📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Sunday, April 05, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The national spot freight market is navigating a complex environment this Sunday, characterized by a stabilization in total available loads at 140,386 and a strong market average rate of $2.66/mile. Capacity remains structurally tight across specialized and temperature-controlled sectors, heavily influenced by a punishing $5.61/gallon national diesel average and extreme regional fuel spikes driven by global geopolitical tensions. Widespread severe flooding across the Midwest, Texas, and the Northeast is fracturing major transcontinental routing, forcing carriers to demand significant hazard and detour premiums. Brokers must prioritize aggressive fuel surcharge negotiations and secure capacity early, as carriers are actively rejecting low-yield freight and leveraging the volatile fuel environment to protect their margins.
Insight
The next squeeze comes from recovery freight, not fresh rain
The near-term stress point is shifting from active precipitation to network recovery. Illinois, Indiana and Ohio trend cooler and mostly drier into Tuesday, which should limit broad new washouts, but river flooding and secondary-road closures will linger beyond the rain; the tightest Monday-Tuesday conditions are likely on freight that missed weekend appointments, with another rate push midweek as delayed flatbed, retail and replenishment freight re-enters the market.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe River Flooding (Midwest (IL, IN, OH, MI, MO, IA)): Major flooding is occurring along the Maumee, Killbuck, and Des Plaines rivers, threatening critical freight corridors including I-80, I-74, and I-75. Expect significant routing delays, localized road closures, and carriers demanding hazard premiums to navigate the region.
- Major River Flooding (Texas (TX, Dallas, Hunt, Rockwall counties)): The Trinity and Sabine rivers are experiencing minor to moderate flooding, threatening the I-20, I-30, and I-35E corridors. This is expected to disrupt regional distribution networks and tighten capacity as drivers avoid waterlogged routes.
- Northeast Flooding (Upstate New York (NY, Herkimer, Oneida counties)): Minor flooding along West Canada Creek is creating localized disruptions. While less severe than the Midwest, this is complicating regional Northeast routing and tightening local capacity pools.
- Snowmelt Flooding (Washington (WA, Chelan county)): Flooding caused by rapid snowmelt is inundating the Stehekin Valley. This poses risks to regional PNW freight movement and may force detours for specialized and heavy haul equipment operating in the area.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Wind and residual water will keep the Midwest slower than it looks on radar
Even where flooding stops expanding, 20-32 mph winds across Ohio, Indiana and Illinois through Monday will keep flatbed securement, tarp work and empty repositioning slower than normal. High-profile equipment on exposed stretches of I-55, I-65 and I-75 will continue to run conservatively, so service failures are more likely to show up first as dwell, late arrivals and missed reload windows than as systemwide shutdowns.
- Northwest Ohio picks up another light round of rain midday Sunday before drying; water levels remain the operational issue into Monday.
- Dallas stays largely dry through Monday, so North Texas disruption is more about localized access and detours than a worsening weather pattern.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Crude oil volatility driven by Middle East conflicts is pushing diesel futures higher, indicating that the current $5.61/gallon average may persist or climb, keeping intense pressure on carrier operating costs.
- Carrier Financial Health: Smaller fleets are facing severe cash flow crises due to the rapid spike in fuel costs and delayed shipper payments, leading to increased market consolidation and a structural tightening of reliable capacity.
- Economic Indicators: Rising fuel and food costs are straining consumer spending, though urgent replenishment cycles for essential goods are sustaining strong spot market volumes in the short term.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
Carriers Implement Aggressive Fuel Surcharges Amid Global Tensions 🔗:
With diesel hitting $5.61/gallon nationally and spiking higher regionally due to the Iran conflict, carriers are universally adopting strict fuel surcharges. Brokers must proactively renegotiate rates with shippers to include dynamic fuel pricing, or risk massive margin erosion when sourcing capacity on the spot market.
