📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Friday, May 01, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The spot freight market is closing the week with a notable 6.0% contraction in total available loads to 167,666, driven primarily by a cooling in the flatbed and heavy haul sectors. Despite this volume dip, carriers maintain absolute pricing power across the board, securing significant premiums over posted rates in every equipment category. The market average rate remains firm at $2.72/mile, heavily supported by sustained diesel prices at $5.572/gallon which continue to compress carrier margins and shrink deadhead radiuses. Brokers face a complex operational environment today, balancing tightening van and reefer capacity against severe Midwest river flooding that is fracturing transcontinental routing along the I-70 and I-64 corridors.
Insight
Usable capacity is tighter than the headline load drop suggests
The 6.0% decline in posted freight is understating actual tightness. Flood detours across the central Midwest, elevated diesel, and growing compliance friction are shrinking the pool of trucks willing and able to cover freight without extra compensation, especially on east-west moves touching Illinois, Missouri, and Indiana. In practice, the market is trading closer to a selective-capacity environment than a softening one.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe Mississippi River Flooding (Midwest (IL, MO, IN)): Major flooding along the Mississippi River is forcing closures and detours along critical transcontinental corridors including I-70 and I-64. This is extending transit times, trapping flatbed capacity, and driving localized rate premiums as drivers avoid the region.
- Tangipahoa River Flooding (Deep South (LA, MS)): River flooding in the South is threatening secondary routes and local delivery networks. While major interstates may remain passable, local pickup and delivery operations face significant delays and potential facility closures.
- Late-Season Freeze Warnings (Northern Tier & Intermountain West (WI, UT, ID)): Sub-freezing temperatures are sustaining urgent protect-from-freeze (PFF) requirements for temperature-sensitive freight. This is directly competing with southern produce demand, severely tightening national reefer capacity.
- Stehekin River Flooding (Pacific Northwest (WA)): Minor flooding is inundating local roads and properties, which may delay regional freight operations and require rerouting for final-mile deliveries in affected counties.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Midwest routing gets a short operating window before disruption reloads
Conditions around the flood zone are quieter through Saturday, but that is more a dispatch window than a recovery signal. Rain returns Sunday near the river corridor, followed by stronger storms and wind across Illinois and Indiana Monday into Tuesday, which raises the odds that detours and service failures linger well into next week even where water levels temporarily stabilize.
- Friday and Saturday are the cleanest days to push through backlog freight and reposition trucks across the central Midwest.
- Loads picking up Sunday through Tuesday need wider appointment cushions and firmer detention language, particularly on multi-stop freight.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Sustained high fuel costs are forcing carriers to heavily scrutinize load profitability, leading to increased rejection of freight that doesn't adequately cover deadhead positioning.
- Carrier Financial Health: Carriers are successfully leveraging tight capacity to push paid rates above posted averages, providing a critical buffer against high operating costs, though smaller fleets remain vulnerable to cash flow crunches.
- Economic Indicators: Spring retail replenishment and early construction activity are providing a solid demand floor, though inflationary pressures on fuel and equipment maintenance continue to challenge overall network efficiency.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
Insurance Lawsuit Highlights Carrier Vetting Risks for Brokers 🔗:
An $8.2M lawsuit over a trucking death judgment centers on the timing of an FMCSA authority revocation and an insurance cancellation. For brokers, this underscores the critical importance of real-time carrier monitoring. Relying on delayed FMCSA data can expose brokerages to massive negligent selection liability if a carrier's insurance is cancelled before their authority is officially revoked.
-
FMCSA Transition to New 'Motus' Registration System 🔗:
The FMCSA is urging carriers to update their portal information by May 14 ahead of the new Motus registration system launch. Brokers should anticipate potential administrative friction and temporary authority verification issues during this transition period. Proactive communication with core carriers to ensure their records are updated will prevent unexpected onboarding delays.
-
Localized Fuel Spikes Impacting Regional Transportation Costs 🔗:
Reports of rising diesel prices severely impacting school transportation budgets in Northwest Arkansas highlight the localized nature of fuel inflation. Brokers moving freight through the mid-South and Midwest must account for these regional fuel spikes, as local carriers will demand higher rates to offset immediate pump prices, regardless of national averages.
