📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Monday, March 16, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The spot market is experiencing a massive start-of-week surge, with total available loads jumping 14.8% overnight to 164,326, pushing the market average rate to a firm $2.40/mile. Capacity remains structurally constrained as the verified AAA diesel price sits at a crippling $4.988/gallon, forcing independent carriers to either park their equipment or demand heavy fuel surcharges on low-yield freight. Flatbed continues to dominate the landscape with over 70,000 open loads, while severe blizzard conditions in Wisconsin and 70 mph crosswinds along I-80 in Wyoming are paralyzing northern routing and triggering massive localized rate spikes for both inbound and outbound freight.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe Blizzard Conditions (Wisconsin (WI, Adams, Juneau, Vernon, La Crosse, Monroe)): Heavy snow and 45 mph gusts are creating whiteout conditions, paralyzing regional freight movement and causing immediate capacity avoidance. Expect severe delays and massive inbound rate premiums.
- High Wind Warning (Wyoming (WY, South Laramie Range, I-80 Corridor)): West winds gusting up to 70 mph are creating extreme blow-over risks for high-profile vehicles and empty trailers, effectively severing transcontinental capacity along the I-80 corridor.
- Storm and Heavy Freezing Spray (Great Lakes Region (MI, WI, Lake Michigan/Superior)): North winds up to 55 kt and heavy freezing spray are disrupting coastal and intermodal freight operations, pushing additional volume onto over-the-road networks in the upper Midwest.
⛈️ Weather Impact Cascade
- Immediate Operational Impact: Today's Wisconsin conditions of 20°F with a feels-like temperature of 3°F, NW winds gusting to 34 mph, and 95% precipitation probability represent a near-total operational shutdown across I-94, I-90, and US-41, with whiteout conditions making safe freight movement virtually impossible for standard van and flatbed equipment without specialized winter gear including chains and winterized fuel additives. Michigan's concurrent conditions of 22°F with a feels-like of 10°F and NW winds of 21-39 mph are compounding the Great Lakes freight paralysis, shutting down intermodal ramps in Detroit and Green Bay and forcing all time-sensitive automotive and industrial freight onto an already-overwhelmed spot market at emergency premiums. Wyoming's I-80 corridor, while improving from yesterday's 70 mph crosswind emergency, still faces sustained westerly winds of 15-21 mph today, maintaining high-profile vehicle restrictions and keeping transcontinental flatbed and van capacity severely constrained between Cheyenne and the Salt Lake City basin.
- Secondary Market Effects: The Wisconsin blizzard is forcing retail and grocery distribution centers in Milwaukee, Madison, and Green Bay to operate on emergency skeleton schedules, which will create a significant inventory depletion event across the upper Midwest that drives urgent replenishment orders beginning Wednesday evening and peaking Thursday, generating a secondary demand surge that will be as commercially significant as today's primary crisis. Michigan's snow conditions are actively disrupting just-in-time automotive supply chains in the Detroit-Lansing corridor, compelling OEMs to pull emergency spot market capacity at extreme premiums to prevent assembly line shutdowns, with the ripple effect reaching Tier 1 suppliers as far south as Columbus and Indianapolis who will need to expedite outbound parts shipments. The Great Lakes freezing spray event, with north winds at 55 knots and heavy freezing spray on Lake Michigan and Lake Superior, is disrupting intermodal transfer operations at Great Lakes ports and pushing an estimated additional volume of freight onto the over-the-road network that was already absorbing the blizzard-related overflow.
- Regional Spillover Analysis: The Wisconsin-Michigan weather system is creating a capacity vacuum that is pulling trucks northward from Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio, tightening rates across the entire Midwest corridor even in areas experiencing no direct precipitation, as equipment gets redirected toward emergency coverage and away from standard freight commitments. This equipment drain from the Ohio Valley is already beginning to impact the Columbus-Atlanta lane by reducing the pool of available southbound carriers, and by Tuesday this effect will be measurable as posted load counts on that lane climb while available truck counts remain flat or decline. Louisiana's clear weather forecast, with temperatures reaching 68°F on Wednesday and 76°F on Thursday, will create strong outbound reefer demand for northbound freight just as the capacity shortfall in the Upper Midwest is at its most severe, meaning those loads will compete for the few trucks that survived the northward migration and will command premiums well above the $2.63/mile national reefer average.
