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📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report

Saturday, March 28, 2026

7:00 AM CST


📊 Top-Line Summary

The spot freight market is experiencing a weekend volume correction, with total available loads dropping 26.1% to 167,186, though the national average spot rate remains resilient at $2.55/mile. A significant drop in the national diesel average to $3.694/gallon is providing immediate operating relief for carriers and creating margin expansion opportunities for brokers on long-haul lanes. However, capacity remains structurally constrained by strict FMCSA Clearinghouse enforcement—which has removed over 200,000 drivers from the market—and severe regional weather, including major flooding across Ohio and Indiana and freeze warnings in the Plains. Brokers must leverage the stabilizing fuel environment to negotiate better rates while utilizing automation to handle the persistent administrative burden of carrier onboarding and load execution.

Insight

Weekend dip likely flips to a Monday reload

The 26.1% weekend volume correction is not a clean softening signal in the Midwest. Freeze-related holds, flood detours, and missed weekend receiving windows in Ohio and Indiana are setting up a concentrated spot rebound Monday into Tuesday, with dry van demand firming first on Chicago-Ohio freight while reefer demand normalizes faster once protect-from freeze requirements expire.

Daily market overview

⛽ Diesel Price Analysis

Price Trend Over Time

Diesel Price Trend Chart

🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence

U.S. freight weather impact map

Current Major Weather Events:

Weather Affected Corridors:

I-69
Interstate69
Severe
State
Hazards
Flood Warning
Alert Count
1
I-71
Interstate71
Severe
State
Hazards
Flood Warning
Alert Count
2
I-29
Interstate29
Severe
State
Hazards
Flood Warning
Alert Count
1
Weather Insight

Flood friction will outlast the clear weekend

Dry weather improves driving conditions today, but river flooding near local access roads in eastern Indiana and central Ohio will keep warehouse approach routes and appointment reliability uneven after the skies clear. The bigger risk is no longer linehaul speed but final-mile access, where a truck can make transit and still lose margin in the last 20 miles.

Weather Insight

Freeze premium has a short shelf life

The freeze setup in Kansas, Missouri, Indiana, and Kentucky is a weekend event rather than a multi-day pattern. With temperatures rebounding sharply Sunday and Monday, protect-from freeze pricing should fade quickly on freight not already committed, and some reefer units tied up on PFF freight should start re-entering standard temperature-controlled rotations by Monday.

💰 Financial Market Indicators

📰 Impactful News Analysis

  1. FMCSA Clearinghouse Enforcement Removes 200,000+ Drivers from Capacity Pool 🔗:
    With 1 in 30 CDL holders now in prohibited status and automatic downgrades enforced, brokers must implement hyper-vigilant carrier vetting. This structural capacity reduction gives compliant carriers immense pricing power, requiring brokers to sell shippers on the value of verified, legal capacity rather than just the lowest rate.
  2. Portal Automation Becomes Critical for Broker Margins 🔗:
    As manual data entry costs brokers up to $150K annually, adopting computer vision and automation for load posting and document reconciliation is no longer optional. Brokers leveraging these tools can process freight faster, secure capacity before competitors, and reallocate headcount to high-value carrier relationship building.
  3. Mastering Fuel Surcharges in a Volatile Diesel Market 🔗:
    Even as diesel prices stabilize at $3.694/gallon, the recent volatility highlights the need for dynamic fuel surcharge (FSC) programs. Brokers must transparently separate linehaul from fuel costs when negotiating with shippers, ensuring that sudden fuel spikes don't erode margins while remaining competitive when prices drop.
News Insight

Compliance risk is turning into weekend coverage risk

With the driver pool structurally smaller under Clearinghouse enforcement, last-minute truck swaps are becoming more dangerous during weather-disrupted weekends. The carriers creating the most value are the ones that can accept tenders without qualification issues and hold the load through appointment changes, which is why compliant incumbents will keep rate power even as diesel eases.

🔍 Competitive Intelligence

👥 Customer Sector Analysis

🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis

📍 Primary Region Focus: Midwest

The Midwest is currently the most volatile freight region in the country, battered by a combination of severe river flooding in Ohio, Indiana, and Minnesota, alongside moderate freeze warnings in Kansas and Missouri. This weather convergence is severely disrupting standard routing, delaying warehouse operations, and forcing carriers to demand hazard pay and Protect From Freeze (PFF) premiums. Despite these challenges, industrial demand remains incredibly strong, keeping flatbed volumes elevated. The drop in diesel prices to $3.694/gallon is the only factor preventing a complete rate explosion, but capacity remains fundamentally tight as carriers actively avoid flooded corridors.

