📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Sunday, February 08, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
Sunday markets are showing a distinct bifurcation: while overall spot volume has dipped slightly to 107,260 loads, the urgency for temperature-controlled capacity in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic has intensified due to dangerous wind chills and freeze warnings. Reefer paid rates continue to command a significant premium over posted averages as shippers scramble for freeze protection. Conversely, flatbed and standard van markets remain softer with paid rates trailing posted averages, offering brokers leverage to negotiate aggressively on open-deck freight moving away from weather-impacted zones. Operations should prioritize securing reefer capacity immediately for Monday morning dispatches while pushing for margin expansion on standard dry van freight.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Extreme Cold & Wind Chill Warning - Northeast/Mid-Atlantic (PA, NJ, NY, CT, MA (Northeast Region)): Dangerous wind chills to -30F causing equipment issues (gelled fuel) and high refusal rates for inbound freight. Reefer demand for freeze protection is critical.
- High Wind Watch - Wyoming/I-80 Corridor (Southeast Wyoming (WY, Laramie, Platte counties)): Gusts up to 70-80 mph creating extreme blow-over risk for light trailers. Expect closures on I-80/I-25 and significant delays.
- Fire Weather Watch - Colorado Front Range (Northeast Colorado (CO, Weld, Logan counties)): High winds and low humidity creating fire risk; potential for rapid road closures if fires ignite near major routes like I-76.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Stable diesel prices are helping to keep carrier operating costs predictable, though regional spikes may occur in cold-affected areas due to additives.
- Carrier Financial Health: Smaller carriers operating in the Northeast are facing increased maintenance costs due to extreme cold, potentially impacting their availability and reliability.
- Economic Indicators: Consumer demand remains steady, but weather disruptions are likely to cause short-term supply chain bottlenecks in the Northeast retail sector.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
FMCSA Operation SafeDRIVE Removes Nearly 2,000 Drivers 🔗:
The recent removal of ~2,000 drivers for various violations, including English proficiency, will create immediate, albeit localized, capacity tightening. Brokers should verify driver eligibility carefully and expect potential service disruptions on lanes previously serviced by these drivers.
-
New Autonomous Trucking Bridge to Link BNSF and Fort Worth Warehouses 🔗:
This infrastructure development signals a long-term shift towards automation in major hubs. While not an immediate capacity changer, brokers should monitor how this impacts drayage rates and short-haul capacity availability in the Dallas-Fort Worth market.
-
FMCSA Compliance Guide for Truck Owners 🔗:
With increased focus on compliance, smaller carriers may face higher administrative burdens. Brokers can add value by guiding owner-operators through these requirements, fostering loyalty and ensuring a compliant carrier base.
🔍 Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Paid rates for reefer loads are consistently beating posted averages in the Northeast, indicating that load boards are lagging behind real-time urgency. Brokers using historical data alone will underprice freight.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is extremely tight for reefer vans in PA, NY, and NJ due to freeze protection needs. Conversely, flatbed capacity is loose in the Midwest and South.
- Technology Disruptions: The integration of autonomous lanes in Texas (Alert ALERT_5) highlights the growing role of tech in freight movement, potentially squeezing margins on short-haul drayage over time.
👥 Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retailers in the Northeast are rushing to restock ahead of potential weather-related supply chain snarls, driving demand for last-minute van and reefer capacity.
- Manufacturing: Manufacturing output remains steady, but raw material deliveries into the Northeast may be delayed due to weather, potentially impacting production schedules.
- Agriculture: Freeze warnings in the Southeast continue to drive urgent demand for reefer capacity to move produce north, keeping rates elevated on outbound FL and GA lanes.
- Automotive: Auto parts moving via I-80 through Wyoming face significant delay risks due to high winds; brokers should proactively communicate potential disruptions to JIT customers.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Northeast & Mid-Atlantic (PA, NJ, NY, CT, MA)
This region is currently the epicenter of operational disruption and opportunity due to the extreme cold event (Alert WX4FE1822B). The combination of dangerous wind chills and high demand for freeze protection has created a seller's market for carriers with reefer equipment. Inbound capacity is hesitant, driving up rates for loads entering the region, while local moves requiring heat are commanding premium pricing.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA → Philadelphia, PA:
This lane presents a classic weather-driven arbitrage opportunity. Outbound capacity from Atlanta is relatively stable, but demand for goods into the freeze-impacted Northeast is high. Carriers are wary of the destination weather, allowing brokers to charge a premium to shippers while negotiating fair rates with carriers willing to make the run.
Chicago, IL → Elizabeth, NJ:
A high-volume lane connecting two major hubs, currently impacted by the destination's extreme cold. Chicago capacity is generally loose, but carriers are demanding premiums to deliver into the Northeast freeze zone. The spread between van and reefer rates is widening significantly.