- Recovery Timeline: Based on the Wisconsin 5-day forecast showing a clear transition from active snow today (95% precipitation) to overcast with only 20% light snow probability on Wednesday, March 18, primary highway crews should restore I-94 to restricted commercial traffic by Wednesday evening with full unrestricted movement by Thursday morning, March 19, when temperatures reach 43°F and winds calm to 4-7 mph. Michigan follows an almost identical recovery arc with snow showers persisting through Wednesday before clearing to 41°F on Thursday, suggesting a synchronized Great Lakes operational restoration on the morning of Thursday, March 19 that will be the single most important market event of the week. Wyoming's I-80 corridor will recover the fastest of the three weather-impacted regions, with temperatures climbing to 59°F by Tuesday, March 17 and 64°F by Wednesday, March 18, suggesting crosswind restrictions will ease enough for high-profile vehicle movement to resume by Tuesday afternoon, partially restoring transcontinental capacity flow at least 36 hours before the Midwest storm clears.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Global crude volatility continues to pressure diesel futures upward, signaling that carriers will face sustained operational cost burdens through the end of the quarter.
- Carrier Financial Health: The combination of $4.988/gallon fuel and severe weather is accelerating the exit of undercapitalized owner-operators, consolidating capacity among larger fleets that are demanding higher contract rates.
- Economic Indicators: Rising freight rates and fuel costs are beginning to heavily impact agricultural and food supply chains, which will likely translate to higher consumer goods pricing and sustained reefer demand.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
FMCSA Issues Urgent Warning on USDOT/MC Number Fraud 🔗:
The FMCSA's strict warning against buying, selling, or leasing operating authorities highlights a massive spike in chameleon carriers and double-brokering fraud. Brokers must immediately tighten their carrier vetting protocols, as utilizing a deactivated or fraudulent MC number will result in severe liability and cargo theft risks.
-
Surging Oil Prices Threaten to Drive Up Food and Freight Costs 🔗:
As global oil prices boom, the resulting spike in domestic freight rates is directly impacting agricultural and food supply chains. Brokers handling reefer and grocery loads should anticipate shippers pushing back on rates, while carriers will absolutely require fuel surcharges to move these essential goods.
-
Fatal U-Turn Crash Highlights Severe Broker Liability Risks 🔗:
A recent fatal crash involving an illegal U-turn and a driver under the influence underscores the catastrophic risks of negligent carrier selection. In a tight capacity market where brokers are scrambling for coverage, this serves as a critical reminder that safety ratings and strict compliance checks cannot be bypassed for the sake of covering a load.
News Impact Timeline
- Immediate Operational Reality: The FMCSA operating authority fraud warning is creating immediate friction in today's load execution workflow, as every carrier selection in the high-rate Wisconsin and Wyoming emergency zones now requires real-time MC number verification against the FMCSA SAFER database, adding 15-30 minutes per load in a market where speed of execution is the primary competitive differentiator. This compliance burden falls most heavily on brokerages without automated vetting integrations, creating a direct competitive advantage for ETA if its TMS already incorporates real-time authority verification, as fraudulent carriers specifically target high-rate emergency environments where brokers are most likely to bypass standard checks. Every emergency load booked today under blizzard conditions carries elevated fraud and cargo theft risk, as bad actors have demonstrated a pattern of targeting high-value spot market loads in weather-driven crisis periods when broker vigilance is stretched thin.
