📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Thursday, February 05, 2026
2:36 PM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
Market volume has exploded over the last 24 hours, jumping from 144k to over 207,000 available loads, signaling a massive surge in freight demand. However, a critical pricing disconnect remains: while posted rates have optically softened, actual paid rates for Van and Reefer equipment are trading significantly higher than posted averages (+$0.11 to +$0.13 premiums), indicating hidden capacity tightness. Brokers must look past the posted averages today; the real market is trading higher due to severe winter weather in the Great Lakes and Appalachia, combined with freeze warnings in the Southeast creating urgent demand for temperature-controlled capacity.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Great Lakes Hazardous Marine & Icing Conditions (Upper Midwest (MI, WI, IL - Lake Superior/Michigan/Huron)): Severe freezing spray and gale force winds will disrupt logistics near the Great Lakes. Expect delays on bridges and coastal routes (I-75 in MI, I-90/94 corridors) due to high winds and potential icing.
- Appalachian Winter Storm & Blizzard Conditions (West Virginia, Maryland (WV, MD - Garrett, Grant, Pendleton counties)): Major disruption expected on I-68 and US-40 corridors. Heavy snow (6-8 inches) and wind gusts up to 60 mph will make travel treacherous or impossible. Carriers will likely bypass this region.
- Southeast Freeze Warning (Northern Florida, Southeast Georgia (FL, GA - Suwannee, Baker, Nassau counties)): Sub-freezing temps (low as 30F) threatening crops. Expect a surge in reefer demand for 'Protect From Freeze' loads and accelerated outbound produce shipments to beat the cold.
⛈️ Weather Impact Cascade
- Immediate Operational Impact: Thursday-Friday: Great Lakes region (MI, WI, IL) experiences freezing spray and gale-force winds, disrupting I-75, I-90, I-94 corridors. Appalachian region (WV, MD) faces blizzard conditions with 6-8 inches of snow and 60 mph winds on I-68 and US-40, making travel treacherous. Southeast (FL, GA) experiences freeze warning with temperatures dropping to 30°F, creating urgent 'protect from freeze' demand. Illinois forecast shows overcast conditions Thursday-Friday with winds 15-28 mph (feels like 27-28°F), manageable but uncomfortable. Maryland forecast shows snow showers Friday (0.0in precipitation, 20% chance) escalating to snow showers Saturday (0.0in precipitation, 25% chance) with extreme wind chill (feels like 5°F). West Virginia forecast shows light snow Friday (0.2in precipitation, 45% chance) escalating to snow showers Saturday (0.0in precipitation, 25% chance) with severe wind chill (feels like 5°F). Florida forecast shows light rain Thursday (0.2in precipitation, 95% chance) clearing to sunny conditions Friday onward.
- Secondary Market Effects: Carriers refusing loads in Appalachia and Great Lakes regions will redirect capacity southbound, creating temporary Southeast capacity surplus by Saturday evening. However, this surplus arrives after the freeze window closes, limiting its utility. Rerouted freight from I-68 and US-40 corridors will shift to I-81 and I-77 alternatives, creating temporary rate pressure on those routes. LTL networks will experience service disruptions in Great Lakes and Appalachian regions, pushing more partial shipments into spot market, increasing van load volume. Reefer capacity that was positioned for freeze-protection loads will need repositioning for floral distribution by mid-week next week.
- Regional Spillover Analysis: Great Lakes weather (MI, WI, IL) will create capacity tightness in Ohio, Indiana, and Pennsylvania as carriers avoid the region. This spillover effect will push rates up on alternative routes (I-81, I-77 corridors) through Saturday. Appalachian blizzard (WV, MD) will create severe capacity shortage in that region, forcing freight to reroute through Virginia and North Carolina, creating temporary rate pressure on those corridors. Southeast freeze will create temporary reefer capacity shortage in Florida and Georgia, but this will not spillover to other regions because the demand is localized to agricultural zones. Midwest capacity tightness will ease by Sunday as weather clears and equipment repositions.