🚨 Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Northeast Inbound (PA, NJ, NY) - Reefer/PFF loads
- I-80 Corridor (WY/NE) - All equipment types due to wind closures
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Reefer vans with functioning heater units in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic are in critical short supply.
Opportunity Zones:
- Atlanta to Northeast (Reefer PFF)
- Chicago to East Coast (Reefer PFF)
🎯 Strategic Recommendations for Today
💼 For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Emphasize the severity of the Northeast cold event and the necessity of 'protect from freeze' services to prevent cargo loss. Position ETA as the expert in securing reliable, winter-ready capacity.
Action: Proactively contact customers with temperature-sensitive freight shipping into/out of the Northeast to offer freeze protection solutions before they ask.
🚛 For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Prioritize carriers with reefer units and a proven track record of winter operations. Focus sourcing efforts in the Midwest for inbound Northeast loads.
Negotiation Leverage: For loads moving AWAY from the weather (e.g., Northeast to South), use the driver's desire to escape the cold to negotiate lower rates.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
- Two-speed market: urgent reefer “protect from freeze” (PFF) into the Northeast vs. soft van/flatbed away from weather—shift resources to reefer coverage now
- Capitalize on shipper fear-of-loss psychology for temp-sensitive freight—sell verified protection and reliability over headline rate
- Exploit carrier weather aversion inbound PA/NJ/NY to widen shipper spread while holding carrier buys steady from the Midwest
- Avoid WY I-80/I-25 wind corridors for light/high-profile equipment; detour planning now prevents fall-offs and blow-over incidents
- Keep FSC (Fuel Surcharge) steady with diesel at $3.644/gal; itemize PFF and winterization in linehaul to defend margin transparency
- Tighten carrier vetting post-FMCSA blitz—expect surprise fall-offs; prioritize carriers with clean, recent inspections and winter SOPs
📊 National Pulse (trusted data only)
- Total Loads: 107,260
- Loads Moved: 60,559
- Market Opportunity: $138.5M
- Average Spot Rate: $2.25/mi
- Diesel (AAA national average): $3.644/gal
- Capacity signals: Elevated tender rejections on reefer in weather zones; van/flatbed rejections steady, confirming accessible capacity for standard freight
- Implication: Price aggressively on PFF reefers into the Northeast; expand margins on van/flatbed outbound Midwest/South and on loads moving away from the weather footprint
🌦 Weather-to-Freight Map (24–72h)
- Northeast/Mid-Atlantic extreme cold (PA/NJ/NY/CT/MA)
- Risk: -30°F wind chills, fuel gelling, equipment failures, higher refusal rates, slower docks.
- Plays:
- Pre-commit reefer capacity with PFF and verified heater capability; require continuous mode and temp logs.
- Pad ETAs and add weather clauses (no punitive LDs during declared weather events; pre-set detention/layover).
- Inbound premiums likely through early week; stage reloads southbound to negotiate down carrier asks.
- WY I-80/I-25 High Wind Watch (gusts 70–80 mph)
- Risk: Blow-over hazard for light trailers and empties; expected closures/delays.
- Plays:
- Reroute east via NE/KS when practicable; prohibit empties/high-profile flatbeds.
- Pre-approve detours with customers to avoid surprise accessorial battles.
- CO Front Range Fire Weather Watch
- Risk: Rapid closures if fires ignite near I-76; visibility and detour uncertainty.
- Plays:
- Build alternate routings/backup carriers; time pickups earlier in the day window where possible.
🎯 Profit Plays (do these now)
- Reefer PFF into NE/Mid-Atlantic
- Sell certainty: Heater verification, continuous mode, set-point on BOL, photo/time-stamped temp logs, fuel level SOPs.
- Source in the Midwest and Mid-South: Carriers will quote hazard premiums; counter with guaranteed southbound reload plans and fuel-additive reimbursements.
- Dry Van margin capture (Midwest/South)
- Anchor buys near the national average and sell to shippers on reliability + proactive weather buffers for NE deliveries.
- Bundle 2–3 load plans to reduce carrier deadhead and justify holding rates flat while you expand spread.
- Flatbed leverage (Midwest/South)
- Weekend/early-week bundles and dock flexibility win discounts.
- Avoid wind corridors; into cold zones, convert to tarped/secure-heavy configurations only if shipper pays risk/time premiums.
🛣 Lane Tactics That Pay
- Atlanta, GA → Philadelphia, PA (Van/Reefer, PFF ideal)
- Why it works: Outbound ATL capacity is stable; destination weather aversion lifts shipper sell.
- Play: Price PFF with documented protection; promise a southbound reload to hold the buy.