News Insight
Weekend dispatches carry the highest insurance-verification exposure
The insurance and authority blind spot is most dangerous on Friday tenders that move through the weekend, when a carrier can look acceptable at booking and become a liability before delivery. First-use carriers, recently reactivated carriers, and small fleets sourced late in the day deserve the most scrutiny because they are also the most likely to be pulled in when spot rates are outrunning contract freight.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest is currently the most volatile and strategically critical freight region due to the convergence of severe Mississippi River flooding and late-season freeze warnings in the upper states. The flooding is actively fracturing major East-West corridors (I-70, I-64), forcing extensive detours that consume driver hours and trap equipment. Simultaneously, freeze warnings in Wisconsin are sustaining protect-from-freeze (PFF) demands, pulling reefer capacity away from other regions. This dual-threat environment is empowering carriers to demand significant premiums, as evidenced by the 10-cent spread in van rates and 12-cent spread in flatbed rates nationally.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL → St. Louis, MO: This traditionally high-volume lane is currently severely impacted by Mississippi River flooding. Transit times are extended due to localized road closures and detours along the I-55 and I-70 corridors. Capacity is tight as drivers are reluctant to position equipment into flood-threatened areas.
Milwaukee, WI → Salt Lake City, UT: This long-haul lane is currently bookended by freeze warnings, requiring strict protect-from-freeze (PFF) protocols. Reefer capacity is tight as equipment is pulled south for produce season, leaving northern shippers scrambling for temperature-controlled options.
Regional Insight
Chicago-St. Louis is becoming a transit-time problem before it becomes a price problem
The biggest risk on this lane is not just linehaul inflation but schedule instability. With river flooding already disrupting normal routing, the next round of wind and storms early next week will make appointment reliability harder to sell than truck availability itself; carriers that do commit are likely to protect themselves with stricter layover terms and less flexibility on same-day changes.
- Friday afternoon and Saturday morning pickups are the best chance to secure cleaner execution before weather risk rises again.
- Shippers expecting normal one-day turns between Chicago and St. Louis are likely to pay a premium for that service level.
Regional Insight
The Milwaukee-Salt Lake City reefer premium has a narrower shelf life than it appears
Protect-from freeze pressure is strongest on departures through Saturday. Wisconsin and Utah both warm materially by Sunday and Monday, so the lane's current urgency is likely to shift from freeze protection to simple reefer scarcity tied to produce repositioning. That keeps rates firm, but the highest-margin freight will be the loads that still require verified heating capability over the next 24 to 36 hours.
💰 Rate Spread Analysis: Carriers Command the Negotiation Table
Today's real-time load board data reveals a market where carriers hold absolute pricing authority, evidenced by positive spreads across every single equipment category. The gap between posted and paid rates is most pronounced in the flatbed sector (+$0.12/mile) and van sector (+$0.10/mile). This indicates that brokers are consistently underpricing their initial load board postings relative to actual market clearing prices. When a van load is posted at $2.32 but pays $2.42, it signals that carriers are successfully rejecting initial offers and forcing brokers to dig into their margins to secure trucks. For brokerage operations, this means initial quoting to shippers must be aggressively padded. Relying on posted rate averages will result in underwater loads. Brokers must price freight based on the paid rate reality and secure capacity immediately, as the 6.0% drop in total available loads suggests that the trucks that are available are being absorbed quickly.
🚛 Reefer: The Produce and Freeze Collision
The temperature-controlled sector is experiencing a unique volatility spike today, with available load volumes surging 7.2% to 8,046—the only major equipment type besides van to see an overnight increase. This surge is being driven by a brutal collision of seasonal forces. In the South, early produce harvests are accelerating, pulling reefer equipment toward Florida and Texas. Simultaneously, active freeze warnings (Alert WX08155F4C) across Wisconsin, Utah, and Idaho are forcing northern shippers to demand protect-from-freeze (PFF) services for chemicals, beverages, and sensitive goods. This geographic tug-of-war is stretching the national reefer fleet thin. Carriers are capitalizing on this desperation, securing an average of $2.77/mile paid against $2.69/mile posted. Brokers handling temperature-controlled freight must recognize that reefer capacity is not just tight; it is fundamentally misaligned geographically, requiring significant deadhead premiums to reposition equipment into northern freeze zones.