- Recovery Timeline: Great Lakes conditions improve Saturday evening; normal operations resume Sunday. Appalachian conditions improve Sunday afternoon; normal operations resume Monday. Southeast freeze ends Saturday morning; normal operations resume Saturday afternoon. By Monday, February 10, all weather-impacted regions will have returned to normal operations. Rate normalization will lag weather normalization by 24-48 hours as carriers adjust pricing. Expect full market normalization by Tuesday, February 11.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Stable fuel costs are currently acting as a neutral factor, allowing carriers to focus negotiations purely on lane complexity and weather hazards.
- Carrier Financial Health: The divergence between posted and paid rates in Van/Reefer sectors suggests carriers are regaining short-term pricing power in disrupted regions.
- Economic Indicators: The massive jump in total load volume (up ~43% day-over-day) signals a potential end-of-week push from shippers trying to clear docks before weekend weather impacts.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
FMCSA Warns of Sophisticated Phishing Attacks Targeting Carriers 🔗:
Brokers must exercise extreme caution with carrier vetting today. Fraudulent emails impersonating the DOT are circulating to steal carrier credentials. Verify every new carrier setup through official phone numbers and established portals, not just email links, to prevent cargo theft and double-brokering risks.
-
HOS Waiver Extended for 40 States Due to Winter Weather 🔗:
The FMCSA has extended Hours of Service relief for emergency relief loads in 40 states. This provides brokers with a sourcing advantage for 'relief' freight (food, fuel, supplies), allowing for faster transit times on qualifying loads moving into weather-impacted zones like the Northeast and Midwest.
-
Maersk Cuts Jobs as Ocean Rates Plummet 🔗:
Continued weakness in ocean freight rates and major staff cuts at Maersk signal a bearish outlook for import volumes. Brokers should anticipate softer drayage and transloading demand from ports in the coming weeks, making domestic manufacturing and agricultural freight more critical for volume goals.
News Impact Timeline
- Immediate Operational Reality: FMCSA phishing alert (ALERT_1) requires immediate carrier vetting protocol changes. Brokers must verify all new carrier setups through official phone numbers, not email links. This adds 2-4 hours to carrier onboarding but prevents fraud. Implement this protocol immediately for any new carriers contacted today. HOS waiver extension (ALERT_3) becomes operational immediately for qualifying relief loads in 40 states. This allows faster transit times on emergency freight moving into weather-impacted zones. Maersk job cuts (ALERT_5) have no immediate operational impact but signal future drayage/transloading weakness.
- 3-Day Market Implications: By Friday, the phishing alert will have reached most carriers, creating awareness of credential theft risks. This may slow carrier response times as they implement additional security protocols. HOS waiver will be actively used by brokers sourcing relief freight (food, fuel, supplies) into Northeast and Midwest, creating competitive advantage for brokers who understand the waiver's scope. By Sunday, Maersk's job cuts will begin affecting port operations as staffing reductions take effect, potentially creating minor drayage delays.
- Week-Ahead Positioning: By Monday, February 10, the phishing alert will be old news, but security protocols will remain in place. Brokers should maintain heightened carrier vetting through the week. HOS waiver will remain active through the week, providing sourcing advantage for relief freight. By mid-week, Maersk's staffing reductions will create measurable drayage delays, making domestic freight more attractive relative to import-dependent freight. Brokers should position customers toward domestic manufacturing and agricultural freight.
- Regulatory Compliance Impacts: HOS waiver extension requires brokers to verify load eligibility (emergency relief, food, fuel, supplies) before quoting faster transit times. Misrepresenting load eligibility could trigger FMCSA enforcement. Phishing alert requires documented carrier vetting procedures. Brokers should maintain records of verification calls and official portal confirmations. No immediate compliance changes required, but documentation standards should be elevated.
🔍 Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Real-time data shows a massive volume spike to 207k loads. The key competitive advantage today is speed; capacity is available but expensive (paid rates > posted rates). Brokers who bid aggressively early will cover loads; those bidding at posted averages will fail.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is severely restricted in West Virginia/Maryland (Blizzard) and tightening in Northern FL (Freeze). Surplus capacity remains in the flatbed sector generally, but specific weather zones are no-go areas.