-
Air Cargo Disruptions Drive Urgent Domestic Expedited Demand 🔗:
Global air cargo capacity reductions and rate spikes tied to Middle East airspace restrictions are forcing shippers to rely on domestic expedited ground transport to meet critical deadlines. Brokers should target high-value manufacturing and retail customers, offering premium team-transit solutions at elevated margins.
-
Produce Prices Surge as Fuel Costs Squeeze Agricultural Supply Chains 🔗:
The combination of rising fuel costs and early produce season demand is driving up wholesale food prices and tightening reefer capacity. Brokers handling temperature-controlled freight have immense leverage to command premium rates from shippers desperate to move perishable goods before spoilage occurs.
News Insight
Air cargo disruption will pull premium truck capacity into manufacturing corridors
The spillover from international air disruptions is likely to show up first in premium solo van, straight truck and team demand around Chicago, Detroit, Toledo and Columbus as manufacturers protect parts flow around flooded corridors. Same-day recoveries will increasingly price off service certainty rather than mileage, especially on automotive and high-value retail freight tied to airport-adjacent distribution.
🔍 Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Spot market transparency is currently favoring carriers, who are using real-time visibility into the 140,000+ available loads to cherry-pick high-paying, short-haul freight that minimizes their fuel exposure.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is critically tight in the Midwest and Texas due to severe flooding, and in the Sunbelt due to produce season. Conversely, the Northeast is seeing a slight surplus of inbound van capacity.
- Technology Disruptions: The rapid adoption of automated fuel surcharge calculators in carrier TMS platforms means brokers can no longer rely on manual, static rate negotiations; dynamic pricing models are now mandatory for competitive bidding.
👥 Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retailers are rushing to secure capacity for spring inventory positioning, but are facing pushback from carriers demanding higher rates to offset fuel costs, creating opportunities for brokers to step in with guaranteed capacity solutions.
- Manufacturing: Industrial production remains strong, driving the massive 60,000+ flatbed load volume. Shippers are highly dependent on brokers to source specialized equipment as routing guide compliance plummets.
- Agriculture: The Sunbelt produce season is in full swing, absorbing significant reefer capacity. Shippers are highly sensitive to transit times and temperature integrity, willing to pay premiums for reliable broker execution.
- Automotive: Just-in-time auto supply chains are being threatened by Midwest flooding disrupting major I-75 and I-80 corridors, driving urgent demand for expedited and team-transit solutions.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest is currently the most volatile and opportunity-rich region in the country. Severe river flooding across Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio is fracturing major freight corridors, severely restricting capacity and driving up rates. Simultaneously, the region is seeing massive demand for flatbed equipment to support spring construction, while carriers are actively rejecting long-haul outbound loads due to $5.61/gallon diesel costs. This combination of weather disruptions, high demand, and fuel sensitivity is creating massive arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can effectively navigate the chaos.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL → Dallas, TX: This major transcontinental lane is currently heavily disrupted by severe flooding at both the origin (Des Plaines River) and destination (Trinity River). Van rates are averaging $2.56/mile nationally, but this lane is seeing significant premiums as carriers demand heavy fuel surcharges for the 900+ mile transit and hazard pay for navigating waterlogged regions.
Columbus, OH → Atlanta, GA: The I-75 corridor is facing pressure from minor flooding in Ohio and surging inbound demand in the Southeast due to produce season. Flatbed demand is particularly strong here, with national paid rates at $2.92/mile, though this specific lane is commanding higher rates due to regional capacity imbalances.
Regional Insight
Chicago-to-Dallas pricing pressure is concentrated at the origin
North Texas conditions look comparatively stable through Monday, which means the lane's real pricing pressure remains around Chicago-area origin routing, flood detours and carrier reluctance on a 900-mile fuel-heavy move. The best buying window is freight that can load early Monday or Tuesday with fixed appointment times; by midweek, a broader Midwest freight release could tighten outbound coverage again.
