📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Sunday, February 22, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The freight market is experiencing a significant weekend volume contraction, with total available spot loads dropping to 119,714—down sharply from 198,639 just one week ago. Despite this volume drop, the overall market average rate remains robust at $2.31/mile, indicating that carriers are successfully holding the line on pricing amidst tightening driver pools. A major catalyst for this capacity squeeze is the escalating federal crackdown on non-domiciled CDLs, highlighted by a recent audit revealing a 20% compliance failure rate in Illinois, which is immediately sidelining drivers in the Midwest. Concurrently, sudden Freeze Warnings across Northern Florida and Southeast Georgia are triggering urgent 'Protect From Freeze' (PFF) requirements, creating extreme regional volatility in the temperature-controlled sector and forcing brokers to aggressively secure specialized capacity.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Freeze Warnings and Fire Weather Watches (Northern Florida and Southeast Georgia (FL, GA)): Sub-freezing temperatures (as low as 25°F) are threatening early agricultural yields and requiring immediate Protect From Freeze (PFF) protocols for dry van and reefer freight. Concurrent Red Flag warnings with wind gusts up to 45 mph are creating blow-over risks for empty trailers along I-75 and I-95.
- Heavy Freezing Spray and Gale Warnings (Lake Superior Corridors (MI, WI)): Rapid ice accretion and severe winds are creating hazardous conditions near northern Great Lakes freight corridors. While primarily a maritime threat, the associated coastal freezing and 40 kt wind gusts will slow truck transit along US-41 and northern I-75 routing.
- Pacific Northwest Coastal Storms (Oregon Coast (OR)): Severe south winds with gusts up to 55 kt are battering the coastal highways. This presents significant blow-over risks for high-profile vehicles along US-101 and will delay regional distribution connecting to the I-5 corridor.
⛈️ Weather Impact Cascade
- Immediate Operational Impact: Sunday night through Monday morning represents the highest-risk operational window for the Southeast freeze event. Georgia's forecast shows 44°F on Monday with NW winds 16-29 mph — while the daytime high is manageable, overnight lows in Northern Georgia and Northern Florida may remain near or below freezing based on the active alert indicating temperatures as low as 25°F. Carriers transiting I-75 southbound should be aware of potential 45 mph crosswind gusts (Red Flag warning) creating blow-over risk for high-profile and empty trailers. In the Pacific Northwest, Oregon shows persistent south winds of 26-40 mph on Sunday and light rain with SSW winds 22-34 mph continuing through Monday-Tuesday, sustaining disruption on US-101 and coastal connector routes to I-5. In the Great Lakes corridor, Michigan forecasts show snow showers through the week with temperatures as low as 14°F on Monday, reinforcing the Lake Superior freezing spray and gale warning (WX3592F409) impact on northern freight corridors.
- Secondary Market Effects: The Southeast freeze, though brief, will have secondary effects on the dry van market as shippers who cannot secure reefer capacity delay shipments or reroute freight. This delay accumulation may create a brief mid-week volume surge on standard dry van lanes in the Southeast as held freight releases simultaneously. In the Midwest, the CDL audit fallout will drive some shippers to extend lead times or pre-book capacity further in advance than normal, which could create unusual mid-week activity on the spot board as shippers who typically book same-day begin booking 2-3 days ahead.
- Regional Spillover Analysis: The Southeast freeze is creating a northbound capacity pull that may tighten reefer availability in the Mid-Atlantic (Virginia, Carolinas) as equipment repositions south. Shippers in Charlotte and Raleigh who rely on reefer capacity for outbound produce or perishables should be aware that their local equipment pool is being drawn toward the emergency zone. The Oregon coastal storm, with winds forecast at 26-40 mph on Sunday and sustained disruption through Tuesday, may delay freight connecting from coastal Oregon to the I-5 mainline, creating downstream delays into California and Nevada markets. As Oregon clears by Wednesday (forecast shows sunny, 40°F with W winds 9-14 mph), expect a brief flush of held freight onto the I-5 southbound corridor.
