trucks you need this weekend are scarce, and the ones available are selective about where they'll go."
Value Proposition: We've already identified carriers positioned to move freight out of the Northeast into better weather zones. We can secure your capacity now at known rates, rather than waiting until Monday when you're competing with thousands of other shippers for the same trucks.
Urgency Creator: Storm warnings in NJ and DE expire Sunday evening, but the backlog of rejected loads will hit the spot market Monday morning. If you wait until Monday to book, you'll be competing with every other shipper whose contract carrier rejected them. Book today, move this weekend, and avoid the Monday surge.
Objection Handler: I hear you that you want to wait and see if rates come down. The data suggests the opposite is happening. Tender rejections are rising, not falling. Diesel is ticking up. Carriers are gaining leverage. The 'cheap truck' you got last month isn't available at that price today. We can hold a rate quote for you through end of business today—after that, we'll need to re-quote based on Monday's market.
Reefer Capacity Communication For Freeze-Sensitive Freight
Opening Script: "Northern Florida is under a freeze warning through the weekend, and we're seeing a surge in demand for reefer capacity from shippers who normally move goods via dry van. The issue is that every available heated trailer is being booked for produce and nursery shipments. If you have temperature-sensitive freight moving out of the Southeast, we need to secure reefer capacity immediately."
Value Proposition: We have relationships with carriers who specialize in PFF (Protect From Freeze) loads. We can guarantee temperature-controlled equipment and monitoring, which protects your freight and your customer relationships. Standard dry van won't cut it in this market.
Urgency Creator: Reefer capacity in the Southeast is effectively sold out through Sunday. If you need to move freight Monday or Tuesday, we need to book today. After Sunday, reefer availability will depend on how quickly carriers can reposition from Florida back to other regions.
Objection Handler: Reefer rates are higher than dry van, I understand. But if your freight freezes in transit, the cost of replacement or customer penalties will far exceed the reefer premium. We're quoting you the market rate for guaranteed heated equipment. That's the cost of protecting your shipment in a freeze warning.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
- OTRI at 14% with a 207k-load spike = immediate capacity crunch despite a $2.27/mi headline average
- Brief pricing lag window: buy now before a likely 10–15% spot jump into Monday’s backlog
- Weather bifurcation: NE/Mid-Atlantic pays premiums; SE reefer PFF (Protect From Freeze) is the profit center through Sunday
- Flatbed into Great Lakes/Northeast needs storm premiums; avoid unless margins justify
- Diesel nudging up ($3.643/gal) adds carrier resolve; keep FSC steady, flex linehaul
- Speed and compliance win: tech-enabled matching + strict vetting amid FMCSA chameleon focus
🌐 Market Read: What Changed And Why It Matters
- Two-speed market is real
- 8-day trend says “decreasing rates,” but yesterday’s 207,223 loads + OTRI 14% says immediate tightening. The spot board hasn’t fully repriced—yet.
- Regional weather = structural premiums
- Mid-Atlantic/Northeast: storm and extreme cold are grounding capacity; carriers require weather premiums and safer routing.
- Southeast PFF: sub-freezing North FL/SE GA converts dry freight to reefer-with-heat; localized reefer spikes are masked by national averages.
- Great Lakes flatbed: gale/heavy freezing spray halts open-deck; expect rejection behavior and significant premiums for anyone willing.
- Behavioral dynamics
- Carriers have options and leverage; selective acceptance will intensify into Monday’s backlog.
- Shippers still quoting off stale averages; fast brokers monetize the dislocation with secured capacity and documented risk controls.
⏱️ 0–6 Hour Playbook (Do First, Win Today)
- Prioritize PFF reefer in the Southeast
- Reprice all freeze-sensitive freight with +$0.25–$0.45/mi above your last paid comp plus $150–$300 PFF surcharge.
- Non-negotiables: set-point on BOL, continuous temp monitoring, fuel-level and temp photos at PU/each stop, door seals captured.
- Exploit the exit lanes from the Northeast
- Target carriers currently in NJ/DE/PA/MD wanting to go south; bundle southbound + reloads (ATL/CLT/JAX) to lower your buy.
- Hold rates for 45–60 minutes; offers expire to force decisions before repricing catches up.