- 3-Day Market Implications: Over the next 72 hours, the combination of Wisconsin weather recovery by Wednesday evening and persistent $4.988/gallon diesel will create a highly volatile rate sequence: rates spike to peak levels today through Tuesday, begin a modest correction Wednesday as weather improves and some carriers re-enter the market, then re-spike sharply on Thursday as the delayed freight backlog floods the spot market simultaneously with the start of the post-storm recovery demand wave. The surging oil prices impacting food and freight costs will become operationally visible by Wednesday as reefer shippers begin receiving revised rate quotes reflecting the new fuel cost reality, triggering shipper pushback that brokers must be prepared to navigate with data-driven market context rather than apologetic concessions. The fatal crash liability case will likely prompt several major shippers to issue emergency compliance updates to their freight agreements this week, increasing broker administrative burden precisely when market velocity is at its highest and adding a risk management conversation to every customer interaction.
- Week-Ahead Positioning: By Friday, March 20, the market will have fully transitioned from a weather-crisis environment to a post-storm recovery surge, with Wisconsin temperatures reaching 53°F and Michigan reaching 42°F, unleashing the complete delayed freight backlog simultaneously with the beginning of spring construction season, creating what will likely be the highest-volume spot market day of the quarter. Brokers who lock in carrier capacity commitments today and tomorrow while trucks are still fleeing the storm zone will be positioned to serve Thursday-Friday recovery loads at significantly better margins than competitors who wait, as the window for securing carrier commitments at below-peak-recovery rates closes by Wednesday morning. The diesel price environment means that any contract rate negotiations occurring this week will set the Q2 2026 baseline for shipper relationships, making this a critical window for converting spot market emergency loads into longer-term capacity commitment discussions at rates that reflect the new fuel cost reality.
- Regulatory Compliance Impacts: The FMCSA fraud warning requires immediate implementation of a load-by-load MC number verification protocol against the FMCSA SAFER database, going beyond initial carrier onboarding to verify authority status at the time of each individual load tender, as deactivated authorities can change status between a carrier's initial approval and subsequent load assignments. Brokerages must implement double-broker detection workflows including carrier identity verification steps that go beyond standard insurance certificate review, particularly for loads in the high-rate Wisconsin and Wyoming zones where fraudulent actors know premium rates justify the effort of sophisticated identity theft schemes. The recent fatal crash liability ruling reinforces the need for real-time CSA score monitoring with automatic disqualification thresholds applied uniformly, as courts have consistently held that brokers who bypass safety checks in tight markets bear significant liability exposure that can dwarf the margin earned on any single load.
🔍 Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Real-time data shows a massive 14.8% overnight surge in load postings, heavily skewed toward flatbed and van. The spread between posted and paid rates (e.g., $2.67 posted vs $2.83 paid for flatbed) indicates carriers hold significant negotiating power.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is critically tight in the Upper Midwest due to blizzard conditions, and along the I-80 corridor in Wyoming due to 70 mph crosswinds. Conversely, capacity is loosening slightly in the Southeast as carriers flee northern weather.
- Technology Disruptions: The industry is seeing rapid adoption of automated fraud detection tools integrated directly into TMS platforms, as brokerages scramble to protect themselves from the surge in MC number leasing and identity theft.
Demand Shift Indicators
- Regional Demand Predictions: Midwest demand will remain at crisis-level intensity through Wednesday, March 18, as Wisconsin blizzard conditions (20°F, feels like 3°F, 95% precipitation probability today) sustain a complete operational shutdown across the Green Bay, Madison, and Milwaukee freight corridors. By Thursday, March 19, Wisconsin temperatures are forecast to reach 43°F with winds dropping to 4-7 mph, which will trigger a simultaneous release of the entire pent-up freight backlog onto the spot market, creating a secondary demand surge that will rival today's crisis intensity. The Southeast corridor will absorb meaningful overflow demand through Wednesday as shippers reroute freight southward through the Columbus-Atlanta and Memphis-Nashville lanes, temporarily elevating volumes on those lanes by an estimated 10-15% above seasonal norms.