- Recovery Timeline: Southeast freeze: Based on forecast data, Georgia temperatures reach 52°F by Tuesday and 66°F by Wednesday. The acute PFF requirement is likely to expire by Monday evening or Tuesday morning. Full operational normalization for the Southeast is expected by Wednesday. Oregon coastal disruption: Forecast shows clearing by Wednesday (sunny, 40°F, light winds), meaning I-5 connectivity should normalize by Wednesday-Thursday. Great Lakes/Michigan: Snow showers persist through the entire 5-day forecast window with no clear recovery indicated, suggesting sustained disruption to northern Great Lakes freight corridors through at least Thursday. Wisconsin similarly shows persistent snow through Thursday with no clear clearing window.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Energy markets remain volatile, but the stabilization of retail diesel at $3.71 provides carriers with predictable fuel surcharges, shifting their negotiation focus entirely to linehaul rates and driver detention compensation.
- Carrier Financial Health: The ongoing federal audits of CDL programs are disproportionately impacting smaller carriers who rely on non-domiciled drivers, accelerating market consolidation and reducing the pool of cheap, marginal capacity.
- Economic Indicators: A sharp drop in weekend spot market volume suggests shippers are successfully routing more freight through primary routing guides, though the high average spot rate ($2.31/mile) indicates that when freight does hit the spot market, it is urgent and expensive.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
Federal Audit Exposes 20% Failure Rate in Illinois Non-Domiciled CDL Program 🔗:
This is a massive capacity disruptor for the Midwest. With 1 in 5 sampled licenses failing federal requirements, brokers must anticipate an immediate contraction in the driver pool as carriers sideline non-compliant drivers to avoid severe FMCSA penalties. Expect localized rate spikes out of the Chicago market and increased importance on rigorous carrier vetting to avoid co-liability in compliance failures.
-
FMCSA Pushes for Industry Input on Safety Advisory Committees 🔗:
As nominations close for the MCSAC and MRB, the FMCSA is signaling a continued aggressive stance on roadway safety and driver medical qualifications. Brokers should use this as a talking point with shippers to explain why 'cheap capacity' is disappearing from the market; regulatory floors are rising, and compliant carriers will continue to command premium rates.
-
Industry Watchdogs Highlight FMCSA Resource Constraints for Fraud Prevention 🔗:
With only $500M reportedly left for safety initiatives and fraud prevention, federal resources are stretched thin. For brokers, this means the burden of preventing double-brokering, identity theft, and cargo theft falls entirely on internal compliance teams. Carrier identity verification must be heightened, especially when sourcing capacity in loose markets where fraudulent actors typically operate.
News Impact Timeline
- Immediate Operational Reality: Today and tomorrow, the Illinois CDL audit fallout is the dominant operational disruptor in the Midwest. Carriers are actively pulling non-compliant drivers from service to avoid FMCSA penalties. Brokers covering loads out of Chicago and Northern Illinois should assume reduced carrier acceptance rates and higher bounce rates on tenders to carriers with unknown compliance status. The PFF emergency in the Southeast requires immediate action — any delay in sourcing temperature-controlled capacity for at-risk freight extends the window of shipper exposure to freeze damage liability.
- 3-Day Market Implications: By Wednesday, the CDL audit impact will have matured into a more visible market reality — carriers with full compliance will have captured a disproportionate share of available loads and will begin raising rates more aggressively, knowing their non-compliant competitors are sidelined. Expect Chicago outbound rates to show a more pronounced upward trend by Wednesday-Thursday. The FMCSA advisory committee nominations (ALERT_1) signal continued regulatory pressure — brokers should begin updating their compliance communication templates now rather than reacting when new rules are finalized.
- Week-Ahead Positioning: By next weekend, the market will likely show the Southeast stabilizing at post-freeze normal rates, the Midwest showing structurally tighter capacity than this time last week, and the Pacific Northwest returning to normal operational patterns. The overarching trend for the week ahead is that compliant, well-vetted carriers will continue to capture an outsized share of available freight as the regulatory floor rises. Brokers who have invested in carrier compliance verification will find their carrier networks are better positioned than those who relied on volume over quality.
- Regulatory Compliance Impacts: The 20% CDL failure rate in Illinois is not isolated — it signals that the FMCSA's broader crackdown on non-domiciled CDL programs will likely extend to other states with similar license structures. Brokers should treat the Illinois audit as a preview and begin reviewing their carrier panels for non-domiciled CDL exposure across all regions, not just the Midwest. Additionally, with FMCSA resources reportedly stretched (ALERT_7), the burden of fraud and identity verification falls entirely on brokers — double-brokering risk is elevated in any market where cheap capacity suddenly appears to fill a void left by sidelined non-compliant carriers.
