📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Saturday, March 28, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The spot freight market is experiencing a weekend volume correction, with total available loads dropping 26.1% to 167,186, though the national average spot rate remains resilient at $2.55/mile. A significant drop in the national diesel average to $3.694/gallon is providing immediate operating relief for carriers and creating margin expansion opportunities for brokers on long-haul lanes. However, capacity remains structurally constrained by strict FMCSA Clearinghouse enforcement—which has removed over 200,000 drivers from the market—and severe regional weather, including major flooding across Ohio and Indiana and freeze warnings in the Plains. Brokers must leverage the stabilizing fuel environment to negotiate better rates while utilizing automation to handle the persistent administrative burden of carrier onboarding and load execution.
Insight
Weekend dip likely flips to a Monday reload
The 26.1% weekend volume correction is not a clean softening signal in the Midwest. Freeze-related holds, flood detours, and missed weekend receiving windows in Ohio and Indiana are setting up a concentrated spot rebound Monday into Tuesday, with dry van demand firming first on Chicago-Ohio freight while reefer demand normalizes faster once protect-from freeze requirements expire.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe River Flooding (Indiana (IN, Delaware and Randolph counties)): Moderate flooding along the Mississinewa River is forcing closures on State Route 1 and local county roads, severely disrupting local agricultural transport and tightening outbound capacity along the I-69 corridor.
- Severe River Flooding (Ohio (OH, Holmes, Wayne, Trumbull, Pickaway counties)): Multiple rivers including Killbuck Creek and the Scioto River are flooding, threatening State Route 60 and Island Road. This is causing significant routing delays along the I-71 corridor and delaying warehouse loading operations.
- Moderate Freeze Warning (Kansas and Missouri (KS, MO)): Sub-freezing temperatures dropping to 21 degrees are driving urgent Protect From Freeze (PFF) requirements, severely straining local reefer capacity and pushing up temperature-controlled spot rates.
- Moderate Freeze Warning (Indiana and Kentucky (IN, KY)): Temperatures dropping to 26 degrees across the Ohio Valley are creating hazardous conditions for sensitive freight, requiring brokers to secure scarce reefer equipment for commodities normally moved in dry vans.
- Severe River Flooding (Minnesota (MN, Kittson county)): Flooding along the Two Rivers River is threatening local infrastructure and agricultural staging areas, tightening capacity in the northern Midwest as carriers avoid the region.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Flood friction will outlast the clear weekend
Dry weather improves driving conditions today, but river flooding near local access roads in eastern Indiana and central Ohio will keep warehouse approach routes and appointment reliability uneven after the skies clear. The bigger risk is no longer linehaul speed but final-mile access, where a truck can make transit and still lose margin in the last 20 miles.
- Expect the cleanest coverage from carriers already positioned east of Indianapolis and Columbus.
- Tuesday's renewed rain and 24-42 mph winds in Indiana and Ohio could slow drainage and keep detention elevated into midweek.
Weather Insight
Freeze premium has a short shelf life
The freeze setup in Kansas, Missouri, Indiana, and Kentucky is a weekend event rather than a multi-day pattern. With temperatures rebounding sharply Sunday and Monday, protect-from freeze pricing should fade quickly on freight not already committed, and some reefer units tied up on PFF freight should start re-entering standard temperature-controlled rotations by Monday.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: The sharp drop in retail diesel to $3.694/gallon provides immediate cash flow relief to small carriers, reducing the immediate risk of bankruptcies that plagued the market during recent fuel spikes.
- Carrier Financial Health: While fuel costs have eased, strict regulatory enforcement (such as the FMCSA Clearinghouse) is actively removing non-compliant drivers, meaning carrier health is increasingly defined by compliance and safety records rather than just operating margins.
- Economic Indicators: Industrial and construction sectors remain highly active, evidenced by the massive 72,000+ flatbed load count, signaling strong underlying economic demand for raw materials and infrastructure components.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
FMCSA Clearinghouse Enforcement Removes 200,000+ Drivers from Capacity Pool 🔗:
With 1 in 30 CDL holders now in prohibited status and automatic downgrades enforced, brokers must implement hyper-vigilant carrier vetting. This structural capacity reduction gives compliant carriers immense pricing power, requiring brokers to sell shippers on the value of verified, legal capacity rather than just the lowest rate.