🔧 Compliance and Insurance Risks Threaten Capacity
A critical undercurrent in today's market is the rising administrative and compliance risk facing the carrier base. The ongoing $8.2M lawsuit regarding an insurance cancellation and delayed FMCSA authority revocation (ALERT_
- highlights a massive liability trap for brokers: the lag time between a carrier losing insurance and the FMCSA officially revoking their authority. If a broker dispatches a carrier during this blind spot, the negligent selection liability is catastrophic. Compounding this risk is the impending May 14th transition to the FMCSA's new Motus registration system (ALERT_
- . As carriers struggle to update portal credentials, brokers should anticipate a spike in temporary authority verification failures. This administrative friction will artificially tighten capacity, as compliance teams will be forced to place otherwise viable carriers on 'Do Not Use' status until their Motus profiles are verified. Brokers must proactively audit their core carrier base's insurance status directly with providers rather than relying solely on FMCSA portal data
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Use paid rates as the real clearing price today, then add a Midwest detour buffer rather than pricing off posted averages.
- Treat Friday and Saturday as the best window to move freight through the central Midwest before Sunday through Tuesday weather renews disruption.
- Prioritize reefer freight with hard protect-from freeze requirements on departures through Saturday; that premium likely fades faster than general reefer tightness.
- Tighten same-day insurance and authority checks on any newly sourced carrier before weekend dispatch.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a selective-capacity market, not a weak market.
- Total available loads are 167,666, down 6.0% from 178,328 yesterday.
- But a week ago the market sat at 167,606, which tells you the broader demand picture is stable, not collapsing.
- The real issue is usable capacity, which is being reduced by Midwest flood detours, high diesel, and weekend compliance friction.
The load drop is being driven by industrial/open-deck cooling, while service-sensitive freight is tightening.
- Van loads rose to 22,525 (+2.3%).
- Reefer loads rose to 8,046 (+7.2%).
- LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload / partial truckload) rose to 11,618 (+4.6%).
- Meanwhile flatbed fell to 72,279 (-9.3%) and heavy haul fell to 33,248 (-11.1%).
- That matters because many brokers will read the top-line load decline as softness when the real story is a freight-mix shift toward harder-to-service loads.
Paid rates are the market truth today.
- Van: $2.42 paid vs. $2.32 posted
- Reefer: $2.77 paid vs. $2.69 posted
- Flatbed: $3.33 paid vs. $3.21 posted
- Heavy Haul: $3.38 paid vs. $3.31 posted
- Specialized: $2.91 paid vs. $2.85 posted
- LTL/Partial: $1.77 paid vs. $1.67 posted
- Every mode is clearing above the board, which means there is no cheap backup market hiding behind the posted screen.
Carrier pricing power is being reinforced by diesel at $5.572/gallon.
- At this fuel level, carriers are not just pricing miles.
- They are pricing deadhead, delay risk, poor reload odds, and time lost in flood-affected corridors.
Friday and Saturday are the best operating window for the Midwest.
- Use this window to push backlog freight, reposition trucks, and lock in reloads.
- Treat Sunday through Tuesday freight as higher-risk freight with wider appointment cushions and stricter detention/layover terms.
📉 What the market is really saying
The headline volume decline is misleading.
- 59,253 loads have already moved today, versus 53,493 at the same point yesterday.
- That is a strong clue that freight is being absorbed faster, even with fewer total visible loads.
- In plain broker terms: the board is thinner, but the market is not easier.
The slight dip in the national average rate to $2.72 does not equal negotiating leverage.
- Yesterday’s market average was $2.75.
- Today’s $2.72 likely reflects mix change, not broad pricing weakness.
- When high-rate open-deck categories lose share of the total, the blended average can soften a little even while van and reefer get harder to cover.
Open-deck still dominates desk attention.
- Flatbed + Heavy Haul + Specialized = 125,477 loads, or roughly 74.8% of visible spot volume.
- That means industrial freight still drives a huge share of the opportunity.
- But the best same-day broker margins may come from service-sensitive freight where customer urgency is high and replacement cost rises quickly.
The paid-versus-posted spreads show where brokers are getting trapped.
- Van and LTL/Partial both show a $0.10 spread.
- Flatbed shows the widest spread at $0.12.
- Reefer’s spread is smaller at $0.08, but do not underestimate it. Reefer pain is often less about the spread itself and more about failed first coverage and emergency rebuy.
- Heavy haul and specialized are also above posted, which means even niche equipment is not offering brokers a discount pocket today.
The market is behaving like OTRI (Outbound Tender Rejection Index) is elevated.