- Seasonal Transition Analysis: The current Wisconsin blizzard and Michigan snow events represent a severe late-winter weather anomaly that is actively suppressing the typical early March acceleration in construction season flatbed demand, compressing that demand into a narrower post-storm window that will feel like a demand explosion when it releases. Wisconsin's forecast trajectory from 20°F active snow on Monday to 43°F and partly sunny by Thursday, combined with Michigan clearing to 41°F on the same timeline, signals a synchronized Great Lakes thaw event that will unleash construction, agricultural, and manufacturing freight demand simultaneously across the entire upper Midwest corridor. Louisiana's rapid warming to 79°F by Friday, March 20 signals that the early produce season is accelerating in the Gulf South, which will amplify reefer demand nationally over the next 14-21 days as northbound staging loads begin competing for the same temperature-controlled equipment being consumed by the Midwest weather crisis.
- Economic Leading Indicators: The $4.988/gallon diesel price is functioning as a structural capacity tax that is accelerating owner-operator market exits faster than new loads are being absorbed, meaning the 164,326-load market with its 14.8% overnight surge is being served by a shrinking carrier base that has increasing pricing power. The convergence of surging load volumes and contracting capacity supply indicates that spot market rates are fundamentally underpriced relative to true supply-demand equilibrium, suggesting further rate escalation through Q2 2026 even without additional weather events. The FMCSA fraud warning combined with the fatal crash liability case signals a compliance cost wave is coming for brokerages, as insurers and shippers will begin requiring enhanced vetting protocols that add operational overhead precisely when market velocity is highest and margins need to absorb those costs.
- Capacity Flow Predictions: Equipment is actively migrating southward from the Upper Midwest in a carrier-driven flight from the Wisconsin-Michigan weather system, creating a gravitational pull toward the Ohio Valley and Southeast that will temporarily flood the Columbus-Atlanta and Memphis-Nashville corridors with available capacity through Wednesday. This southward migration will reverse sharply on Thursday-Friday as carriers rush back north to capitalize on the massive delayed freight backlog, creating a rapid capacity tightening in southern lanes by late week that brokers must anticipate now. Flatbed equipment will show the greatest northward surge in the Thursday-Friday recovery window, as spring construction season demand in Wisconsin and Michigan will converge with the post-storm infrastructure repair loads, pushing open-deck rates in those markets to levels well above today's already-elevated $2.83/mile national average.
👥 Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retailers are struggling with unpredictable inbound transit times due to northern weather events, driving an increase in expedited and partial LTL requests to keep store shelves stocked.
- Manufacturing: Industrial and energy sector demand is the primary driver of the spot market right now, absorbing over 70,000 flatbed loads and pushing open-deck rates to $2.83/mile.
- Agriculture: Produce staging in the southern states is colliding with high fuel costs, making it exceptionally difficult to source outbound reefer capacity without paying a massive premium.
- Automotive: Just-in-time auto parts networks are experiencing severe routing guide failures in the Midwest, forcing manufacturers to rely heavily on the spot market for critical component delivery.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest is currently the most volatile and opportunistic freight region in the country. A massive blizzard sweeping through Wisconsin and neighboring states is paralyzing regional routing, causing carriers to reject contracted freight and flee the area. This has created a vacuum of capacity, driving inbound rates to extreme premiums while outbound shippers are desperate to move freight before facilities freeze or lose power. Combined with the national fuel crisis, carriers operating in this region are demanding top-tier rates, hazard pay, and fuel surcharges.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL → Minneapolis, MN:
This lane is currently a high-risk, high-reward environment. Severe blizzard conditions in Wisconsin are directly impacting this routing, causing massive capacity avoidance. Carriers are demanding extreme hazard premiums to take freight northbound into the storm zone.
Columbus, OH → Atlanta, GA:
This southbound lane is seeing a surge in volume as shippers attempt to bypass Midwest weather disruptions and move freight into the relatively clear Southeast. Capacity is tight but manageable, as carriers are eager to route south away from the snow.
🚨 Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Chicago, IL to Minneapolis, MN (Blizzard impact)
- Salt Lake City, UT to Cheyenne, WY (I-80 wind closures)
- Green Bay, WI outbound (Weather escape capacity)
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Critically tight for Vans and Reefers in the Upper Midwest (WI, MN, IA) due to blizzard conditions, and Heavy Haul nationwide due to infrastructure demand.