- Triage WV/MD/Great Lakes exposure
- Option A: reroute via I-75/I-77/I-81; add 2–6 hours and adjust SLAs.
- Option B: stage Sun PM/Mon AM with locked trucks at pre-agreed premiums.
- Flatbed: avoid open-deck into MI/WI/N Lake corridors unless buy margin >$0.25/mi above your baseline.
- Pre-book Monday recovery freight today
- Reserve capacity for NE/Mid-Atlantic outbound (southbound/inland) and Midwest recovery lanes Mon–Tue at today’s prices.
- Compliance posture
- Tighten vetting to avoid “chameleon carriers”: FMCSA status, insurance on file, phone-on-file callbacks, VIN/plate verification at pickup on high-risk lanes.
💵 Pricing & Bidding Targets (All-In, Today–Monday)
- Dry Van
- Core markets (non-weather): Buy 2.00–2.20 | Sell 2.30–2.55
- Tactics: compress pickup windows; offer multi-stop to shave $0.03–$0.05/mi on buys.
- NE/Mid-Atlantic outbound (weather premium): Buy 2.45–2.85 | Sell 2.85–3.25
- Tactics: guarantee safe routing, add weather clause, pre-approve detention/layover.
- NE → Southeast southbound escapes: Buy 2.55–2.95 | Sell 2.95–3.40
- Tactics: bundle with ATL/CLT reload; carriers value warmth and reload certainty.
- Reefer
- PFF Southeast (FL/GA/AL/SC/NC): Buy 3.20–3.60 + $150–$300 PFF | Sell 3.60–4.15
- Tactics: verify heater capability (no cycle), enforce photo logs; stage Mon/Tue returns.
- Non-PFF general: Buy 2.60–2.90 | Sell 2.90–3.25
- NE/Mid-Atlantic reefer (cold premium): Buy 3.00–3.50 | Sell 3.40–4.00
- Flatbed
- Great Lakes/Northeast weather-impacted: Buy 2.40–2.80 | Sell 2.70–3.15
- Tactics: hazard pay framed as safety, require winterization gear; consider deferral.
- Elsewhere (buyer’s market): Buy 2.00–2.25 | Sell 2.25–2.50
- Tactics: mini-awards (2–3 loads) to secure stable buys through midweek.
Notes:
- Expect a 10–15% rate firming by Monday on NE/Mid-Atlantic outbound and SE PFF lanes as backlog hits.
- Fuel: keep FSC (Fuel Surcharge) steady; flex linehaul to win trucks without renegotiating FSC mechanics.
🛣️ Lane Tactics To Monetize The Dislocation
- Elizabeth, NJ → Atlanta, GA (Van)
- Buy 2.65–3.00 | Sell 3.05–3.45; carriers want out of cold—bundle ATL reloads same day.
- Baltimore, MD → Columbus, OH (Van)
- Buy 2.50–2.85 | Sell 2.90–3.30; offer I-81/I-68 alternatives and extra transit; pre-approve weather delays.
- Jacksonville, FL → Atlanta, GA (Reefer PFF)
- Buy 3.30–3.65 + $150–$250 | Sell 3.75–4.15; verify continuous run, no door cycling.
- Philadelphia, PA → Charlotte, NC (Van)
- Buy 2.55–2.90 | Sell 2.95–3.35; avoid coastal wind pockets; inland routing via I-81 improves acceptance.
- Chicago, IL → Detroit, MI (Flatbed)
- Buy 2.45–2.75 | Sell 2.80–3.10; heavy spray warnings = tight acceptance; stage Mon/Tuesday if today’s margin <$0.25/mi.
📞 Scripts That Close (Use Verbatim With Edits For Commodity/Customer)
- Rate justification (NE/Mid-Atlantic):
- “Tender rejections jumped to 14% while storms hit NJ/DE. Contract trucks are walking. We can still secure capacity before Monday’s backlog spike, but it requires a weather premium. We’ll guarantee pickup and safe routing instead of gambling on Monday’s surge.”
- Capacity scarcity (Weekend moves):
- “We saw 207k loads yesterday. Trucks are selective. Booking today locks a known truck at a known rate versus bidding against everyone Monday.”
- Reefer PFF (Freeze-sensitive):
- “North FL is under a freeze warning. A dry van isn’t enough. We’ll provide heated reefer, set-point on the BOL, and photo-documented temperature checks so your product isn’t at risk.”