- You do not need a printed OTRI number to see the behavior.
- When every mode clears above posted, contract freight is usually leaking into spot, carriers are becoming more selective, and brokers who wait for lower prices usually end up buying worse service at a higher number.
💸 Best margin deployments today
1) Van freight with clean appointments and strong reload stories
- Why it works: 22,525 van loads and a $0.10 spread tell you standard dry van has lost its broker cushion.
- Best targets: retail replenishment, packaged goods, consumer freight, end-of-week overflow.
- Broker move: quote from $2.42 paid reality, not from $2.32 posted, then add lane-specific risk for Midwest exposure.
- Best margin condition: customers who can give pickup certainty and at least modest delivery flexibility.
2) Reefer freight with true PFF (Protect From Freeze) requirements through Saturday
- Why it works: 8,046 reefer loads and an active collision between southern produce demand and northern/intermountain freeze protection.
- Best targets: chemicals, beverages, food products, any shipment requiring documented temperature handling.
- Broker move: sell compliance and claim prevention, not just truck capacity.
- Important nuance: the highest PFF premium is time-sensitive. Once temperatures moderate by Sunday/Monday, the lane may stay firm, but the premium shifts from freeze protection to basic equipment scarcity.
3) Flatbed freight where accessorials are separated from linehaul
- Why it works: 72,279 flatbed loads at $3.33 paid vs. $3.21 posted means carriers still have leverage.
- Best targets: construction material, steel, machinery, project freight with known site conditions.
- Broker move: break out tarp, detention, reroute, and site-delay exposure instead of burying everything in one all-in price.
- Margin edge: most brokers lose money on flatbed today through bad scope discipline, not bad linehaul alone.
4) Partial conversions for budget-sensitive truckload customers
- Why it works: LTL/Partial is at 11,618 loads with $1.77 paid vs. $1.67 posted.
- Best targets: overflow freight, non-urgent replenishment, customers resisting higher truckload quotes.
- Broker move: present partial early as an account-saving alternative, not as a recovery plan after the shipper rejects truckload pricing.
- Warning: only use it where transit flexibility is real. Do not sell partial service to a shipper expecting dedicated truckload speed.
5) Open-deck freight paired with outbound planning
- Why it works: flood zones are making carriers price freight like a network problem, not a one-load problem.
- Best targets: Midwest inbound freight that can be matched to a plausible outbound.
- Broker move: sell two-load logic when possible.
- Margin edge: a load into a disrupted market is cheaper to buy when the carrier believes you understand what happens after delivery.
🚚 Mode-by-mode buying guide for today
🚐 Dry Van
- Market read: Tighter than the headline load decline suggests.
- What to pay attention to:
- 22,525 loads
- $2.42 paid vs. $2.32 posted
- Broker playbook:
- Quote with short validity.
- In a tightening van market, morning quotes age badly.
- Cover Midwest-touching freight early.
- Flood reluctance will worsen as the day gets older.
- Favor clean freight.
- Loaded miles, quick turns, and predictable delivery windows will get better carrier response than arguing over pennies.
- Trap to avoid:
- Quoting off posted rates and trying to buy later.
🧊 Reefer
- Market read: Operationally tight, geographically misaligned.
- What to pay attention to:
- 8,046 loads
- $2.77 paid vs. $2.69 posted
- Broker playbook:
- Prioritize true temperature-sensitive freight first.
- Hard PFF and food-grade loads deserve first call.
- Write exact instructions.
- Setpoint, PFF language, product sensitivity, and continuous-run expectations should be explicit.
- Use trusted carriers.
- Claims risk rises fast when brokers use bargain reefer coverage during volatile weather.
- Trap to avoid:
- Assuming the smaller spread means easier buying.
- Reefer failures are expensive because they become emergency buys, not because the initial rate spread looks dramatic.
🟧 Flatbed
- Market read: Still carrier-favored, with routing friction doing as much damage as price.
- What to pay attention to:
- 72,279 loads
- $3.33 paid vs. $3.21 posted
- Broker playbook:
- Separate base linehaul from accessorial exposure.
- Confirm site access before dispatch.
- Prefer carriers already near the freight.
- Trap to avoid:
- Treating a booked truck as secured execution.
- In flood-affected regions, execution breaks at the dock, access road, or reload plan, not always at booking.