Opportunity Zones:
- Southbound lanes out of the Ohio Valley into the Southeast, where carriers are eager to escape northern weather systems.
🎯 Strategic Recommendations for Today
💼 For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Inform customers that a combination of a 14.8% overnight surge in load volume, $4.988/gallon diesel, and severe Midwest blizzards are creating a perfect storm for capacity shortages. Emphasize that ETA provides reliable coverage when routing guides fail.
Action: Proactively reach out to all customers with freight touching the Midwest or I-80 corridor. Offer to take over their problem loads immediately, quoting with built-in weather and fuel premiums.
🚛 For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Focus entirely on securing winter-ready capacity for the Midwest, and flatbed capacity for the South/Southwest. Prioritize carriers with proven safety records given the FMCSA's recent fraud warnings.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the promise of southbound freight to negotiate better rates on loads leaving the weather-impacted zones. Remind carriers that you have freight that will keep them moving and cover their fuel costs.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a tighter market than the raw board count alone suggests: Total available loads are 164,326, up 14.8% from 143,174, and the national average rate is $2.40/mile with diesel at $4.988/gallon. That is not a “cheap Monday” signal. That is a replacement-cost market.
Fuel and weather are distorting normal price discovery at the same time: Carriers are not just pricing miles. They are pricing fuel burn, storm exposure, deadhead risk, and reload confidence. That is why some freight is still negotiable while other freight is clearing above the screen.
Open-deck is where the day’s money is concentrated: Flatbed + Heavy Haul + Specialized = 121,903 loads, which is about 74.2% of the board. More importantly, those three categories also account for about 76.1% of moved volume so far today. If your desk time is not heavily tilted toward open-deck, you are probably misallocating effort.
The spread data matters more than the load count today:
- Flatbed: $2.67 posted / $2.83 paid → real buy-side pressure
- Heavy Haul: $2.75 posted / $2.90 paid → true scarcity
- Specialized: $2.52 posted / $2.61 paid → important shift from yesterday’s negotiation profile
- Reefer: $2.60 posted / $2.63 paid → still firm, but not as disorderly as prior scarcity spikes
- Van: $2.18 posted / $2.12 paid → national leverage exists, lane-specific pain still very real
- LTL (Less Than Truckload) / Partial: $1.56 posted / $1.43 paid → useful relief valve where density is real
The Midwest is a timing market, not just a weather market: Today and Tuesday are about service protection and inbound premiums. Wednesday is likely the transition day. Thursday into Friday looks like the real backlog-release event. Brokers who buy capacity before the thaw will outperform brokers who try to buy it after the board lights up.
Best overall posture today:
- Buy early on flatbed, heavy haul, storm-sensitive reefer, and critical Midwest service
- Negotiate hard on regional van and dense LTL/partial
- Do not quote off the national average for freight touching Wisconsin, Michigan, Chicago spillover, or Wyoming transcon corridors
- Tighten compliance workflow immediately because high-rate weather events attract bad actors
📊 What the board is really saying
Demand is up, but the bigger story is cost-supported pricing:
- Today: 164,326 loads, $2.40/mile
- Yesterday: 143,174 loads, $2.36/mile
- One week ago: 157,305 loads, $2.36/mile
- One month ago: 198,639 loads, $2.29/mile
The important read:
- Board volume is below the one-month level
- Rates are well above the one-month level
- Diesel is at $4.988/gallon
- That combination tells you the market is being supported by capacity discipline, not just raw freight abundance
What experienced brokers should notice:
- This is not universal tightness
- It is segmented tightness
- The screen is telling you exactly where carriers have leverage and where brokers still have room to work
Commercial implication:
- Shippers will anchor to the headline average
- Carriers will anchor to trip economics
- Your job is to translate lane-specific replacement cost before either side forces you into a bad commitment
🚚 Equipment-by-equipment trading map
1) Flatbed: now a genuine buy-early segment
- Data: 70,588 loads, $2.67 posted, $2.83 paid
- Read: A +$0.16/mile paid-over-posted spread is meaningful. That is not just noisy board behavior. It says carriers are winning negotiations after the post goes up.