🔍 Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Real-time data shows a massive 40% drop in available loads compared to last week (119k vs 198k), yet average rates have climbed to $2.31/mile. This divergence indicates that the freight remaining on the spot board is highly urgent, specialized, or routing into undesirable markets.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is critically tight in Illinois due to CDL compliance audits, and in Florida/Georgia due to sudden freeze warnings. Conversely, outbound capacity from the Northeast is loosening as carriers look to escape the aftermath of recent winter storms.
- Technology Disruptions: The increasing reliance on automated compliance monitoring tools is becoming a competitive necessity for brokers, as manual vetting cannot keep pace with the rapid revocation of non-compliant CDLs and federal safety audits.
Demand Shift Indicators
- Regional Demand Predictions: The Southeast will experience a two-phase demand pattern this week. Phase 1 (Sunday night through Tuesday): Acute inbound demand for reefer and PFF-capable equipment as shippers protect freeze-vulnerable freight. Phase 2 (Wednesday onward): A likely surge in outbound agricultural freight from Northern Florida and Southern Georgia as growers move rescued crops northbound, potentially generating a brief northbound rate spike on the ATL-Charlotte and Jacksonville-Atlanta corridors. The Midwest will experience sustained outbound rate pressure through the week as the CDL audit fallout continues to shrink the compliant driver pool — this is a structural shift, not a temporary disruption.
- Seasonal Transition Analysis: The current market is showing an unusual early-season pattern. Typically, late February in the Southeast sees gradual pre-spring produce movement building slowly. The freeze event is compressing what would normally be a 3-4 week demand ramp into a 48-72 hour emergency window. This creates higher peak rates but a shorter duration opportunity than a normal seasonal build. In the Midwest, the CDL audit is accelerating what would have been a gradual spring capacity tightening as construction season approaches — brokers should expect the Midwest to be structurally tighter earlier than historical seasonal norms.
- Economic Leading Indicators: The high average spot rate ($2.31/mile) despite a 40% load volume drop is a strong leading indicator that shippers are successfully routing more freight through primary guides but are paying significant premiums when those guides fail. This pattern typically precedes a near-term increase in contract rate renegotiations as shippers seek to lock in capacity commitments before spot market conditions worsen. Diesel holding at $3.71/gallon provides carriers a stable cost floor, reducing their incentive to accept below-market loads and sustaining the rate floor.
- Capacity Flow Predictions: Reefer equipment currently being pulled into the Southeast for the freeze emergency will likely begin repositioning northward by mid-week as the weather event clears. This repositioning may create a brief window of loose reefer capacity in the Mid-Atlantic and Midwest by Thursday-Friday. Flatbed equipment in the Southeast may absorb some of the construction season staging demand that was delayed by weekend weather, creating a moderate tightening in that sector later in the week. Van capacity in the Northeast, currently loosening as carriers escape post-storm conditions, is likely to remain softer than other regions through mid-week.
👥 Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retailers are scrambling to adjust routing guides in the Southeast as sudden freeze warnings threaten temperature-sensitive inventory, forcing a shift from dry vans to reefers for goods normally shipped dry.
- Manufacturing: Midwest manufacturing output is facing outbound delays as the local driver pool shrinks due to the Illinois CDL audits, forcing shippers to extend lead times or pay spot premiums.
- Agriculture: The Florida and Georgia freeze warnings are a critical threat to early produce. Expect an immediate surge in urgent outbound reefer demand as growers attempt to move harvested crops before spoilage occurs.
- Automotive: Auto parts suppliers in the Midwest are experiencing transit delays as flatbed and specialized capacity is absorbed by early construction staging and heavy haul projects paying premium rates.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast
The Southeast has rapidly become the most volatile freight region today due to a convergence of extreme weather alerts. Widespread Freeze Warnings across Northern Florida and Southeast Georgia are threatening early agricultural yields and forcing immediate Protect From Freeze (PFF) protocols for standard freight. Simultaneously, Red Flag warnings with 45 mph wind gusts are creating hazardous driving conditions. This is causing a severe capacity imbalance: carriers are reluctant to enter the region without premium rates due to the weather risks, while shippers are desperate for temperature-controlled equipment to rescue produce and protect sensitive retail goods.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA → Jacksonville, FL:
This lane is driving straight into the heart of the Freeze and Red Flag warning zones. Capacity is hesitant to take this southbound route due to 45 mph crosswinds on I-75 and the sudden drop in temperatures requiring PFF protocols for goods that normally ship in standard dry vans. Demand is surging as Florida distributors urgently restock ahead of the freeze.
