Expedited Transport Agency Logo

📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report

Saturday, March 14, 2026

7:00 AM CST


📊 Top-Line Summary

The spot market is experiencing intense volatility today as the national average diesel price hits a historic $4.942/gallon amid the ongoing Strait of Hormuz blockade, fundamentally altering carrier behavior and capacity availability. Real-time market data indicates total available loads have dropped 19.7% over the weekend to 146,242, yet the market average rate has ticked up to a firm $2.38/mile. This rate inflation is primarily driven by capacity exiting the market, with independent carriers parking trucks rather than absorbing crippling fuel costs. Flatbed continues its dominance with over 62,000 open loads, while a major blizzard in the Upper Midwest and severe 85mph winds across the Rockies are paralyzing transcontinental routing and triggering massive localized rate spikes.

Daily market overview

⛽ 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:

⛈️ Weather Impact Cascade

💰 Financial Market Indicators

📰 Impactful News Analysis

  1. Historic Diesel Spike Threatens Independent Carrier Survival 🔗:
    With diesel jumping over 85 cents in a week due to geopolitical conflicts, brokers must proactively address fuel costs in every negotiation. Carriers cannot absorb this expense; expect immediate demands for higher linehaul rates or explicit fuel surcharges. Brokers who secure fuel-adjusted rates from shippers will win the capacity war.
  2. FMCSA Finalizes Mandatory eDVIR Compliance Rule for 2026 🔗:
    The shift to mandatory electronic Driver Vehicle Inspection Reports (effective March 23) will temporarily slow down carrier operations and potentially sideline non-compliant equipment. Brokers should verify carrier compliance during onboarding to avoid loads being delayed by DOT out-of-service orders.
  3. FMCSA Cracks Down on USDOT and MC Number Transfers 🔗:
    As capacity tightens and margins shrink, fraud is rising. The FMCSA's warning about deactivated operating authorities highlights the critical need for brokers to maintain strict carrier vetting protocols. Double-brokering and chameleon carriers are major risks in the current high-rate environment.
  4. New CDL Training Rule Delayed by Administration Pause 🔗:
    The 60-day delay on new CDL training requirements provides a brief reprieve for driver pipelines, but the broader structural shortage remains. Brokers should not expect any immediate influx of new capacity, especially given the current fuel crisis driving existing operators out of the market.

News Impact Timeline

🔍 Competitive Intelligence

Demand Shift Indicators

👥 Customer Sector Analysis

🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis

📍 Primary Region Focus: Midwest

The Midwest is currently the most volatile freight region in the country, caught between a historic blizzard threatening Minnesota and Wisconsin, and the crippling effects of $4.942/gallon diesel. Capacity is rapidly exiting the market as carriers refuse to risk equipment in whiteout conditions for standard rates. Inbound capacity is nearly non-existent without massive hazard premiums, while outbound carriers are demanding top-tier rates to escape the weather zone. The combination of weather delays, fuel costs, and routing guide failures is pushing unprecedented volume into the spot market.

🛣️ Key Lane Watch

Chicago, IL → Minneapolis, MN:

This lane is directly in the crosshairs of the impending blizzard. Carriers are outright rejecting standard contract rates, forcing urgent freight into the spot market. The combination of $4.942 diesel and severe weather risk has created a massive capacity vacuum.

Indianapolis, IN → Dallas, TX:

This North-South lane is serving as a critical bypass route for freight avoiding the transcontinental chaos on I-80 and the Midwest blizzards. However, the 800+ mile transit makes it highly sensitive to the recent 85-cent diesel spike.

🚨 Actionable Alerts

Rate Spike Warnings:

Capacity Shortage Alerts:

Opportunity Zones:

🎯 Strategic Recommendations for Today

💼 For Customer Sales:

Narrative: The market is facing a dual-threat crisis: the fastest diesel price spike in history ($4.942/gal) combined with severe weather paralyzing the Midwest and Rockies. Routing guides are failing because carriers cannot afford to run contract rates. We need to adjust pricing immediately to secure reliable capacity.

Action: Proactively contact all shippers with freight moving through the Midwest or on I-80. Request immediate rate increases or temporary fuel surcharges to prevent service failures.

🚛 For Carrier Reps:

Sourcing Focus: Target carriers in the Midwest looking for escape loads to the South or Southeast. Prioritize owner-operators by offering transparent, fair fuel surcharges to build loyalty.

Negotiation Leverage: Use the promise of consistent, weather-free reload opportunities in the South to negotiate better rates on outbound Midwest freight. Emphasize our quick-pay options to help them manage cash flow amid high fuel costs.

🧭 Savvy Broker's Playbook

🔑 Executive Signal Summary


📊 What the board is really saying


🚚 Equipment-by-equipment trading plan

1) Flatbed: still the best use of desk time

2) Heavy Haul: operationally tight, fast-clearing

3) Specialized: your best negotiation pocket

4) Reefer: still buy-first, but more lane-selective

5) Van: negotiable nationally, dangerous selectively

6) LTL / Partial: useful tool, not a universal escape hatch


🌨️ Weather and corridor playbook for the next 24–72 hours

1) Upper Midwest inbound: premium and fragile

2) Northern transcon: do not sell “normal transit”

3) Southern bypass lanes: opportunity with discipline

4) Texas: still attractive, but not friction-free


💰 Where the best brokers make money today


🧠 Customer sales strategy for today

1) Lead with replacement cost, not national averages

2) Call these accounts first

3) Commercial asks you should make today

4) Best customer-facing language


🤝 Carrier desk tactics that win today

1) Change your call order

2) Reduce the carrier uncertainty premium

3) Use carrier psychology correctly


🛡️ Compliance and fraud controls you should not skip


📈 Probability-weighted 24–72 hour outlook


🎯 Highest-value actions before the day ends

  1. Reprice every uncovered load touching the Upper Midwest, the northern transcon corridor, or any long-haul lane with weak reloads

    • Add fuel protection
    • Add delay protection
    • Add detour language
  2. Move more desk time into open-deck immediately

    • 108,437 loads
    • 74.1% of the board
    • 83.8% of moved volume
    • That is where the day is paying
  3. Use Specialized as your margin-defense segment

    • $2.54 posted / $2.35 paid
    • Do not overpay for ambiguity
  4. Pre-cover reefer before you promise it

    • Especially anything Midwest-bound, food-grade, or time-sensitive
  5. Negotiate national van, but protect weather-exposed van

    • Van is not broadly hot
    • Some lanes absolutely still are
  6. Convert only the right freight into LTL/Partial

    • Dense corridor = yes
    • Ugly one-off rescue move = usually no
  7. Tighten new-carrier vetting

    • Today’s fraud loss will erase multiple good-margin loads
  8. Track these four metrics tonight

    • First quote vs booked buy
    • Quote-to-cover time
    • Percent of loads with facility reconfirmation
    • Percent of risk-lane loads with written fuel/detour protection

🧭 Bottom line

The brokers who win today will do three things better than everyone else: - Separate negotiable freight from replacement-cost freight - Sell lane-specific risk instead of national averages - Put their time where the money is: open-deck, reefer risk lanes, and disciplined specialized buys

💡 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

1780: American Revolutionary War: Spanish forces capture Fort Charlotte in Mobile, Alabama, the last British frontier post capable of threatening New Orleans.
1942: Anne Miller becomes the first American patient to be treated with penicillin, under the care of Orvan Hess and John Bumstead.
1945: The R.A.F. drop the Grand Slam bomb in action for the first time, on a railway viaduct near Bielefeld, Germany.

💭 Quote of the Day

"It is dangerous to be right in matters on which the established authorities are wrong."

— Voltaire