- Technology Disruptions: Digital freight matching is critical today as the volume surge requires automated covering for standard freight to free up human capital for complex, weather-impacted lanes.
Demand Shift Indicators
- Regional Demand Predictions: Southeast reefer demand will peak Friday-Saturday (freeze window), then drop sharply Sunday-Monday as temperatures normalize. Expect a 30-40% volume decline in freeze-protection loads by Sunday. Simultaneously, floral and Valentine's Day freight will begin building mid-week next week, creating a secondary demand wave. Atlanta-Columbus lane will see demand tighten Friday-Saturday due to weather hesitation, then normalize Monday-Tuesday. Flatbed demand will remain stable through next week with no significant seasonal shifts expected until mid-February.
- Seasonal Transition Analysis: Current demand pattern is weather-driven, not seasonal. The 43% day-over-day volume jump (144k to 207k loads) is an anomaly caused by shippers front-loading freight ahead of weekend weather disruptions. This is not a sustainable demand level. By Monday, volumes will normalize to 160-180k range as the weather event passes. The market is experiencing a temporary demand spike, not a seasonal shift. Post-weather normalization, expect a brief lull (Tuesday-Wednesday) before Valentine's Day demand builds.
- Economic Leading Indicators: The massive volume surge combined with end-of-week timing suggests retailers are executing aggressive replenishment strategies ahead of potential weekend disruptions. This indicates confidence in consumer demand despite economic headwinds. However, Maersk's job cuts and ocean rate weakness signal caution in import-dependent sectors. Domestic manufacturing (flatbed volume at 80k+) remains healthy, suggesting industrial output is stable. Overall economic signal: cautiously optimistic on domestic demand, bearish on import-dependent sectors.
- Capacity Flow Predictions: Equipment will flow northward from Southeast to Midwest through Friday as shippers rush to clear docks. This creates temporary Southeast capacity tightness (especially reefer) and temporary Midwest capacity surplus. By Saturday evening, as weather clears, equipment will reposition southward. By Monday, normal bidirectional flows resume. Flatbed equipment will remain distributed across South/Southwest with no significant repositioning expected. Expect equipment positioning to normalize by Tuesday, February 11.
👥 Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: End-of-week replenishment push is visible in the van volume surge; retailers are rushing to stock shelves ahead of potential weekend weather disruptions.
- Manufacturing: Flatbed volume is very strong (80k loads), indicating healthy industrial output despite weather headwinds.
- Agriculture: Urgent demand in the Southeast to move sensitive crops before freezing temperatures set in tonight/tomorrow morning.
- Automotive: Just-in-time supply chains in the Midwest (MI/OH/IN) are at high risk due to the Great Lakes weather alerts; expect expedite requests.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast (FL, GA, AL)
The Southeast is the primary opportunity zone today due to the convergence of a Freeze Warning driving reefer demand and generally high outbound freight volumes. The weather event creates immediate urgency for temperature-controlled capacity, allowing for margin expansion. Additionally, the region is relatively insulated from the severe blizzard conditions crippling the Appalachians, making it a more reliable operational theater.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Jacksonville, FL → Atlanta, GA:
This short-haul lane is critical today due to the freeze warning in Northern Florida. Shippers are rushing to move product into regional distribution centers. Capacity is tightening as local drivers prioritize higher-paying emergency loads.
Atlanta, GA → Columbus, OH:
A high-volume replenishment lane connecting the Southeast to the Midwest. While Atlanta is open, the destination (Ohio/Midwest) is on the fringe of the Great Lakes weather system, causing carrier hesitation.
🚨 Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Outbound Northern Florida (Reefer - Freeze Warning)
- Inbound/Outbound West Virginia & Western Maryland (Blizzard Conditions)
- Cross-border routes near Great Lakes (Freezing Spray/Wind)
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Severe shortage of winter-equipped carriers in Appalachia (I-68 corridor). Tight reefer capacity in North Florida.