Macon, GA → Charlotte, NC:
This outbound lane from the freeze zone is experiencing a surge in urgent agricultural and nursery freight. Growers are attempting to move vulnerable plants and early produce out of the sub-freezing temperatures. Capacity is tight as local equipment is quickly absorbed by the highest bidders.
🚨 Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Outbound Florida/Georgia (Reefer/PFF Van)
- Outbound Chicago/Illinois (Van - due to CDL driver shortages)
- Inbound Pacific Northwest (Van - due to coastal storm delays)
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Severe reefer shortages in the Southeast due to freeze warnings; structural driver shortages in the Midwest due to FMCSA CDL compliance audits.
Opportunity Zones:
- Outbound Northeast (Loose capacity as carriers escape winter storm aftermath)
- Southwest to Midwest (High demand for compliant carriers willing to enter heavy enforcement zones)
🎯 Strategic Recommendations for Today
💼 For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Educate customers on the dual threats in the market today: the sudden Southeast freeze requiring immediate PFF upgrades, and the Midwest CDL audits that are structurally removing drivers from the road. Emphasize that ETA's rigorous carrier vetting protects them from compliance risks.
Action: Proactively contact all customers with freight touching the Southeast to confirm PFF requirements. Reach out to Midwest shippers to offer reliable, fully-vetted capacity as their routing guides fail.
🚛 For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Aggressively source reefer capacity in the Southeast. For the Midwest, focus on mid-size to large fleets with proven compliance records to avoid fallout from the ongoing CDL audits.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the drop in overall spot volume (down to 119k loads) to negotiate better rates on standard dry van freight in non-weather impacted regions, reminding carriers that overall market opportunities are shrinking.
📞 Customer Communication Scripts
Southeast Shipper Requiring Pff Or Temperature-Controlled Capacity Today
Opening Script: "Hi [Customer Name], this is [Your Name] at ETA. I'm reaching out because we have active Freeze Warnings in Northern Florida and Southeast Georgia right now, with temperatures dropping as low as 25°F overnight. Any freight you have moving southbound into Florida or sitting in Northern Georgia tonight is at risk if it's not under Protect From Freeze protocols. We're already seeing reefer capacity disappear from the market in real time — I want to make sure your freight is covered before the remaining equipment is absorbed."
Value Proposition: ETA has already identified and pre-qualified reefer carriers in the upper Southeast corridor who are positioned to move tonight. You won't have to scramble on the open spot market where capacity is already critically short and carriers are demanding significant premiums.
Urgency Creator: Based on the 5-day forecast, Georgia warms to 66°F by Wednesday and Florida recovers to 70°F — but tonight and Monday morning represent the highest freeze risk window. The carriers covering this freight are being booked right now. This window is approximately 24-48 hours.
Objection Handler: If the customer says 'we'll just use our standard dry van carrier': Respond — 'I understand the instinct to stay with your routing guide, but the issue is that dry van equipment without insulation does not meet PFF requirements. If your freight sustains cold damage tonight, the liability exposure and claim cost will far exceed any rate premium today. We can document the weather alert and the PFF requirement in the load confirmation to protect both of us.'
Midwest Shipper Experiencing Outbound Delays Or Carrier No-Shows Due To Cdl Audit Fallout
Opening Script: "Hi [Customer Name], this is [Your Name] at ETA. I wanted to flag something that may be impacting your outbound freight today. A federal audit just revealed a 20% failure rate in Illinois' non-domiciled CDL program, which means roughly 1 in 5 drivers operating under those licenses is being sidelined right now. If you're seeing carrier cancellations or delayed pickups out of the Chicago market, this is likely why. The good news is ETA pre-screens all carriers for FMCSA compliance, so we can step in with vetted capacity that won't put your shipment — or your compliance record — at risk."
Value Proposition: Using a non-compliant carrier creates co-liability exposure for your business under current FMCSA broker responsibility standards. ETA's carrier vetting process specifically screens for CDL compliance, insurance currency, and safety ratings — giving you documentation that protects you in an audit environment.