- Chicago, IL → Elizabeth, NJ (Van/Reefer)
- Why it works: CHI capacity accessible; NE cold drives inbound reluctance.
- Play: Offer additive reimbursement + weather clause; pre-arrange Elizabeth-area egress to Philly/Balt/DC or immediate reposition south.
- NE → South backhauls (all equipment)
- Why it works: Drivers want out of the cold.
- Play: Negotiate down buys using “escape-the-cold” psychology and guaranteed reload certainty.
💵 Pricing & Margin Control (rate-safe guidance)
- Anchor to trusted baseline: Use the $2.25/mi national average to frame buys; expand spreads where capacity is loose (Midwest/South) and itemize weather-driven services instead of inflating FSC.
- Itemize, don’t hide: Separate PFF, winterization, and weather-contingency charges in linehaul to de-risk claims and reduce shipper pushback.
- Defend value with deliverables: Temp logs, continuous-mode verification, additive receipts, and photo documentation justify premium service pricing.
🧭 72-Hour Positioning
- Today
- Lock Monday AM reefers for NE PFF. Pre-book vans Mon–Wed out of IL/IN/OH.
- Pre-clear weather clauses with NE receivers; reslot tight docks to midday when possible.
- Next 48 hours
- Cycle reefer assets locally around major hubs (CHI/IND/CMH) to stay flexible for late-breaking PFF tenders.
- Keep WY detour plans live; communicate pro-actively on any I-80/I-25 exposure.
- By 72 hours
- Expect lingering NE tightness early-week; slight normalization mid-week if temperatures moderate.
- Flatbed remains buyer’s market barring localized wind-driven pockets.
🛡 Risk Controls & Compliance (post-FMCSA blitz)
- Carrier vetting (non-negotiable)
- Verify CDL/ELD status, recent inspection history, English proficiency indicators, insurance active dates, IFTA/IRP.
- Call-back verification to phone-on-file; reject bank detail changes sent via email links.
- Winter SOPs
- Fuel additive receipts for NE runs, continuous-mode confirmation, no doors-open >60 seconds in sub-freezing temps, and ETD/ETA buffers.
- “No punitive LDs for declared closures” and pre-approved detention/layover in your rate confirmations.
- WY/CO exposure
- Prohibit empties/light trailers through wind corridors; require dispatcher sign-off on reroutes.
📈 KPI Targets (today → 72h)
- Coverage: ≥70% of Monday AM reefer PFF tenders covered by midday; ≥40% of Mon–Wed vans pre-booked by end of day.
- GM% (gross margin): Van 12–16%; Reefer PFF 14–20%; Flatbed 10–14%.
- Service: On-time ≥95%; Fall-offs ≤3%; Temp-control claims = 0 (with documented SOPs).
🧩 Competitive Angle
- Digital load boards are lagging on PFF urgency. Quote above posted when PFF applies and back it with deliverables (logs/photos). Competitors anchored to stale posted rates will underprice, fail to cover, and backtrack—use that to win incumbency on reliability.
🗣 Quick Win Talk Tracks
- PFF Shipper (Northeast-bound):
- “With extreme wind chills, standard reefers won’t cut risk. We’ll lock heater-capable units in continuous mode, capture temp/photo logs, and include weather clauses so your delivery windows are protected without surprise fees.”
- Reefer Carrier (Midwest pickup → NE):
- “We’ll cover winterization costs and guarantee a southbound reload to get you out of the cold. Weather clauses remove LD risk. Let’s keep your deadhead low and your day predictable.”
- Van Shipper (Midwest outbound):
- “Capacity is accessible today. If we stage your Mon–Wed now, we’ll hold today’s soft pricing and shield you from early-week Northeast weather repricing.”
📚 Terminology Edge
- PFF (Protect From Freeze): Temperature-control service to prevent product from freezing; often requires heater-capable reefers in continuous mode with temp logs.
- OTRI (Outbound Tender Rejection Index): Measures the rate at which carriers reject contract tenders; rising OTRI = tightening capacity.
- FSC (Fuel Surcharge): A line-item that adjusts for diesel price changes; keep it steady when diesel is stable.
- HOS (Hours of Service): FMCSA rules regulating driver on-duty/driving hours; monitor for any temporary waivers during declared emergencies.
📅 This Day in History
1587: Mary, Queen of Scots is executed on suspicion of having been involved in the Babington Plot to murder her cousin, Queen Elizabeth I.
1837: Richard Johnson becomes the first and only Vice President of the United States chosen by the Senate.
1879: England's cricket team, led by Lord Harris, is attacked in a riot during a match in Sydney.
💭 Quote of the Day
"Love yourself with the same intensity you would use to pull yourself up if you were hanging off a cliff."
— Kamal Ravikant