Opportunity Zones:
- Southeast regional reefer freight
- Flatbed loads in the South/Southwest where weather is clear and rates are balanced
🎯 Strategic Recommendations for Today
💼 For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Inform customers about the 'hidden' rate hikes in Van/Reefer markets. Explain that while load boards show one rate, actual moving rates are higher due to weather and volume surges. Proactively discuss 'Protect From Freeze' needs for Southeast freight.
Action: Audit all active shipments for temperature sensitivity in the Southeast. Add 'Protect from Freeze' accessorials to quotes immediately.
🚛 For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Focus on Flatbed for easy wins (balanced market). For Van/Reefer, source capacity BEFORE booking the load - the market is tighter than it looks.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the HOS waiver news (Alert_3) to negotiate faster transit times on qualifying relief loads. For flatbed, leverage the high volume/stable rate environment to secure volume commitments.
📞 Customer Communication Scripts
Rate Increase Justification For Southeast Reefer Freight
Opening Script: "I wanted to reach out proactively about your Southeast shipments. We're seeing a significant freeze warning in Northern Florida tonight through tomorrow morning, and the market is responding with urgent demand for temperature-controlled capacity. While posted reefer rates show $2.57/mile, actual carriers are securing $2.70/mile—that $0.13 premium reflects the real market right now. For your time-sensitive produce or perishable loads, we need to quote at the paid rate, not the posted rate, to guarantee equipment availability."
Value Proposition: Guaranteed equipment availability for freeze-protection loads when competitors are scrambling. Your shipments move on schedule, avoiding crop loss or spoilage.
Urgency Creator: Freeze warning window closes Saturday morning when temperatures normalize. After that, rates drop significantly. This premium pricing is a 48-hour window.
Objection Handler: I understand the rate jump looks steep compared to last week. Here's the reality: we have 17,500+ reefer loads competing for capacity in the Southeast right now, and carriers know it. The $0.13 spread between posted and paid rates proves carriers are rejecting low bids. If we quote at posted rates, your load sits. If we quote at paid rates, it moves. The choice is timing or cost—you can't have both in this market.
Capacity Shortage Communication For Atlanta-Columbus Lane
Opening Script: "Your Atlanta-to-Columbus shipments are in a tricky spot right now. The Great Lakes region is under severe weather alerts with freezing spray and gale-force winds, and carriers are hesitant to head north into that system. We're seeing paid van rates creeping above posted averages as drivers demand hazard premiums. The good news: we can still source capacity, but we need to book it now—not this afternoon."
Value Proposition: Early booking secures capacity at today's rates before Friday's weather tightens the market further. You avoid the Friday/Saturday rate spike that's almost certain to hit.
Urgency Creator: Forecast shows conditions deteriorating Friday through Saturday with wind gusts up to 60 mph in the Appalachian corridor. Carriers will either demand higher rates or refuse loads entirely. Pre-booking today locks in current pricing.
Objection Handler: Yes, we're asking you to commit early, but here's why: the market is showing us that van capacity is available in Atlanta right now, but finding drivers willing to head into winter weather is the real bottleneck. By Friday, that bottleneck tightens dramatically. We're not asking you to pay more today—we're asking you to pay today's rate instead of Friday's rate. That's the real savings.
Flatbed Opportunity Positioning
Opening Script: "I have good news on your flatbed freight. Unlike the van and reefer markets where we're seeing hidden rate premiums, flatbed is in perfect equilibrium right now. Posted and paid rates are both $2.36/mile, which means the market is balanced. We have 80,000+ flatbed loads available, and capacity is fluid enough to absorb the volume without inflationary pressure. This is your window to move industrial and construction freight at predictable, stable rates."
Value Proposition: Flatbed rates are stable and transparent—no hidden premiums, no surprises. You can budget accurately and move volume without the rate volatility hitting van and reefer markets.
Urgency Creator: This equilibrium won't last forever. Once winter weather clears next week, seasonal demand patterns will shift. Lock in your flatbed volume now while rates are stable and capacity is available.