Urgency Creator: The driver pool contraction in Illinois is structural, not temporary. Every day that passes, fewer non-compliant drivers are available, which means the remaining compliant carriers are being booked faster. Rates out of Chicago are already climbing. Locking in capacity now versus next week is the difference between market rate and a panic premium.
Objection Handler: If the customer says 'our current carrier has always been reliable': Respond — 'I'm not suggesting they aren't a good carrier — this audit is catching drivers who may not even know their license has an issue. The 20% failure rate means this isn't isolated to bad actors. If you'd like, we can run a quick compliance check on your carrier's active drivers at no cost to you, just to confirm you're protected.'
Standard Shipper Pushing Back On Elevated Spot Rates Given The Overall Load Volume Drop
Opening Script: "Hi [Customer Name], I know what you're probably seeing on your end — the overall number of loads in the spot market dropped about 40% from last week, from roughly 198,000 loads down to around 119,000. Normally that would mean rates go down. But the average spot rate has actually climbed to $2.31 per mile. I want to walk you through why that is, because it directly affects what I can offer you today."
Value Proposition: The freight remaining on the spot market right now is predominantly urgent, specialized, or routing into markets with active weather events or regulatory enforcement zones. Carriers are being highly selective. The cheap capacity that was filling your loads a few weeks ago has been systematically removed from the market by compliance audits and weather repositioning. What you're buying today is reliable, compliant capacity — which has a higher floor.
Urgency Creator: Diesel is holding at $3.71 per gallon, which gives carriers a stable but elevated cost baseline. With the driver pool shrinking due to CDL audits and carriers repositioning around weather, there is no near-term catalyst for rate relief. The shipper who locks in capacity commitments now will be better positioned than one who waits for rates to drop.
Objection Handler: If the customer says 'rates were lower two weeks ago': Respond — 'You're right, and the reason is structural rather than cyclical. Two weeks ago, the CDL audits hadn't hit Illinois yet and the Southeast freeze wasn't on the forecast. Both of those events have permanently removed a segment of cheap capacity from the market. We're not seeing a temporary spike — we're seeing the market repricing to reflect the actual cost of compliant, reliable capacity.'
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
- Compliant capacity is the trade today: Illinois CDL audit fallout is shrinking the Midwest driver pool fast; expect higher bounce/fall-off risk from marginal fleets. Price to the paid anchor where carriers hold leverage and add corridor risk premiums.
- Southeast PFF (Protect From Freeze) is a 24–48 hour sprint: Lock reefers and PFF-capable vans before tonight; document SOPs to mitigate claim risk. Expect brief mid-week van surge as delayed dry releases in FL/GA clear.
- Buy the soft spots, sell the pain: Northeast outbound is loosening; buy near anchors. Sell urgent Midwest outbound and Southeast PFF freight at premiums. Inbound PNW will require weather buffers through Tuesday.
- Use diesel at $3.71/gal to anchor negotiations: Carriers will defend the linehaul; win coverage with schedule certainty, reloads, and documented accessorials rather than trying to push below floor.
📊 Market Anchors You Must Use
- Total available loads: 119,714 | Loads moved today: 7,247 | Market opportunity: $144.9M
- National average rate: $2.31/mi (range $1.57–$2.75) | Diesel (AAA): $3.71/gal
- Van: 18,078 loads | Posted $2.18 | Paid $2.19
- Reefer: 5,791 loads | Posted $2.57 | Paid $2.49
- Flatbed: 50,214 loads | Posted $2.47 | Paid $2.21
- Heavy Haul: 27,034 loads | Posted $2.53 | Paid $2.75
- Specialized: 11,928 loads | Posted $2.42 | Paid $2.67
- LTL/Partial: 6,669 loads | Posted $1.57 | Paid $1.71
🌦 Weather-to-Operations Map (next 24–72 hours)
- Southeast (Northern FL / SE GA) — Freeze + Red Flag winds
- Operational risk: Sub-freezing overnight lows (as low as 25°F), 45 mph gusts on I‑75/I‑95; high blow-over risk for empties.
- Actions:
- Convert at-risk dry to PFF immediately (insulated van or reefer, fuel topped off, no extended dwell).
- Night pickups with confirmed staging/door ready; minimize exposure windows.
- Wind threshold on RC (Rate Confirmation) for high-profile equipment; avoid light/empty moves overnight.
- Pacific Northwest (OR coast) — Gale/Storm
- Operational risk: 26–40+ mph sustained winds, 55 kt gusts; US‑101 disruptions; knock-on delays to I‑5 connectors.