- What changed:
- Yesterday, flatbed was not the cleanest scarcity signal
- Today, it absolutely deserves priority attention
- Best broker behavior:
- Pre-cover clean, site-ready freight
- Ask about tarps, securement, crane/forklift availability, and unload conditions before quoting
- Use your best construction, steel, energy, and industrial carriers first
- Big mistake:
- Treating all 70,588 flatbed loads as equally hot
- The right move is to buy the clean freight early and avoid muddy jobsite chaos unless margin is exceptional
2) Heavy Haul: real leverage belongs to qualified capacity
- Data: 34,977 loads, $2.75 posted, $2.90 paid
- Read: A +$0.15/mile spread confirms scarcity with execution risk
- What matters most:
- Permits
- Route feasibility
- weather exposure
- escort timing
- loading accuracy
- Best broker behavior:
- Do not sell heavy haul until dimensions, loading method, and route restrictions are verified
- Avoid northern exposure assumptions until wind and storm impact are confirmed
- Use known carriers, not “available” carriers
- Big mistake:
- Chasing the board count without respecting route complexity
3) Specialized: the market just flipped on you
- Data: 16,338 loads, $2.52 posted, $2.61 paid
- Read: This moved from a negotiation pocket yesterday into a positive spread today. That is an important signal.
- What it means:
- Some brokers will still treat specialized like yesterday’s discounted category
- That creates opportunity for carriers to take rate higher than desks expect
- Best broker behavior:
- Re-underwrite every specialized quote
- Clean up specs before taking a pricing position
- Protect margin on anything with handling or loading uncertainty
- Big mistake:
- Assuming yesterday’s playbook still applies
4) Reefer: firm, but more disciplined than panicked
- Data: 8,359 loads, $2.60 posted, $2.63 paid
- Read: A +$0.03/mile spread says reefer is still tight, but today’s board is closer to executable pricing than in a true panic condition
- What it means:
- Food and retail replenishment still need pre-coverage
- But you do not need to overpay blindly on every temp-controlled load
- Best broker behavior:
- Pre-cover high-service food, grocery, and produce freight
- Confirm setpoint, pre-cool requirements, seal process, and receiver flexibility
- Use reliable equipment first in upper-Midwest-facing freight
- Big mistake:
- Treating every reefer lane as equally distressed
5) Van: still the main negotiation pocket, but only nationally
- Data: 24,540 loads, $2.18 posted, $2.12 paid
- Read: A -$0.06/mile spread says there is still broker leverage in van, especially on dense, reload-friendly lanes
- What it means:
- Regional van is negotiable
- Midwest inbound, transcon via weather risk, and rigid-appointment freight are not average van
- Best broker behavior:
- Press on rate where freight is short-haul, flexible, and reload-friendly
- Protect long-haul and storm-exposed quotes
- Avoid using $2.12 as a lazy benchmark for problem freight
- Big mistake:
- Telling customers “van is soft” without qualifying the lane
6) LTL / Partial: useful for cost control, not a magic escape hatch
- Data: 9,524 loads, $1.56 posted, $1.43 paid
- Read: A -$0.13/mile spread says shippers want consolidation, but the market still rewards operational discipline
- Best broker behavior:
- Use partials to protect margin on dense lanes
- Bundle shipments where stop count, dwell time, and geography make sense
- Pitch it as a strategic alternative to full truckload, not a desperate workaround
- Big mistake:
- Building one-off partials with no route density and pretending the math works
🌨️ Weather-driven lane strategy for the next 24–72 hours
1) Wisconsin and the Upper Midwest: inbound is premium, outbound is tactical
- Current reality:
- Blizzard warnings across parts of Wisconsin are creating whiteout risk and operational drag
- Great Lakes storm and freezing spray conditions are also disrupting surrounding freight networks
- Broker implication:
- Inbound loads deserve full risk pricing
- Outbound loads should be sold based on escape value and next-load geometry
- Best play:
- Pair difficult inbound freight with clean southbound or eastbound continuation
- Get written approval for weather delay, layover, and detention before dispatch
- Reconfirm facility operating status, not just appointment time
2) Chicago, Detroit, Columbus: secondary tightening is the real trap