Objection Handler: Flatbed is the one equipment type where posted rates actually match paid rates. We're not hiding anything here. The market is working efficiently, which means you get predictable pricing. Take advantage of that stability.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
- Spot volume spike is real; pricing power is not on the boards. Total loads 207k (+~43% DoD). Van and Reefer paid rates are clearing well above posted (+$0.11 and +$0.13/mi), signaling hidden tightness and strong carrier leverage in weather-impacted corridors.
- Weather is the price engine. Great Lakes gales/icing and an Appalachian blizzard are pushing northbound hazard premiums and re-routing freight to I-81/I-77. A Southeast freeze warning is creating urgent Reefer PFF (Protect From Freeze) demand in North FL/SE GA.
- Two-speed market: Van/Reefer = pay for reliability; Flatbed = harvest margin at parity. Flatbed posted = paid ($2.36/mi) despite huge volume (80k+). Use multi-load blocks to lock buy-side stability.
- Diesel stable = clean read on linehaul. $3.638/gal keeps FSC (Fuel Surcharge) steady; rate movements are 90% linehaul and risk premiums today.
- Compliance risk elevated; speed still wins. FMCSA phishing alert requires hard vetting. HOS (Hours of Service) waiver in 40 states creates legitimate transit speed-ups on qualifying emergency freight—use it, document it.
🧭 24–72 Hour Outlook (Probability-Weighted)
- Base case (70%): Van/Reefer premiums persist through Saturday; regional tightness eases Sunday/Monday as weather clears; full rate normalization lags by 24–48 hours into Tuesday.
- Bull tightness (15%): Appalachia recovery drags; northbound premiums +$0.05–$0.10/mi vs today on Friday PM pickups; Reefer PFF scarcity pushes late-day bids higher.
- Bear relief (15%): Faster repositioning compresses Van spread to +$0.03–$0.06/mi by Monday; Reefer PFF recedes Sunday; Flatbed unchanged.
🚦 Now → Next → Later: Execution Timeline
- Now (0–120 minutes)
- Triaging: Identify every Southeast load with freeze exposure (produce, beverages, liquids, chemicals, coatings, canned goods). Tag PFF and get written shipper authorization.
- Re-price: Move Reefer PFF quotes to paid reality (+$0.13/mi over posted baseline) plus a PFF accessorial. Shorten quote validity to 45 minutes.
- Pre-source carriers: For Van/Reefer, secure the truck before you confirm the quote. Target carriers already staged within 75–150 miles of pickup.
- Compliance hardening: For any new carrier, initiate call-back verification to FMCSA phone-on-file before rate con. Screenshot portal checks. No links from emails.
- Next (120–360 minutes)
- Lock northbound early: Book ATL → OH/IN/PA loads before lunch. Add hazard premiums for Friday/Saturday receivers.
- Block flatbeds: Offer 2–3 load mini-awards in IL/IN/OH/KY at or below $2.30/mi buy with flexible windows; sell $2.45–$2.60.
- Mode substitution: Where shipper can waive PFF safely, convert to Van with insulated blankets and a waiver on file.
- Later (EOD)
- Pre-book Friday/Saturday: Cover Saturday morning PFF pickups by 16:00 today. Secure Sunday returns for Reefer assets ex-ATL/CLT/JAX to keep drivers sticky.
- Route design: Shift any WV/MD freight to VA/NC routing via I-81/I-77 with +60–180 minutes transit pad. Set ETAs accordingly.
- Data hygiene: Attach PFF SOP to every BOL (Bill of Lading); store temp and fuel photos.
💵 Pricing & Bid Targets (All-In)
- Dry Van (DV)
- National buy: $2.20–$2.40/mi; Southeast outbound: $2.30–$2.60/mi; ATL → OH/PA: $2.45–$2.75/mi (add $0.05–$0.12 hazard if delivery north of I-70).
- National sell: $2.45–$2.75/mi; Southeast: $2.60–$2.95/mi; ATL → OH/PA: $2.80–$3.10/mi.
- Tactics: 30–60 min quote clocks; flexible pickup windows shave $0.03–$0.05/mi; add $75–$150 weather-handling flat when routing via I-81/I-77.
