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πŸ“Š Daily Market Intelligence Report

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

12:54 PM CST


πŸ“Š Top-Line Summary

Market volatility is accelerating mid-week as severe winter weather slams the West Coast and Upper Midwest, effectively trapping capacity in key agricultural and retail corridors. While total load volumes have normalized to 214,569, the spread between posted and paid rates has widened significantly, particularly in the reefer sector where paid rates are commanding a 6-cent premium over posted averages ($2.61 vs $2.55). This indicates urgent, weather-driven demand is forcing brokers to pay up for immediate coverage. Capacity is tightening rapidly along the I-5 corridor due to blizzard conditions, while the Midwest faces similar disruptions. Brokers should prioritize securing coverage for outbound Western freight immediately before road closures severely restrict equipment availability.

Daily market overview

β›½ Diesel Price Analysis

Price Trend Over Time

Diesel Price Trend Chart

AAA Historical Price Comparison

AAA Historical Price Comparison Chart

🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence

Current Major Weather Events:

β›ˆοΈ Weather Impact Cascade

πŸ’° Financial Market Indicators

πŸ“° Impactful News Analysis

  1. Illinois CDL Audit Risks $128M Funding Cut & Capacity Fallout πŸ”—:
    The FMCSA's audit of Illinois' non-domiciled CDL program could lead to the revocation of nearly 20% of these specific licenses. For brokers, this signals a potential sudden tightening of driver availability in the Midwest hub. Vetting carrier credentials for Illinois-based drivers is now critical to avoid service failures if licenses are invalidated.
  2. J.B. Hunt Reports Tightening Capacity & Positive Demand Signals πŸ”—:
    Executive commentary from a major carrier confirms that capacity has 'notably tightened' and demand is outperforming early Q1 expectations. This validates the spot market premiums we are seeing and suggests that brokers should prepare for a firmer rate environment earlier in the year than typical seasonal patterns would dictate.
  3. Spot Rates Diverge: Flatbed Gains While Van/Reefer adjust πŸ”—:
    While some data sources show softening, the nuance is in the equipment types. Flatbed's resilience highlights the strength of the industrial economy. Brokers should segment their strategy: aggressive spot buying on flatbed to lock in margins before spring construction fully hits, while monitoring the weather-driven volatility in reefer/van.
  4. Port Congestion & Demurrage Risks Rising in 2025 πŸ”—:
    Rising global shipping disruptions are extending voyage times and increasing port congestion. For domestic brokers, this often translates to unpredictable drayage volume surges and tight capacity near major ports as vessels bunch up. Expect erratic demand spikes out of coastal markets.

News Impact Timeline

πŸ” Competitive Intelligence

Demand Shift Indicators

πŸ‘₯ Customer Sector Analysis

πŸ—ΊοΈ Regional & Lane Analysis

πŸ“ Primary Region Focus: Southeast (GA, FL, AL, NC, SC)

The Southeast offers the most stable and profitable operating environment today. While the West and Midwest battle severe weather, the Southeast is experiencing moderate conditions and steady agricultural preparation. Rates are firming but predictable, allowing brokers to secure margins without the chaos of weather-induced service failures. Produce season preparation in Florida is beginning to absorb capacity, creating a natural tightening that supports rate growth.

πŸ›£οΈ Key Lane Watch

Atlanta, GA β†’ Miami, FL:

This lane is heating up as carriers position themselves for Florida produce season. Inbound Florida rates are typically lower, but current demand for positioning is creating a balanced market. Capacity is readily available as drivers want to head south.

Charlotte, NC β†’ Chicago, IL:

A traditional backhaul lane that is seeing upward rate pressure due to the weather impacts in the Midwest. Carriers are hesitant to head into potential blizzard conditions without a premium.

🚨 Actionable Alerts

Rate Spike Warnings:

Capacity Shortage Alerts:

Opportunity Zones:

🎯 Strategic Recommendations for Today

πŸ’Ό For Customer Sales:

Narrative: Severe winter weather is disrupting the West and Midwest. We need to secure lead time on any shipments moving into or out of these zones to ensure coverage. Rates in these lanes are elevated due to risk.

Action: Proactively contact customers with freight in CA, OR, MN, and CO to adjust pickup/delivery expectations and secure budget approvals for weather premiums.

πŸš› For Carrier Reps:

Sourcing Focus: Focus on the Southeast for volume. For weather zones, look for carriers already stuck or based in those regions who are comfortable navigating the conditions.

Negotiation Leverage: Use the 'Florida Produce Season' positioning angle to negotiate lower rates on inbound FL freight. For weather lanes, focus on 'getting the driver home' or out of the storm path.