-
Portal Automation Becomes Critical for Broker Margins 🔗:
As manual data entry costs brokers up to $150K annually, adopting computer vision and automation for load posting and document reconciliation is no longer optional. Brokers leveraging these tools can process freight faster, secure capacity before competitors, and reallocate headcount to high-value carrier relationship building.
-
Mastering Fuel Surcharges in a Volatile Diesel Market 🔗:
Even as diesel prices stabilize at $3.694/gallon, the recent volatility highlights the need for dynamic fuel surcharge (FSC) programs. Brokers must transparently separate linehaul from fuel costs when negotiating with shippers, ensuring that sudden fuel spikes don't erode margins while remaining competitive when prices drop.
News Insight
Compliance risk is turning into weekend coverage risk
With the driver pool structurally smaller under Clearinghouse enforcement, last-minute truck swaps are becoming more dangerous during weather-disrupted weekends. The carriers creating the most value are the ones that can accept tenders without qualification issues and hold the load through appointment changes, which is why compliant incumbents will keep rate power even as diesel eases.
🔍 Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Despite a weekend volume dip, the market maintains a strong $2.55/mile average rate, indicating that carriers are holding firm on pricing and refusing to race to the bottom, particularly in the flatbed and heavy haul sectors.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is critically tight in the Midwest due to overlapping flood and freeze events. Conversely, the drop in diesel prices has slightly loosened capacity on long-haul transcontinental routes as carriers are more willing to take longer miles.
- Technology Disruptions: The integration of AI-driven portal automation is creating a divide between tech-enabled brokerages that can instantly secure capacity across multiple platforms and legacy operations bogged down by manual data entry.
👥 Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retail routing is stabilizing, though sudden weather events in the Midwest are causing localized out-of-stocks, driving spot demand for expedited dry van recovery loads.
- Manufacturing: Manufacturing demand remains the strongest pillar of the spot market, driving over 72,000 flatbed loads as spring production schedules ramp up.
- Agriculture: Early produce staging in the South is colliding with freeze warnings in the Plains, creating a severe imbalance in reefer equipment positioning and driving up PFF premiums.
- Automotive: Auto parts suppliers in the Ohio Valley are facing routing delays due to severe flooding along the I-71 and I-69 corridors, requiring brokers to build in extra transit time.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest is currently the most volatile freight region in the country, battered by a combination of severe river flooding in Ohio, Indiana, and Minnesota, alongside moderate freeze warnings in Kansas and Missouri. This weather convergence is severely disrupting standard routing, delaying warehouse operations, and forcing carriers to demand hazard pay and Protect From Freeze (PFF) premiums. Despite these challenges, industrial demand remains incredibly strong, keeping flatbed volumes elevated. The drop in diesel prices to $3.694/gallon is the only factor preventing a complete rate explosion, but capacity remains fundamentally tight as carriers actively avoid flooded corridors.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL → Columbus, OH: This critical Midwest corridor is currently severely impacted by flooding along I-71 and surrounding state routes in Ohio. Capacity is tightening as carriers face significant routing delays and potential warehouse closures at the destination. The drop in diesel prices is helping offset some of the operational friction, but rates remain firm.
Kansas City, MO → Indianapolis, IN: This lane is caught between two major weather systems: sub-freezing temperatures at the origin and severe flooding at the destination. Reefer demand is spiking as shippers require Protect From Freeze (PFF) service for commodities normally moved in dry vans. Capacity is highly constrained.
Regional Insight
Chicago to Columbus is now an appointment market
On Chicago-to-Columbus, the biggest pricing spread is between freight with verified dock access and freight moving into flood-affected consignee networks. Carriers are screening destination ZIP codes and charging for uncertainty, so the best margins will come from loads with confirmed receiving status rather than from chasing the highest headline spot quote.
- Build extra transit buffer for unloads, not pickups.