- Reefer (RFP)
- PFF buy: $2.95–$3.25/mi; Non-PFF buy: $2.70–$2.95/mi.
- PFF sell: $3.25–$3.65/mi; Non-PFF sell: $2.95–$3.30/mi.
- Lane targets:
- JAX → ATL (PFF): Buy $3.15–$3.45, Sell $3.50–$3.90.
- MIA → ATL (northbound): Pre-book buy $3.10–$3.40, Sell $3.40–$3.80.
- Accessorials: PFF surcharge $150–$300 or $0.12–$0.18/mi; continuous temp monitoring required.
- Flatbed (FB)
- Buy: $2.20–$2.40/mi (Midwest/South).
- Sell: $2.40–$2.60/mi.
- Tactics: Bundle 2–3 loads per truck Thurs–Sat; push weekend options; keep tarping simple where possible to avoid weather holds.
- Heavy/OD
- Buy: $2.35–$2.55/mi plus permits/escorts.
- Sell: $2.65–$2.95/mi; lock permits early; verify escort coverage in WV/MD before committing.
Note: Market averages today — Van posted $2.15 vs paid $2.26; Reefer posted $2.57 vs paid $2.70; Flatbed posted=paid $2.36. Price off paid behavior in impacted corridors.
🗺️ Regional and Lane Plays
- Southeast (FL/GA/AL) – Primary opportunity
- Focus: PFF Reefer out of North FL/SE GA; short-haul DV in ATL radius.
- Lanes: JAX → ATL; JAX → BNA; SAV → CLT (Reefer PFF). Pre-book return reefer freight ATL → JAX/SAV to retain assets.
- Appalachia (WV/MD) – Avoid/Detour
- Status: Blizzard conditions; carriers will bypass. Expect rejections and cancellations on I-68/US-40.
- Detour: Re-route via I-81/I-77 through VA/NC; add 1–3 hours transit; price hazard premium.
- Great Lakes (MI/WI/IL) – Wind/Icing
- Impact: Capacity avoidance pushes tightness into OH/IN/PA. Pull capacity from downstate IL/IN for Chicago burbs with wind buffers.
- Midwest Flatbed (IL/IN/OH/IA) – Margin zone
- Play: Steel/lumber/machinery with flexible windows. Offer 2–3 day blocks. Keep buys ≤$2.30; sell $2.45–$2.60.
- Texas/Southwest
- Van/FB: Pre-buy today for Fri pickups at today’s softer levels before weekend rebalancing.
🧊 Reefer PFF SOP (Protect From Freeze)
- Before pickup
- Set-point & tolerance in BOL (e.g., “35°F, ±2°F; continuous run”).
- Driver attestations: Fuel ≥¾ at PU; reefer serviced within 90 days; unit heater functional.
- At pickup
- Photo set: Reefer control panel (set-point + supply/return), fuel gauge, first temp strip on pallet, door seal.
- Seal control: Record seal numbers and shipper seal policy.
- In transit
- Monitoring: Hourly temp logs or telematics screenshot on depart, mid-run, and 2 hours pre-DL.
- Routing: Avoid long mountain holds; pre-plan fuel at warm stations where possible.
- At delivery
- Photos: Final temp screen and seal condition; note pulp temp checks if required.
🛡️ Risk, Fraud, and Compliance
- FMCSA phishing alert (Credential theft)
- Protocol: Call the phone-on-file for MC (Motor Carrier) verification; never click emailed bank-change links; store call notes/screenshots in the load file.
- HOS waiver (40 states)
- Use-case: Only for emergency relief (food, fuel, supplies) into impacted zones. Document applicability on rate con. Do not promise transit cuts on non-qualifying freight.
- Contract riders
- Weather clauses: Add explicit hazard/delay language through Monday; require pre-approval for weather layovers/detention on short-hauls with tight docks.
- Cargo control
- Wind risk: Decline high-profile/lightweight DV loads on high-wind corridors; or price with high-risk premium and add securement requirements.