- Actions:
- Route inland when possible, time PU/DEL outside peak gust windows.
- Inbound PNW premiums through Tuesday; plan recovery flush southbound Wed–Thu as weather clears.
- Great Lakes (Lake Superior corridors) — Freezing spray/gales
- Operational risk: 40 kt winds, persistent snow showers MI/WI; slower transits on US‑41/northern I‑75.
- Actions:
- Pad ETAs 6–12 hours, add detour/winter delay language.
- Prioritize seasoned carriers with northern corridor experience; verify winter equipment.
🧭 Where to Buy vs Where to Sell (Today–Wednesday)
- Sell (premium, limited comps):
- Chicago/N. Illinois outbound (Van/Flatbed/Reefer): Compliance-driven driver contraction; quote to paid anchor + corridor premium; pre-verify carrier docs live.
- Southeast PFF lanes (Reefer/PFF Van): Urgent ag rescue and retail protection; service and SOPs over price.
- Inbound PNW (Van/Flatbed): Weather delay exposure; charge risk buffer and time-value premium.
- Buy (near anchors, faster coverage):
- Northeast outbound (Van/Flatbed): Post-storm escape capacity; pair with committed southbound reloads.
- Sunbelt dry loops (TX–LA–MS–AL): Non-impacted corridors; use shrinking load count to negotiate.
- Mid-Atlantic Wed–Thu (Reefer): Brief reposition window as reefers move north after SE freeze.
💵 Pricing Guardrails (anchor to Paid; layer corridor risk)
- Van — Anchor: $2.19/mi (Paid)
- CHI/Midwest outbound (compliance zone): +$0.10–$0.25/mi; add bounce/backup plan on RC.
- Southeast PFF Van: +$0.15–$0.35/mi; include PFF SOPs (fuel top-off, no-break chain, ambient temp checks).
- Northeast outbound (escape loads): −$0.00–$0.05/mi with guaranteed reload south.
- Reefer — Anchor: $2.49/mi (Paid)
- SE PFF emergency (Sun night–Tue AM): +$0.20–$0.50/mi event premium by urgency/mileage; keep hauls short, turns tight.
- Mid-Atlantic reposition (Thu–Fri): −$0.05–$0.10/mi vs anchor for backhauls as capacity loosens briefly.
- Flatbed — Anchor: $2.21/mi (Paid; note Posted $2.47)
- Sunbelt/Midwest staging: +$0.05–$0.15/mi for securement/weather buffers; enforce wind/tarp thresholds.
- OR/PNW inbound: +$0.10–$0.25/mi for wind delays; avoid light/empty crosswinds.
- Specialized — Anchor: $2.67/mi (Paid > Posted by +$0.25)
- Action: Post near paid to avoid instant truck loss; pre-clear escorts/permits and firm schedule.
- Heavy Haul — Anchor: $2.75/mi (Paid > Posted by +$0.22)
- Action: Book early-week starts; detail route plans, permit lead times, and weather contingencies on RC.
- LTL/Partial — Anchor: $1.71/mi (Paid)
- Action: Sell speed/density, minimize touches, prioritize cross-dock certainty.
🚛 Carrier Procurement Playbook
- Targeted sourcing
- Midwest: Mid-size/large fleets with documented FMCSA compliance; verify CDL/MVR and med card recency; avoid heavy non-domiciled exposure.
- Southeast: Reefers and insulated vans with PFF SOP capability; prioritize carriers within 150–300 mi deadhead radius.
- Northeast: Mine escape capacity; hold with published reloads to the Southeast/Mid-South on RC.
- PNW: Inland terminals over coastal; pre-brief wind protocols.
- Verification hardening
- Before dispatch: Driver CDL state/class, med card valid, ELD make/model on FMCSA list, insurance Acord current, VIN plate match.
- Fraud controls: No bank/factoring changes via email; call vendor-of-record. Geo-fence pickup, require truck/plate photo with seeded BOL code.
- Negotiation levers
- Reload on RC, appointment flexibility (2–4 hr windows), detention clarity (start times, caps), weather/detour reimbursement spelled out.
🧩 Customer Strategy & Micro-Scripts
- Southeast PFF conversion (Reefer/PFF Van)
- Open: “Freeze warnings in North FL/SE GA tonight push temps near 25°F; non-PFF moves risk cold damage.”