- Detention language is increasingly part of the buy rate on this lane.
🚨 Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Midwest outbound reefer lanes requiring Protect From Freeze (PFF)
- Ohio and Indiana inbound lanes affected by severe river flooding
- National flatbed lanes supporting spring construction projects
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Reefer capacity is critically short in the Plains (KS/MO) due to freeze warnings, while flatbed capacity remains tight nationally due to a massive 72,000+ load volume.
Opportunity Zones:
- Long-haul transcontinental dry van lanes, where the drop in diesel to $3.694/gallon has significantly improved carrier profitability and willingness to run.
🎯 Strategic Recommendations for Today
💼 For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Emphasize our rigorous carrier vetting process in light of the FMCSA removing 200,000+ drivers from the market. Position our slightly higher rates as the cost of guaranteed, legal, and reliable capacity during Midwest weather disruptions.
Action: Proactively reach out to shippers with freight moving through OH, IN, KS, and MO to offer routing solutions and secure PFF reefer capacity before the weekend.
🚛 For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Focus entirely on securing reefer capacity in the Midwest and Plains for PFF loads, and lock down flatbed capacity for Monday morning construction deliveries.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the significant drop in the national diesel average to $3.694/gallon to push back against inflated fuel surcharges and negotiate better linehaul rates on long-haul lanes.
Strategic Insight
Use fuel relief to buy execution terms
The diesel drop is most useful as negotiating leverage on longer dry van and flatbed moves, but the savings should be converted into service protections rather than pure rate cuts. On Ohio and Indiana freight, a modest concession tied to detention coverage, route flexibility, or same-day POD turnaround is worth more than squeezing a few extra cents from linehaul and risking a Monday re-cover.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Price Midwest PFF reefer freight aggressively today; most of that premium should unwind after Sunday morning.
- Keep Ohio and Indiana unload windows loose through Tuesday because flood access issues will outlast today's clear weather.
- Challenge stale fuel surcharge assumptions on long-haul moves, but do not expect diesel relief to soften weather-exposed reefer lanes.
- Expect a Monday-Tuesday spot rebound as delayed Midwest freight re-enters the market.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a weekend board contraction, not a true market release.
- Total available loads are 167,186, down 26.1% day over day, but loads moved are 61,484, slightly above 60,904 at the same checkpoint yesterday.
- That combination matters: the board got smaller, but executable freight still cleared. In broker terms, weak postings disappeared faster than real demand did.
The national average spot rate at $2.55/mile is holding up better than the load count suggests.
- One week ago, the market sat at 152,178 loads and $2.49/mile.
- Today’s message is not “freight is weak.” The message is “capacity is still disciplined, and weather is distorting timing.”
Diesel at $3.694/gallon is the biggest tactical lever on the board today.
- This is immediate relief for carriers, especially on long-haul dry van and open-deck.
- But the smartest brokers will convert fuel relief into execution terms:
- better detention language
- same-day POD (Proof of Delivery) turnaround
- route flexibility
- more realistic appointment commitments
- Do not spend all of the fuel relief on pure rate cuts.
Reefer is still the highest service-risk mode, but the freeze premium looks short-lived.
- Reefer paid rate is $2.85/mile versus $2.83/mile posted, so there is still a real execution premium.
- However, this is not a runaway reefer market; it is a weather-specific, short-duration premium market tied to PFF (Protect From Freeze) exposure.
Open-deck is still where the money is.
- Flatbed + Heavy Haul + Specialized = 126,664 loads, which is 75.8% of the total board.
- Those same modes account for 51,056 of 61,484 moved loads, or 83.0% of executed volume.
- If your desk is treating today like a generic van day, you are misallocating attention.
Compliance and weather are reinforcing each other.
- With FMCSA (Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration) Clearinghouse enforcement shrinking the legal driver pool, last-minute truck swaps are more dangerous than they used to be.
- In a flood-and-freeze weekend, the compliant incumbent carrier is worth more than the cheapest fresh quote.
📊 What the board is really saying
The market is smaller, but not softer in the lanes that matter.
- Total loads fell to 167,186 from 226,088.