🔌 Ops and Tech Tactics
- DFM (Digital Freight Matching) triage
- Auto-cover standard FB and DV backhauls to free humans for PFF and hazard lanes. Set max auto-bid at paid-5¢ for DV, paid-8¢ for Reefer non-PFF.
- Carrier harvesting
- Time-of-day edge: Best Reefer buys mid-morning before lunch; re-bid unawarded posts at +$0.05/mi near 15:00 to catch late-day capitulation.
- Fallout control
- Two-deep coverage on PFF. Keep a shadow carrier with soft hold until first check-in clears.
📈 KPI Targets and Cadence
- Coverage timing: 70% of PFF covered by 10:30 local; 85% by 14:00.
- Gross margin: DV 12–16%; Reefer PFF 14–18%; FB 10–14%; Heavy 12–16%.
- On-time: ≥95% PU/DEL; Zero temperature claims.
- Fallout: ≤4% on PFF; ≤6% DV/FB.
🧠 Behavioral Edges You Can Monetize
- Posted-price anchoring: Many brokers will quote posted averages; use real paid comps to win first and avoid afternoon surges.
- Northbound aversion: Carriers overprice or avoid Great Lakes/Appalachia; pay a small hazard premium now to avoid larger Friday spikes.
- Asset stickiness: Offer same-day reloads within 150–300 miles for Reefer to keep top carriers loyal during the 48-hour PFF window.
📞 Scripts That Close
- Reefer PFF Price Reality
- “Boards show $2.57, but carriers are clearing $2.70 because of the freeze window. We’re quoting to what actually moves, adding documented PFF controls—set-point on the BOL, continuous monitoring, and photo logs—so your freight doesn’t sit.”
- ATL → Columbus DV (Pre-book Today)
- “Drivers are hesitating to run toward the Great Lakes system. We can still secure vetted capacity this morning at today’s rates. By tomorrow, expect hazard adders or refusals. Locking today avoids the Friday premium.”
- Flatbed Certainty Offer
- “Flatbed is balanced—posted equals paid at $2.36. If you can bundle 2–3 loads with flexible windows, we’ll hold pricing through the weekend and improve your on-time without surprises.”
🧮 Quick Heuristics
- Hazard premium guardrail: Add $0.05–$0.10/mi for destinations north of I-70 when storms are active, cap at $250 on sub-500 mile runs.
- Short-haul density rule: If a PFF load is <350 miles, target total all-in ≥$1,100; below that, fallout risk rises sharply.
- Quote clocks: 45 minutes for Reefer PFF, 60 minutes for DV, 90 minutes for FB blocks.
🚚 Carrier Sourcing Shortlist
- Reefer PFF: Carriers advertising heater kits and continuous logging; priority within 150 miles of JAX/SAV/TLH. Offer return options to keep them in the money loop.
- Van into Midwest: Harvest Reefer carriers seeking dry reloads; offer fast detention approvals and named receivers.
- Flatbed blocks: Carriers with >120 miles average deadhead in last 7 days; fix them with 2–3 day work to raise utilization.
📦 LTL/Partial Spillover
- Action: Offer partials consolidation for shippers affected by LTL (Less Than Truckload) network delays in Great Lakes/Appalachia. Price at 60–70% of full truckload for 12–18 linear feet with faster transit than disrupted LTL.
🎯 What Great Brokers Do Today
- Lead with paid comps, not posted illusions.
- Pre-book northbound before lunch; detour WV/MD automatically.
- Over-document PFF to eliminate claim risk while charging the premium.
- Lock flatbed blocks while the market is at equilibrium.
- Apply HOS waiver only where eligible and sell the speed, not the shortcut.
📅 This Day in History
1818: Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte ascends to the thrones of Sweden and Norway.
1917: The Congress of the United States passes the Immigration Act of 1917 over President Woodrow Wilson's veto.
1918: SS Tuscania is torpedoed off the coast of Ireland; it is the first ship carrying American troops to Europe to be torpedoed and sunk.
💭 Quote of the Day
"The only way to do great work is to love what you do."
— Steve Jobs