- Value: “We’ve pre-qualified PFF-capable trucks and will document setpoint, fuel top-off, and temperature checks.”
- Close: “Approve the PFF upgrade now; this 24–48 hour window is where claims happen.”
- Chicago compliance turbulence (Van/Flatbed/Reefer)
- Open: “IL audit sidelined a meaningful slice of drivers; that’s why you’re seeing fall-offs.”
- Value: “We pre-screen for FMCSA/driver compliance and document it—reducing co-liability.”
- Close: “Let’s lock today; compliant carriers are tightening rates mid-week.”
- Rate pushback during volume drop
- Open: “Loads down to 119k, yet paid rates up to $2.31/mi because the freight left on spot is urgent or risky.”
- Value: “You’re buying reliability and compliance as audits and weather pull cheap capacity.”
- Close: “Authorize the corridor premium so we hold a truck that won’t fall off.”
🛣 Lanes To Act On Now
- ATL/Macon, GA → CLT/RDU (Reefer/PFF Van)
- Tactics: Short-haul PFF turns Sun–Tue; strict SOPs; anchor $2.49 + $0.20–$0.40.
- JAX/Valdosta, GA → ATL (Reefer/PFF Van)
- Tactics: Night PU, morning DEL; add wind threshold; surge through Tuesday AM.
- PHL/ALLENTOWN, PA → RIC/CLT (Van)
- Tactics: Buy near $2.19; publish southbound reload to compress buy.
- CHI/Joliet, IL → KC/DFW (Van/Flatbed)
- Tactics: Pre-verify compliance; quote $2.19 + $0.10–$0.20 corridor; stage alternates.
📈 8-Hour Execution Checklist
- Reprice all IL/Midwest outbound to paid anchors + corridor premiums; stage Plan B carriers.
- Launch SE PFF blitz: call down pre-vetted reefers/PFF vans; enforce SOPs in writing on RC.
- Publish reloads on RC for NE escape trucks into SE/Mid-South to buy near anchor.
- Insert weather/delay/TONU clauses on all PNW and Great Lakes moves; pre-authorize detour miles/time.
- Run compliance sweeps on every dispatch today (CDL/MVR/ELD/insurance).
- Proactive ETA resets where winds/snow dictate; prevent escalations with early notices.
🎯 EOD KPI Targets
- SE PFF coverage time: ≤ 45 minutes per load with full SOP documented.
- Midwest fall-off rate: ≤ 3% with alternates pre-staged on critical tenders.
- NE outbound buy vs anchor: ≥ 65% of van buys at $2.19 ± $0.05.
- PNW RCs with weather language: 100% compliance.
- Fraud checks completed: 100% on new carrier setups and bank changes.
🔮 48–72 Hour Outlook (probability-weighted)
- High (75%): SE freeze urgency fades by Tue; mid-week van volume bump as delayed dry ships release simultaneously.
- High (70%): Chicago outbound rates firm Wed–Thu as compliant fleets gain leverage; acceptance improves only with premium and schedule certainty.
- Medium (60%): Thu–Fri Mid-Atlantic/Midwest see a brief pocket of looser reefer capacity as SE event trucks reposition north.
- Medium (55%): PNW southbound flush begins Wed–Thu; short-lived bid-ask softening on I‑5 south.
🛡 Risk Watchlist & Controls
- Double-brokering/identity theft: Elevated in loose NE outbound; enforce live photo + geofenced check calls.
- Wind blow-over: Avoid empty/light runs in SE/PNW; codify wind thresholds on RC.
- Temperature claims: Require temp photos at PU/mid-transit/DEL; fuel receipts attached.
- Co-liability (FMCSA): Document carrier compliance in tender packet; avoid non-domiciled CDL exposure without verification.
- Detention/backlogs: Pre-book tight appointment windows; escalate early when weather slows docks.
📅 This Day in History
1909: The sixteen battleships of the Great White Fleet, led by USS Connecticut, return to the United States after a voyage around the world.
1944: World War II: American aircraft mistakenly bomb the Dutch towns of Nijmegen, Arnhem, Enschede and Deventer, resulting in 800 dead in Nijmegen alone.
2002: Angolan political and rebel leader Jonas Savimbi is killed in a military ambush.
💭 Quote of the Day
"The older you get, the more you understand how your conscience works."
— Criss Jami