- Average rate only slipped to $2.55/mile from $2.57/mile.
- That is a classic sign of calendar compression plus selective freight, not broad demand destruction.
Today’s spread behavior is more useful than the headline average.
- Van: $2.28 paid vs $2.36 posted = -$0.08
- Reefer: $2.85 paid vs $2.83 posted = +$0.02
- Flatbed: $2.90 paid vs $2.91 posted = -$0.01
- Heavy Haul: $2.95 paid vs $2.95 posted = flat
- Specialized: $2.47 paid vs $2.77 posted = -$0.30
- LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload / partial truckload): $1.63 paid vs $1.70 posted = -$0.07
That spread pattern tells a very specific story.
- Van is negotiable on clean freight.
- The screen is asking more than the market is actually paying.
- Brokers with good trip quality can buy better than the board suggests.
- Reefer still has a real execution premium.
- Small, but important.
- It means actual protected freight is still harder to cover than it looks.
- Flatbed is balanced, not loose.
- Near-parity tells you pricing is efficient, not weak.
- Construction and industrial demand are keeping a firm floor under open-deck.
- Heavy haul is accurately priced.
- Exact parity means specialized equipment is scarce enough that bad quoting gets punished immediately.
- Specialized has the biggest mismatch on the board.
- A -$0.30 spread usually means a lot of posted asks are aspirational, stale, poorly specified, or deadhead-heavy.
- This is a broker opportunity, but only if specs are qualified fast and correctly.
The best hidden signal today is that moved volume held.
- 61,484 loads moved today versus 60,904 yesterday, even while available load count dropped sharply.
- That means real freight is still finding trucks.
- It also means Monday and Tuesday are likely to reprice upward once delayed Midwest freight comes back onto the board.
🚛 Mode-by-mode trading plan
Dry Van
- Market read: Negotiable, but only on clean freight.
- Data: 22,345 loads, $2.28 paid, $2.36 posted
- Broker move:
- Push harder on long-haul one-way freight where diesel relief improves carrier math.
- Do not assume cheap coverage into Ohio and Indiana just because the national van spread is negative.
- Prioritize freight with:
- verified dock access
- one pick / one drop
- flexible unload
- strong reload geography
- Best use of leverage: Trade a modest rate concession for:
- detention clarity
- same-day POD
- broader delivery windows
Reefer
- Market read: Still premium execution, but short shelf life on the weather premium.
- Data: 7,645 loads, $2.85 paid, $2.83 posted
- Broker move:
- Cover PFF freight aggressively today.
- Do not automatically carry that same premium into Monday unless:
- the commodity is still temperature-sensitive
- the lane still crosses freeze exposure
- equipment availability remains tight at origin
- Before dispatch, confirm:
- setpoint
- pre-cool requirement
- reefer fuel level
- breakdown protocol
- whether reefer is truly required or just shipper habit
- Big trap: A lot of freight that “needs reefer” this weekend may revert to dry van eligibility very quickly.
Flatbed
- Market read: Firm, efficient, and still the best volume play.
- Data: 72,236 loads, $2.90 paid, $2.91 posted
- Broker move:
- Pre-cover Monday construction and manufacturing loads today.
- On open-deck, margin will come less from rate spread and more from:
- tarping clarity
- loading method
- securement expectations
- detention pre-agreement
- Do not chase a cheaper truck if it creates securement or appointment risk.
Heavy Haul
- Market read: Precision market, not a bargaining market.
- Data: 36,667 loads, $2.95 paid, $2.95 posted
- Broker move:
- Quote only after confirming:
- exact dimensions
- weight
- axle configuration
- permit path
- escort needs
- When paid equals posted exactly, the market is telling you:
- there is very little room for sloppy execution
- the truck is scarce enough that mistakes become expensive immediately
Specialized
- Market read: Best buy-side opportunity, highest spec risk.
- Data: 17,761 loads, $2.47 paid, $2.77 posted
- Broker move:
- This is where experienced brokers can outperform.
- Many postings are likely inflated because:
- trailer type is misclassified
- securement is vague
- loading reality is unclear
- deadhead assumptions are wrong
- If you qualify the move correctly, you can buy well below screen.