Regional Insight
Columbus-to-Atlanta remains one of the cleaner directional buys
Ohio turns drier after today, and carriers still want to position into Georgia for produce reloads, keeping Columbus-to-Atlanta one of the few lanes where buying power should improve into the early week. The pricing edge is strongest with Southeast-based carriers that already have Wednesday or Thursday outbound plans; local Ohio trucks are still more likely to charge for flood-related uncertainty.
🚨 Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Outbound Chicago, IL (Van/Reefer) due to flooding and fuel costs
- Outbound Dallas, TX (Van) due to Trinity River flooding
- All long-haul lanes (>800 miles) experiencing extreme fuel surcharge pressure
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Critical shortages of Flatbed equipment in the Midwest due to construction demand, and severe Reefer shortages in the Sunbelt due to produce season.
Opportunity Zones:
- Inbound to the Southeast (Atlanta, Miami) as carriers seek positioning for produce season
- Short-haul regional van freight (<300 miles) where fuel exposure is minimized
🎯 Strategic Recommendations for Today
💼 For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Lead conversations with the reality of the $5.61/gallon diesel average and the severe Midwest/Texas flooding. Position ETA as a stabilizing force that can guarantee capacity in a highly volatile, weather-disrupted market.
Action: Immediately contact all shippers with freight moving through the Midwest or Texas to proactively discuss potential weather delays and secure updated, fuel-adjusted rate agreements.
🚛 For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Prioritize building relationships with regional flatbed carriers in the Midwest and reefer owner-operators in the Southeast. Focus on carriers willing to run short-haul, high-frequency dedicated lanes.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the promise of quick pay and consistent, short-haul freight to negotiate favorable rates. Emphasize that ETA offers transparent fuel surcharges to protect carrier margins in this high-cost environment.
Strategic Insight
Separate volatility costs before the market separates them for you
Margin protection is strongest when today’s volatility is itemized up front instead of buried in a single all-in quote.
- Break urgent quotes into linehaul, fuel and flood-detour premiums; shippers are more likely to approve visible risk charges than a blended number that looks inflated.
- Set hard same-day tender cutoffs on Midwest long-haul freight, because replacement costs rise quickly once drivers commit to shorter regional runs.
- Pre-book Monday-Tuesday flatbed and reefer coverage before midday, when recovery freight is most likely to tighten the spot market.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Expect Monday-Tuesday tightness to be driven more by backlog, wind and access issues than by fresh widespread rainfall.
- On Chicago-to-Dallas, treat Chicago-area pickup and routing risk as the main cost driver; Dallas conditions stabilize sooner.
- Use Southeast produce repositioning to buy Columbus-to-Atlanta more aggressively from Georgia- and Florida-oriented carriers.
- Protect margin by itemizing fuel and detour premiums separately and tightening tender deadlines on long-haul Midwest freight.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a selectivity market, not a broad-demand market.
- Total available loads are 140,386, down 0.4% day over day, yet the national average rate is $2.66/mile, up from the recent $2.58/mile reading.
- When volume eases but rates rise, the signal is clear: capacity is not gone, but it is highly selective.
Diesel at $5.61/gallon is still the market’s main filter.
- Carriers are not pricing just miles.
- They are pricing fuel exposure, detours, flood risk, idle time, reefer fuel burn, reload certainty, and appointment rigidity.
The next squeeze is recovery freight.
- Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio are moving from active-weather disruption into backlog, dwell, missed appointments, and secondary-route friction.
- Monday-Tuesday capacity tightness should be driven more by freight catching up than by fresh rain.
Reefer and van are the cleanest “pay-up” markets today.
- Reefer paid is $3.14/mile vs. $2.80/mile posted.
- Van paid is $2.56/mile vs. $2.42/mile posted.
- That tells you carriers are winning negotiations after first quote, especially where service risk is high.
Open-deck is still where the board is deepest, but not every posted ask should be paid.