πŸ“ž Customer Communication Scripts

Rate Increase Justification β€” Weather-Driven Capacity Disruption Across West Coast And Upper Midwest Corridors

Opening Script: "Good morning, [Customer Name]. I wanted to reach out personally before your freight moves, because the market shifted significantly overnight. We are actively tracking severe winter conditions along the I-5 corridor in California and Oregon, blizzard-level conditions in Minnesota, and extreme wind events in Colorado β€” all hitting simultaneously. What that means in real terms is that paid rates in our market are already running 10 cents above posted averages on van freight and 6 cents above on reefer. That gap between what is posted on the board and what brokers are actually paying to secure trucks is your clearest signal that the market has already repriced above what any quote from yesterday reflects. I want to make sure your freight is protected before conditions peak."

Value Proposition: Securing your capacity today gives you two things the spot market tomorrow cannot guarantee: a confirmed truck and a known rate. When road closures materialize and carriers begin rejecting contracted loads to chase higher-paying spot freight, shippers who moved early will have coverage. Those who wait will be competing in an auction with limited available trucks.

Urgency Creator: Based on the forecast data we are tracking, Thursday appears to be the peak disruption window across multiple corridors simultaneously. California is forecasted for rain and snow with approximately 0.4 inches of precipitation and a 75% probability of occurrence. Colorado is projected to reach temperatures near 3 degrees Fahrenheit with wind gusts potentially approaching 59 mph β€” conditions that effectively ground flatbed and light van operations on I-25. Utah is showing a 99% precipitation probability today with approximately 0.3 inches of snow expected, directly impacting I-80 transcontinental freight. These conditions are forecasted to peak before they improve, which means the window to secure pre-disruption capacity is closing today.

Objection Handler: If the customer says 'your rates are too high': 'I completely understand that instinct, and I want to show you exactly what the market is telling us. The spread between what is posted on load boards and what brokers are actually paying to move trucks has widened to 10 cents per mile on vans right now. That means the rates you might see quoted elsewhere are already below what transactions are actually clearing at. What I am offering you is a confirmed truck at a rate I can stand behind today β€” versus the risk of calling around tomorrow when conditions are worse and paying even more, or worse, not finding coverage at all.'

Capacity Shortage Communication β€” Southeast Stability And Proactive Customer Outreach

Opening Script: "Hey [Customer Name], I am calling because I am watching something develop in the market right now that actually works in your favor β€” but the window is narrower than it looks. While the entire West Coast and Midwest is battling severe winter weather, the Southeast is running clean and stable. Carriers that normally operate in those disrupted corridors are repositioning south, which means I have access to high-quality trucks at competitive rates right now. The catch is that Florida produce season is beginning to activate, and once that demand absorbs this repositioned capacity, the economics flip quickly."

Value Proposition: You get better carrier quality, competitive pricing, and reliable on-time service β€” all because we are acting before the broader market recognizes and prices this window. Once produce season fully ramps outbound Florida, the same carriers commanding favorable inbound rates today will be in high demand at significantly higher rates.

Urgency Creator: The Atlanta-to-Miami corridor is particularly active right now with carriers positioning for Florida produce season. This is a measurable, time-limited window where inbound Florida freight moves at favorable rates before outbound produce demand reverses the carrier economics entirely. This transition could occur within the next 5 to 7 days based on current market signals.

Objection Handler: If the customer says 'I do not have any Southeast freight right now': 'Understood β€” but this is also the right moment to talk about any freight you have in California, Oregon, Minnesota, or Colorado, because those lanes are under serious pressure right now. If you have upcoming shipments in those areas, I would strongly recommend we get ahead of the coverage and rate conversation together before conditions peak Thursday.'

🧭 Savvy Broker's Playbook

πŸ”‘ Executive Signal Summary


πŸ“Š Market Snapshot You Can Trade On (Use-Now Figures)


🌦️ Weather-Driven Playbook (Next 72 Hours)


🎯 24–48 Hour Money Moves


πŸ’΅ Pricing Guardrails (Anchor to Paid; Add Risk Premiums)


πŸ›£οΈ Lanes To Prioritize vs. Price Heavy


πŸ›‘οΈ Risk, Compliance, and SOPs That Prevent Fall-Offs


πŸš› Capacity Flows and Opportunity Windows


πŸ“ˆ KPIs To Manage The Day


βœ… 8-Hour Execution Checklist


πŸ—£οΈ Micro Scripts (Concise, Field-Ready)


πŸ“… This Day in History

1229: The Sixth Crusade: Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor, signs a ten-year truce with al-Kamil, regaining Jerusalem, Nazareth, and Bethlehem with neither military engagements nor support from the papacy.
1797: French Revolutionary Wars: Sir Ralph Abercromby and a fleet of 18 British warships invade Trinidad.
1945: World War II: American and Brazilian troops kick off Operation Encore in Northern Italy, a successful limited action in the Northern Apennines that prepares for the western portion of the Allied Spring offensive.

πŸ’­ Quote of the Day

"Not doing it is certainly the best way to not getting it."

β€” Wayne Gretzky