🤝 Carrier Sourcing & Negotiation Psychology
- Lead with destination value
- “This gets you out of the storm zone into ATL reload density today” closes faster than an extra $50.
- Bundle certainty
- Offer a two-load plan (out + reload) with layover protection; many small fleets trade $0.05–$0.08/mi for guaranteed weekend utilization.
- Short clocks
- 45–60 minute quote expirations; state “repricing risk due to 14% rejections and 207k spike.”
- Proof beats promises
- Send weather alerts and market snapshots with your offer; carriers believe data more than talk.
🛡️ Risk, Compliance, and Weather Clauses
- FMCSA ‘chameleon carrier’ vigilance
- Verify DOT/MC status, SMS BASICs, insurance; perform phone-on-file callback; reject email-only bank changes; confirm VIN/plate at pickup for high-risk lanes.
- Weather and PFF controls
- Add “no punitive LDs for weather,” pre-approved detention/layover, reroute authority. For PFF: BOL set-point, continuous temp logging, photo checks, seal numbers, fuel levels.
- Claims prevention
- Use geo-fenced tracking with dwell alerts; require POD temp readings on reefer; document any route deviations due to closures.
📅 Ops Cadence & KPIs (Today–Monday)
- By 10:00 local
- Cover ≥70% of SE PFF tenders; lock 2–3 NE→South lanes; push weather clauses to all affected loads.
- By 14:00
- Pre-book ≥50% of Monday recovery moves (NE/MA outbound and Midwest); secure at least two flatbed bundles outside the Great Lakes.
- By 17:00
- Lock Sun PM/Mon AM pickups with held rates; send market/weather brief to top 10 shippers; verify compliance docs for all new carriers.
- Scorecard targets
- Gross margin: Van 12–16%, Reefer PFF 14–20%, Flatbed 10–14%
- On-time PU/DEL ≥95%, Fall-offs ≤3%, Zero temp claims
🔭 72-Hour Outlook (Probability-Weighted)
- Base case (70%)
- Backlog hits Mon AM; spot up 10–15% on NE outbound and SE PFF; Midwest tightens as trucks reposition; rates begin to ease Tue/Wed by 5–10%.
- Upside tightness (20%)
- Storm impacts linger into Sun PM; NE premiums persist through Tue, SE PFF extends into Mon; van adds +$0.05–$0.10/mi beyond base.
- Faster normalization (10%)
- Clean weather window; backlog clears quickly; national averages drift back toward $2.27/mi by Thu, still 5–10% above pre-event due to diesel and lingering carrier leverage.
🎯 Quick-Hit To-Do List
- Call list: NJ/DE/MD shippers first; confirm tender acceptance, offer spot backup now.
- Post smarter: NE→South, NE→OH/TN/GA; JAX/SAV PFF; avoid Great Lakes open-deck unless margins are rich.
- Reserve for Monday: NE and Midwest recovery with carriers you hold over the weekend.
- Tighten compliance: Auto-vet carriers; perform callbacks; document PFF SOPs; add weather clauses.
🧠 Teaching Corner (For Newer Brokers)
- OTRI (Outbound Tender Rejection Index): Measures how often contract carriers reject loads. At 14%, carriers are saying “no” a lot—spot gets busy and pricier.
- PFF (Protect From Freeze): Using heated reefers to keep non-perishables above freezing. Requires set-point in writing, temp logs, and photo evidence to avoid claims.
- Backlog effect: When weather pauses freight, rejected loads pile up. Once roads clear, everyone needs trucks at once—rates jump temporarily.
📅 This Day in History
1899: Spanish–American War: The Treaty of Paris, a peace treaty between the United States and Spain, is ratified by the United States Senate.
1952: Elizabeth II becomes Queen of the United Kingdom and her other Realms and Territories and Head of the Commonwealth upon the death of her father, George VI. At the exact moment of succession, she was in a tree house at the Treetops Hotel in Kenya.
2000: Second Chechen War: Russia captures Grozny, Chechnya, forcing the separatist Chechen Republic of Ichkeria government into exile.
💭 Quote of the Day
"Failure is an option here. If things are not failing, you are not innovating enough."
— Elon Musk