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized total 103,993 loads, or about 74.1% of the board.
- But in those modes, posted rates are running above paid averages, which means discipline beats panic buying.
Best tactical buys today
- Columbus, OH → Atlanta, GA
- Short-haul regional van under 300 miles
- LTL (Less Than Truckload) / Partial as a shipper retention tool
- Premium manufacturing and expedited freight around Chicago, Detroit, Toledo, and Columbus
📊 What the market is actually saying
Rates are firming against softer board volume.
- Total loads: 140,386
- Yesterday: 141,006
- National average rate: $2.66/mile
- One week ago average rate: $2.53/mile
- One month ago average rate: $2.29/mile
- The message is not “demand is exploding.”
- The message is “the executable truck is getting more expensive.”
The last 8 days show decreasing load volume, but not easier buying.
- That combination usually means the market is filtering out weak freight and concentrating price power in freight that truly must move.
- In practice, that creates a better environment for brokers who can differentiate urgent freight from optional freight.
Paid-versus-posted spread is the best same-day truth signal.
- Van: $2.56 paid vs. $2.42 posted = +$0.14/mile
- Interpretation: van freight is a service premium market today.
If you quote fast without securing a truck, you are likely to get lifted.
Reefer: $3.14 paid vs. $2.80 posted = +$0.34/mile
- Interpretation: reefer is the tightest executable market on the board.
Produce, cooling fuel, and weather-sensitive transit are all compounding.
Flatbed: $2.92 paid vs. $2.99 posted = -$0.07/mile
- Interpretation: public asking prices are running ahead of average clearing levels.
- That does not mean flatbed is soft.
It means brokers who know the jobsite, securement, tarp, and reload story can still buy intelligently.
Heavy haul: $2.98 paid vs. $3.04 posted = -$0.06/mile
- Interpretation: this is a spec-driven market, not a haggling market.
Exact dimensions and route planning decide whether the load clears cleanly.
Specialized: $2.58 paid vs. $2.86 posted = -$0.28/mile
- Interpretation: the “specialized” category is likely carrying a lot of inflated or misclassified asks.
The money here comes from matching exact equipment and refusing to pay generic scarcity premiums.
LTL / Partial: $1.85 paid vs. $1.75 posted = +$0.10/mile
- Interpretation: shippers are still using consolidation to escape full truckload repricing.
- Good margin exists if you control transit expectations.
💰 Where brokers can make the best money today
1) Reefer is the strongest premium market
- 7,303 loads
- $3.14/mile paid
- Why it pays:
- early produce
- expensive fuel for both tractor and unit
- lower tolerance for delays
- carrier reluctance on flood-affected lanes
- Broker edge:
- pre-cover before quoting
- work known reefer incumbents
- separate linehaul, fuel, washout, and late-delivery risk internally
2) Van rescue freight is better than commodity van freight
- 21,230 loads
- $2.56/mile paid
- The best van margin is not in generic long-haul.
- It is in:
- missed weekend appointments
- retail replenishment
- manufacturing recovery freight
- expedited moves tied to air cargo disruption
- Psychology note:
- customers in disruption markets will pay faster for certainty than for mileage logic
3) Flatbed is still the production engine, but buy with discipline
- 60,099 loads
- $2.92/mile paid
- The open-deck market is deep enough to produce strong daily revenue, but only if you avoid:
- generic site assumptions
- underquoted tarping
- underpriced jobsite delay
- soft appointment promises
- Best flatbed business today:
- project freight
- steel
- building materials
- machinery with verified loading conditions
4) Heavy haul remains premium if you are operationally exact
- 28,487 loads
- $2.98/mile paid
- Margin comes from avoiding bad quotes, not from aggressive markups.