🛣️ Key Lane Watch

Chicago, IL → Columbus, OH: This critical Midwest corridor is currently severely impacted by flooding along I-71 and surrounding state routes in Ohio. Capacity is tightening as carriers face significant routing delays and potential warehouse closures at the destination. The drop in diesel prices is helping offset some of the operational friction, but rates remain firm.

Route map for Chicago, IL → Columbus, OH

Kansas City, MO → Indianapolis, IN: This lane is caught between two major weather systems: sub-freezing temperatures at the origin and severe flooding at the destination. Reefer demand is spiking as shippers require Protect From Freeze (PFF) service for commodities normally moved in dry vans. Capacity is highly constrained.

Route map for Kansas City, MO → Indianapolis, IN
Regional Insight

Chicago to Columbus is now an appointment market

On Chicago-to-Columbus, the biggest pricing spread is between freight with verified dock access and freight moving into flood-affected consignee networks. Carriers are screening destination ZIP codes and charging for uncertainty, so the best margins will come from loads with confirmed receiving status rather than from chasing the highest headline spot quote.

🚨 Actionable Alerts

Rate Spike Warnings:

Capacity Shortage Alerts:

Opportunity Zones:

🎯 Strategic Recommendations for Today

💼 For Customer Sales:

Narrative: Emphasize our rigorous carrier vetting process in light of the FMCSA removing 200,000+ drivers from the market. Position our slightly higher rates as the cost of guaranteed, legal, and reliable capacity during Midwest weather disruptions.

Action: Proactively reach out to shippers with freight moving through OH, IN, KS, and MO to offer routing solutions and secure PFF reefer capacity before the weekend.

🚛 For Carrier Reps:

Sourcing Focus: Focus entirely on securing reefer capacity in the Midwest and Plains for PFF loads, and lock down flatbed capacity for Monday morning construction deliveries.

Negotiation Leverage: Use the significant drop in the national diesel average to $3.694/gallon to push back against inflated fuel surcharges and negotiate better linehaul rates on long-haul lanes.

Strategic Insight

Use fuel relief to buy execution terms

The diesel drop is most useful as negotiating leverage on longer dry van and flatbed moves, but the savings should be converted into service protections rather than pure rate cuts. On Ohio and Indiana freight, a modest concession tied to detention coverage, route flexibility, or same-day POD turnaround is worth more than squeezing a few extra cents from linehaul and risking a Monday re-cover.

Strategic Takeaways

High-Signal Additions

🧭 Savvy Broker's Playbook

🔑 Executive Signal Summary


📊 What the board is really saying


🚛 Mode-by-mode trading plan


🌦️ Midwest weather chessboard: where service risk actually lives


🛣️ Lane tactics that matter today


💼 Customer strategy that wins today


🤝 Carrier desk tactics for today


🛡️ Risk controls that protect margin today


🔮 24–72 hour probability-weighted outlook


🎯 Highest-value action stack for today

  1. Pre-cover Monday open-deck now.

    • Flatbed and heavy haul remain the deepest, richest part of the board.
  2. Treat Ohio and Indiana as access-risk freight, not just weather freight.

    • Verify receiving status before you award the load.
  3. Buy reefer premium only where the commodity still truly needs it.

    • Weekend PFF pricing should not become lazy Monday pricing.
  4. Push on long-haul van and open-deck using diesel at $3.694/gallon.

    • Trade for service terms, not only cents per mile.
  5. Exploit specialized spread, but qualify every spec.

    • The negative spread is opportunity for disciplined brokers and a trap for sloppy ones.
  6. Reconfirm carrier legality and commitment closer to pickup than usual.

    • Compliance risk is now operational risk.
  7. Measure execution by midday and again before close.

    • Track:
    • falloff rate
    • paid-versus-posted spread by mode
    • percentage of Midwest loads with verified receiving status
    • detention exposure
    • same-day POD turnaround

🧭 Bottom line

📅 This Day in History

193: After assassinating the Roman Emperor Pertinax, his Praetorian Guards auction off the throne to Didius Julianus.
364: Roman Emperor Valentinian I appoints his brother Flavius Valens co-emperor.
2006: At least one million union members, students and unemployed take to the streets in France in protest at the government's proposed First Employment Contract law.

💭 Quote of the Day

"Fear of death is fear of surrender to Infinity. Learn to surrender, to exist at Infinity while alive, and fear of death dissolves."

— Adi Da Samraj