🏗️ Heavy Haul
- Market read: Scarce and operationally fragile.
- What to pay attention to:
- 33,248 loads
- $3.38 paid vs. $3.31 posted
- Broker playbook:
- Route before quoting.
- Check permits and alternate routing.
- Verify dimensions and loading method.
- Trap to avoid:
- Reading the market as stable just because the spread is “only” $0.07.
- Heavy haul blows up when route assumptions are wrong.
🟪 Specialized
- Market read: No longer a discount pocket.
- What to pay attention to:
- 19,950 loads
- $2.91 paid vs. $2.85 posted
- Broker playbook:
- Still spec-audit aggressively.
- Ask for photos and exact dimensions.
- Call technical carriers before broad posting.
- Trap to avoid:
- Letting “specialized” become lazy shorthand.
- Today you need the right trailer, not merely the more expensive trailer.
📦 LTL/Partial
- Market read: A good escape valve, but not a cheap one.
- What to pay attention to:
- 11,618 loads
- $1.77 paid vs. $1.67 posted
- Broker playbook:
- Use it to defend accounts before truckload quotes become emotional.
- Be honest about transit and handling.
- Secure dock coordination early.
- Trap to avoid:
- Overselling partial as truckload service at a lower rate.
🌊 Regional and lane tactics for the next 24–72 hours
Midwest flood belt is a service-risk market first and a price market second.
- The core issue is routing instability around Illinois, Missouri, and Indiana, especially where I-70 and I-64 exposure creates detours and lost hours.
- Your cost is not just mileage inflation.
- It is missed appointments, reduced driver willingness, weaker reload confidence, and more accessorial events.
Chicago, IL → St. Louis, MO should be sold as a reliability product.
- Best move: quote it with wider transit expectations and stronger service language.
- Best shipper framing: “You are paying for dependable execution through a disrupted corridor.”
- Best broker tactic: secure the truck before late afternoon and give the carrier a realistic cushion.
- Do not do: promise routine one-day turns unless the customer is paying a premium for that service level.
Milwaukee, WI → Salt Lake City, UT reefer is a short-window premium lane.
- Best move: prioritize loads that truly require heating/PFF capability in the next 24–36 hours.
- What changes next: as temperatures improve, the premium does not disappear entirely, but it becomes more about general reefer scarcity than verified freeze handling.
- Best broker tactic: ask the shipper whether they need documented PFF handling or merely reefer availability. That distinction can change your buy strategy and your sell.
Deep South local routing needs extra caution.
- The Tangipahoa River flooding risk matters less for linehaul and more for secondary roads, facility access, and local delivery timing.
- If you are moving freight in LA/MS, confirm dock accessibility and alternate local routes, not just interstate passability.
Northern tier reefer and chemical shippers should be triaged early.
- Freight that genuinely cannot freeze deserves earlier attention than generic cold-chain freight.
- Brokers who sort must-protect from nice-to-have reefer will buy smarter and protect margin.
🧠 Negotiation psychology that wins today
With carriers, lead with certainty.
- Carriers today are reacting less to posted rate and more to uncertainty cost.
- Open with:
- exact loaded miles
- pickup readiness
- dock hours
- detention terms
- flood exposure
- reload outlook
- The best carrier pitch today is: “This is clean freight with honest timing.”
With shippers, re-anchor away from posted screens.
- Posted rates are now reference noise.
- Paid rates are the actual clearing market.
- Use a two-tier structure:
- Flexible service
- lower sell
- wider timing
- Priority service
- higher sell
- earlier committed coverage
- This gives the shipper a choice without forcing your desk to subsidize urgency.
Inside your own desk, stop treating all loads equally.
- Rank loads by:
- replacement-cost risk
- appointment rigidity
- weather exposure
- reload quality
- claims/compliance sensitivity
- The loudest load is not always the best load.
- The best freight today is the freight with clean instructions, true urgency, and recoverable accessorials.
🛡️ Risk controls to tighten before weekend dispatch
1) Insurance and authority verification
- Highest-risk profile: first-use carriers, recently reactivated carriers, small fleets sourced late on Friday, and weekend tenders.
- Action: verify insurance directly, not just by assuming the portal picture is enough.
- Reason: the combination of the lawsuit spotlight and the approaching Motus transition increases the chance of administrative blind spots.