- Rule: No spec sheet, no aggressive quote.
LTL/Partial
- Market read: Good pressure-release valve, not a universal substitute.
- Data: 10,532 loads, $1.63 paid, $1.70 posted
- Broker move:
- Use it for customers resisting full truckload increases on:
- dense lanes
- non-fragile freight
- flexible transit
- Avoid forcing LTL/Partial onto freight that actually needs:
- appointment certainty
- low handling
- same-day or next-day transit reliability
🌦️ Midwest weather chessboard: where service risk actually lives
The biggest Midwest risk is not highway speed. It is facility access and appointment reliability.
- Flooding in Indiana and Ohio is turning some freight into a last-20-miles problem.
- A truck can make linehaul just fine and still lose margin in:
- warehouse approach delays
- detention
- missed receiving windows
- driver HOS (Hours of Service) burn
Eastern Indiana and central Ohio should be treated as access-risk markets through at least early week.
- The right question is not “Is the interstate open?”
- The right question is “Can the truck actually get to the dock, and is the consignee still receiving?”
Freeze warnings in Kansas, Missouri, Indiana, and Kentucky are real, but probably temporary.
- The freeze premium is a weekend event, not a durable new pricing regime.
- Brokers who overpay for reefer into Monday because of Saturday fear will give back margin unnecessarily.
OTRI (Outbound Tender Rejection Index) staying elevated in the Midwest matters.
- That tells you carriers are still rejecting contracted freight in weather-disrupted zones.
- Translation: spot freight with clean execution will keep getting attention, especially if you can prove facility readiness.
🛣️ Lane tactics that matter today
Chicago, IL → Columbus, OH
- This is now an appointment market, not just a mileage market.
- Best broker play:
- verify receiving status
- verify dock access
- build extra unload buffer
- document detention terms in writing
- The highest headline spot quote will not always produce the best margin.
- The best margins will come from loads with confirmed receiving conditions.
Kansas City, MO → Indianapolis, IN
- This is a cross-pressure lane: freeze exposure at origin, flood friction at destination.
- Best broker play:
- charge correctly for weekend PFF exposure
- keep delivery window loose
- reconfirm destination access before the truck gets committed
- If the freight is only “maybe” freeze-sensitive, challenge the reefer requirement once temperatures rebound.
Long-haul transcontinental dry van
- Fuel relief has improved carrier willingness to run.
- Best broker play:
- press rate modestly
- protect service terms aggressively
- separate linehaul from FSC (Fuel Surcharge) if the customer understands it
- Good buying conditions exist here relative to weather-exposed Midwest freight.
💼 Customer strategy that wins today
Sell certainty, not cheapness.
- The most persuasive customer language today is:
- weather is distorting access
- legal capacity is tighter because of compliance enforcement
- fuel is down, so we are being disciplined where the market allows
- That makes your quote feel reasoned, not opportunistic.
Use diesel relief carefully in customer conversations.
- Shippers will see $3.694/gallon diesel and expect instant savings everywhere.
- Your response should be:
- yes, long-haul dry van and some open-deck buys are more negotiable
- no, that does not eliminate flood detention, appointment failures, or PFF service risk
- Separate fuel savings from execution risk.
Ask better qualifying questions before quoting.
- On Midwest freight today, every customer-facing rep should ask:
- Is the facility fully receiving?
- Is there alternate truck access if local roads are affected?
- Does the commodity truly require Protect From Freeze?
- Can delivery be flexed if access deteriorates?
Shorten quote validity on weather-affected freight.
- A long validity window today gives the shipper a free option and leaves the broker holding risk.
- On Midwest freight, same-day or short-duration quote validity is the disciplined posture.
🤝 Carrier desk tactics for today
Start with compliant incumbents before shopping the board.
- In a weather-disrupted, compliance-tight market, the first question is not “Who is cheapest?”
- It is “Who will still be on this load if the appointment changes?”
Use fuel relief as a negotiation anchor, not a hammer.
- Carriers will not emotionally give back all the diesel savings immediately.