- Current reality:
- Even where weather is lighter, these hubs absorb the spillover from disrupted northern routing
- Broker implication:
- The market may look liquid on the screen while practical capacity is being repositioned, delayed, or held for better freight
- Best play:
- Protect same-day pricing
- Do not oversell service on auto, retail, or just-in-time freight
- Use core carriers, not lowest-cost backups
3) Wyoming I-80: improving, but not “normal” yet
- Current reality:
- High-wind exposure has been severe enough to disrupt high-profile and empty-trailer movement
- Broker implication:
- Some competitors will prematurely price transcon freight as if the corridor is fully open
- Best play:
- Avoid fixed transit promises on I-80-dependent freight
- Offer southern routing alternatives where service matters more than shortest miles
- Build detour and delay language into confirmations
4) Thursday-Friday is likely the better margin event than today
- Current reality:
- Post-storm markets often create the best revenue window after the first emergency wave
- Why:
- Today’s rates are crisis-priced
- But Thursday-Friday backlog freight is usually more plentiful, more urgent, and less organized
- Best play:
- Secure capacity commitments now
- Stage recovery conversations with customers today
- Do not wait for the thaw to start sourcing
🧠 Customer psychology and sales posture
1) Lead with lane replacement cost, not averages
- Best message:
- “The national market is $2.40/mile, but your lane is being priced off fuel, weather, and real available capacity.”
- “Waiting may not lower the price; it may only reduce your options.”
- Why it works:
- Shippers resist higher cost less when they understand what is driving the replacement cost
2) Call these customers first
- Priority list:
- Midwest inbound or outbound shippers
- Automotive and manufacturing
- Retail replenishment
- Food and beverage
- Construction, steel, and energy buyers
- Any shipper with freight crossing I-80 or touching Great Lakes distribution
3) Sell timing as a service
- For urgent freight:
- Move now
- Buy certainty before capacity gets more selective
- For flexible freight:
- Delay storm-touching loads when possible
- Preserve service and margin by moving during the recovery window
- For backlog freight:
- Pre-book before the release
- The best trucks will be spoken for before the board looks worst
4) Tighten commercial terms today
- Must-have protections:
- Short quote validity windows
- Separate linehaul from FSC (Fuel Surcharge)
- Written layover and weather-delay language
- Facility status assumptions documented in the rate confirmation
- Why it matters:
- Volatile markets punish vague agreements faster than normal markets do
🤝 Carrier desk tactics that will win today
1) Change your call order
- First priority:
- Flatbed
- Heavy Haul
- trusted Midwest-capable reefer
- Second priority:
- Specialized carriers with good communication and clean operating history
- Third priority:
- Regional van carriers for reload-friendly freight
- Fourth priority:
- Partial/LTL builders where density already exists
2) Sell total trip quality, not just the linehaul
- Carriers care about:
- Fuel
- deadhead
- unload speed
- weather exposure
- reload quality
- Your load pitch should always include:
- Commodity
- weight
- dimensions if relevant
- appointment style
- facility status
- route awareness
- reload plan
- Why it wins:
- In a high-diesel market, reducing uncertainty is often worth more than another nickel on paper
3) Use directional freight as leverage
- Best tactic:
- Offer carriers a storm-exit load or southbound continuation when asking them to take riskier northern freight
- Why it works:
- Carriers will accept difficult pickup or delivery conditions more readily if the next move improves utilization and weather exposure
4) Do not assume posted ask is the buy price in open-deck
- Today’s evidence:
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized are all clearing above posted
- Implication:
- If you wait to source after the customer awards the load, you may buy above what you quoted
- Broker move:
- Pre-source first
- Sell second
- Especially on specialized and heavy haul
🛡️ Compliance, fraud, and liability controls that matter more in this market
1) High-rate weather markets attract identity abuse
- FMCSA (Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration) warning matters right now:
- Fraudsters target exactly these moments because brokers are rushed
- Minimum workflow today:
- Verify MC (Motor Carrier) and USDOT authority load-by-load
- Check SAFER status at time of tender, not just at onboarding
- Confirm insurance and contact consistency
- Watch for dispatcher/carrier identity mismatches
2) Safety discipline is not optional just because coverage is hard
- Hard truth:
- The margin on one emergency load is meaningless next to negligent-selection exposure
- Best practice:
- Set non-negotiable safety disqualifiers
- Use the same standards in tight markets that you use in loose markets
- Escalate storm-zone, reefer, auto, and high-value loads to higher vetting standards
3) Operational speed must come from process, not corner-cutting
- Best broker advantage today:
- Fast desks with structured vetting will outperform fast desks with sloppy vetting
- Practical move:
- Assign one team member to carrier compliance triage
- Assign another to live capacity sourcing
- Separate speed from risk
📈 Probability-weighted market outlook
Base case — 60%
- Today through Tuesday: Midwest and northern-lane premiums remain elevated
- Wednesday: Some rate moderation as weather improves and repositioning begins
- Thursday-Friday: Delayed freight release triggers a second tightening wave
- Best posture: Buy early on service-critical freight and protect recovery-window capacity
Higher-stress case — 25%
- Weather lingers longer, wind risk remains disruptive, and diesel pressure keeps marginal carriers parked
- Van becomes less negotiable on long-haul lanes
- Open-deck pushes even further above posted numbers
- Best posture: Shorten quote validity, add more written protections, and refuse underpriced commitment freight
Relief case — 15%
- Corridor recovery happens a little faster than expected
- Regional van and some partial freight become better buy-side opportunities first
- Open-deck still remains relatively firm
- Best posture: Take margin back where the board was over-defensive, but do not relax on Midwest service freight
💰 Best margin pockets today
✅ Highest-value actions before noon
Reprice all uncovered freight touching Wisconsin, Michigan, Chicago, Detroit, or Wyoming
- Add fuel protection
- Add weather-delay language
- Add facility reconfirmation notes
Shift more desk time into open-deck
- 121,903 open-deck loads
- Flatbed and heavy haul are both clearing above posted
- That is where the board is paying attention today
Pre-book Thursday-Friday recovery capacity now
- Make calls before competitors stop reacting to weather and start reacting to backlog
Use van and LTL as margin-defense tools
- Negotiate on regional van
- Build partial solutions only where density is real
Implement load-by-load fraud controls
- Real-time MC/USDOT verification
- Identity consistency checks
- Higher scrutiny on high-rate emergency freight
Track these four operating metrics by end of day
- First quote vs final buy
- Quote-to-cover time
- Percent of loads with facility reconfirmation
- Percent of premium loads covered with existing approved carriers
🧭 Bottom line
- This is not a “big board equals cheap trucks” market.
- 164,326 loads and $2.40/mile with $4.988 diesel means carriers are pricing survival economics and operational risk.
- Open-deck is the center of gravity.
- Van is negotiable until the lane gets ugly.
- Reefer is firm but more disciplined than panicked.
- The best brokers today will win twice:
- First, by protecting service and margin during the storm
- Second, by owning capacity before the post-storm backlog hits
💡 Tony's Tip
Check out
https://dmir.remote.etaagencyinc.com for an archive of previous newsletters.
National Data Dashboard is now programmatically generated, the image generation AI became too unreliable, should get much more consistent results moving forward.
📅 This Day in History
1815: Prince Willem proclaims himself King of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands, the first constitutional monarch in the Netherlands.
1977: Assassination of Kamal Jumblatt, the main leader of the anti-government forces in the Lebanese Civil War.
1978: Former Italian Prime Minister Aldo Moro is kidnapped; he is later murdered by his captors.
💭 Quote of the Day
"Just because you are happy it does not mean that the day is perfect but that you have looked beyond its imperfections."
— Bob Marley