2) Flood-access confirmation
- Action: call the facility and confirm:
- gate status
- dock hours
- local road access
- trailer restrictions
- current detention likelihood
- Reason: many failures this weekend will occur at the last few miles, not on the interstate.
3) Accessorial language
- Action: put likely charges in writing before dispatch:
- detention
- layover
- reroute
- tarp
- stop-offs
- PFF handling
- Reason: when networks are disrupted, unpriced friction becomes margin leakage.
4) Backup coverage
- Action: keep second-call options ready for:
- reefer with hard appointments
- Midwest van
- flatbed into flood zones
- heavy haul with permit sensitivity
- Reason: today’s fallout risk is execution-based, not just rate-based.
5) Quote-discipline rules
- Action: shorten quote validity on van and reefer.
- Reason: a market where all categories are clearing above posted can turn a “good quote” into an underwater quote within hours.
📈 Probability-weighted outlook for the next 24–72 hours
Base case — most likely
- Van stays firmer than screens imply.
- Reefer remains tight through the weekend, with the strongest PFF premium fading first.
- Midwest flood friction lasts into early next week even if rainfall temporarily eases.
- Flatbed stays strong, especially where routing and access remain uncertain.
- Broker posture: buy early, sell flexibility, document accessorials.
Stress case
- Sunday through Tuesday weather reloads disruption in Illinois and Indiana.
- Chicago–St. Louis reliability deteriorates further.
- Weekend coverage failures rise because brokers stretched into unvetted capacity.
- Broker posture: reduce quote validity, use proven carriers, avoid heroic service promises.
Opportunity case
- PFF urgency eases faster than expected by late weekend.
- Some reefer freight becomes standard reefer scarcity instead of true freeze-protection freight.
- Partial conversion saves accounts that would otherwise reject truckload pricing.
- Broker posture: reclassify urgency quickly and defend margins with smarter mode selection.
✅ Today’s desk priority stack
Cover hard-appointment reefer and true PFF freight first.
- These loads have the highest same-day replacement cost risk.
Reprice van freight off the paid market, not the posted market.
- $2.42 is your working reality before lane risk.
Move Midwest freight during the Friday/Saturday operating window when possible.
- Do not assume Sunday pickup freight can be sold as normal execution.
Bundle inbound and outbound logic on open-deck freight.
- Especially for anything touching disrupted Midwest corridors.
Spec-audit specialized and heavy haul before you publish a number.
- Wrong trailer assumptions are more expensive than slight rate misses.
Offer partial alternatives before truckload quotes get rejected.
- Save the account early, not after the sell has turned adversarial.
Tighten carrier-vetting rules for weekend dispatches.
- Reliability and compliance matter more today than shaving a few cents.
Track three intraday metrics aggressively.
- Quote-to-book spread
- Carrier fallout rate
- Accessorial recovery rate
- These three numbers will tell you by lunch whether your desk is pricing correctly.
🧾 Bottom line
- The market is not soft; it is selective.
- Total visible freight fell to 167,666, but faster load absorption and all-positive paid-posted spreads show real capacity pressure.
- Van and reefer are the most dangerous underquote traps for general brokerage desks today.
- Flatbed remains powerful, but execution detail matters more than headline rate.
- Heavy haul and specialized still require scope accuracy first, price second.
- Diesel at $5.572/gallon is making carriers ruthless about deadhead, dwell, and weak reloads.
- The Midwest should be treated as a reliability-risk market through early next week.
- The brokers who win today will be the ones who buy from paid-rate reality, sell service tiers clearly, verify carriers harder before the weekend, and reduce uncertainty for both shipper and truck.
📅 This Day in History
1898: Spanish–American War: Battle of Manila Bay: The Asiatic Squadron of the United States Navy destroys the Pacific Squadron of the Spanish Navy after a seven-hour battle. Spain loses all seven of its ships, and 381 Spanish sailors die. There are no American vessel losses or combat deaths.
2003: Invasion of Iraq: In what becomes known as the "Mission Accomplished" speech, on board the USS Abraham Lincoln (off the coast of California), U.S. President George W. Bush declares that "major combat operations in Iraq have ended".
2019: Naxalite attack in Gadchiroli district of India: Sixteen army soldiers, including a driver, killed in an IED blast. Naxals targeted an anti-Naxal operations team.
💭 Quote of the Day
"All you need is the plan, the road map, and the courage to press on to your destination."
— Earl Nightingale