- They are still anchored to:
- recent volatility
- deadhead risk
- weekend uncertainty
- reload quality
- The winning ask is:
- “I need a little help on linehaul, and in return I can give you cleaner appointments and faster paperwork.”
Reconfirm harder than usual.
- Before dispatch and near pickup, reconfirm:
- driver identity
- truck and trailer type
- ETA (Estimated Time of Arrival)
- route awareness
- appointment understanding
- This is especially important with Clearinghouse-related compliance pressure and the ongoing risk of unapproved driver swaps.
Use automation where it matters most today.
- Weekend staffing makes administrative drag more expensive.
- If your team has portal automation or workflow tools, use them for:
- load posting
- carrier packet handling
- document reconciliation
- POD chase
- Human time should be spent on:
- weather calls
- carrier commitment
- customer expectation management
🛡️ Risk controls that protect margin today
Final-mile access risk
- Mitigation:
- verify receiving status
- verify dock approach
- verify alternate route access
- build delivery cushion
Compliance risk
- Mitigation:
- use approved carrier lists
- do not allow unapproved driver swaps
- verify CDL (Commercial Driver’s License) and authority details
- reconfirm identity closer to pickup
Accessorial leakage
- Highest-risk items today:
- detention
- layover
- PFF handling
- flatbed tarping
- permit timing on heavy haul
- Mitigation:
- put terms in the rate confirmation
- document pre-approval requirements
- do not leave critical assumptions verbal
False urgency risk
- Specialized’s -$0.30 paid-versus-posted spread is the warning sign.
- Not every high posting reflects real scarcity.
- Mitigation:
- qualify specs first
- confirm loading method
- confirm deadhead
- confirm commodity reality before chasing the ask
🔮 24–72 hour probability-weighted outlook
🟢 Base case — 60%
- Monday-Tuesday spot demand rebounds in the Midwest as weather-delayed freight re-enters the market.
- Dry van firms first, especially on Chicago-to-Ohio and other distribution-center recovery lanes.
- Reefer premium fades faster than flatbed pressure as freeze exposure passes.
🟠 Stress case — 25%
- Flood-related access problems in Indiana and Ohio linger longer than expected.
- Tuesday rain and wind slow drainage and keep detention elevated.
- In this case, the market does not explode nationally, but specific destination ZIP codes become expensive and unreliable.
🔵 Relief case — 15%
- Reefer units tied up on PFF freight return to normal rotation quickly.
- Long-haul van becomes a little easier to buy with lower diesel and improved weekend positioning.
- This would create the best margin opportunity on non-weather-sensitive freight, not on flood-exposed freight.
🎯 Highest-value action stack for today
Pre-cover Monday open-deck now.
- Flatbed and heavy haul remain the deepest, richest part of the board.
Treat Ohio and Indiana as access-risk freight, not just weather freight.
- Verify receiving status before you award the load.
Buy reefer premium only where the commodity still truly needs it.
- Weekend PFF pricing should not become lazy Monday pricing.
Push on long-haul van and open-deck using diesel at $3.694/gallon.
- Trade for service terms, not only cents per mile.
Exploit specialized spread, but qualify every spec.
- The negative spread is opportunity for disciplined brokers and a trap for sloppy ones.
Reconfirm carrier legality and commitment closer to pickup than usual.
- Compliance risk is now operational risk.
Measure execution by midday and again before close.
- Track:
- falloff rate
- paid-versus-posted spread by mode
- percentage of Midwest loads with verified receiving status
- detention exposure
- same-day POD turnaround
🧭 Bottom line
📅 This Day in History
193: After assassinating the Roman Emperor Pertinax, his Praetorian Guards auction off the throne to Didius Julianus.
364: Roman Emperor Valentinian I appoints his brother Flavius Valens co-emperor.
2006: At least one million union members, students and unemployed take to the streets in France in protest at the government's proposed First Employment Contract law.
💭 Quote of the Day
"Fear of death is fear of surrender to Infinity. Learn to surrender, to exist at Infinity while alive, and fear of death dissolves."
— Adi Da Samraj