- The brokers who win here today will:
- verify dimensions
- confirm axle needs
- check permit timing
- route around flood exposure before quoting
5) LTL / Partial is your relationship-defense tool
- 7,860 loads
- $1.85/mile paid
- Use it when the shipper cannot absorb truckload repricing but can tolerate:
- longer transit
- hub touches
- tighter tender requirements
🗺️ Regional and lane posture for the next 24–72 hours
Midwest: highest chaos, highest opportunity
- Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio remain the priority execution zone.
- The real issue is no longer just rainfall.
- It is now:
- river flooding
- secondary-road closures
- dock congestion
- late arrivals
- missed reload windows
- wind slowing empty repositioning and flatbed handling
Chicago, IL → Dallas, TX: origin risk is the real cost driver
- This lane should be priced off:
- Chicago-area pickup reliability
- origin detours
- driver reluctance on a long fuel-heavy move
- Dallas looks more like a local-access issue than a broad regional shutdown.
- Best buying window:
- early Monday pickups
- fixed appointments
- carriers already planning Texas reloads
Columbus, OH → Atlanta, GA: one of the cleaner directional buys
- This is one of the better lanes to buy because carriers want to position into Georgia for produce-related reloads.
- Best targets:
- Southeast-based carriers
- Georgia and Florida-oriented fleets
- trucks with midweek outbound plans from the Southeast
- This is one of the few lanes where buying power should improve into early week.
Northeast inbound van capacity is relatively softer
- Use that to your advantage on:
- repositioning deals
- backhaul conversations
- customers who can ship into the Northeast with modest flexibility
- Do not confuse softer inbound van conditions with perfect execution.
- Flooding there is still more of a local-service friction problem.
North Texas: don’t overprice the whole region
- The better read is:
- localized access and detours
- not full regional paralysis
- Good brokers will price the exact shipper and exact route, not just “Texas weather.”
🚛 Mode-by-mode broker playbook
Dry Van
- Best use: recovery freight, retail, manufacturing, short-to-mid haul, expedited support
- What to do today:
- cover Midwest-origin vans early
- avoid cheap long-haul quotes without fuel treatment
- sell on appointment control and reload visibility
- What to avoid:
- vague pickup windows
- underpriced 800+ mile freight
- receivers with known dwell and no detention protection
Reefer
- Best use: produce, food, high-value perishables, time-sensitive retail
- What to do today:
- source before selling
- verify temperature settings, washout, reefer fuel, and late-delivery procedures
- use repeat carriers first
- What to avoid:
- first-call cheap reefer coverage
- assuming a reefer truck will accept van-like margin
- burying reefer fuel inside linehaul
Flatbed
- Best use: project freight, steel, machinery, construction materials
- What to do today:
- separate linehaul, tarp, securement, and delay exposure
- challenge inflated asks when site conditions are clean
- close same-day when customer approval is obtained
- What to avoid:
- quoting without tarp clarity
- soft jobsite assumptions
- paying peak-market pricing for clean dock-to-dock open-deck freight
Heavy Haul
- Best use: dimensional freight with high service and planning needs
- What to do today:
- confirm dimensions before pricing
- review routing around Midwest flood zones
- build time for route surveys and permit friction
- What to avoid:
- quoting off commodity mileage logic
- same-day promises without route review
- assuming normal transit through disrupted corridors
Specialized
- Best use: niche trailer or handling requirements
- What to do today:
- verify trailer type, loading method, securement, and any handling requirements
- screen out misclassified freight early
- use narrow carrier outreach instead of broad posting
- What to avoid:
- paying posted premium before spec validation
- treating “specialized” as a single uniform market
LTL / Partial
- Best use: protecting relationships when truckload rates break tolerance
- What to do today:
- offer it selectively
- explain transit tradeoffs clearly
- build around existing density and carrier loops
- What to avoid:
- presenting partial as equal to premium truckload service
- ignoring terminal and weather delay risk
💬 How to sell this market to shippers today
Lead with continuity, not with excuses
- Good language:
- “We can cover this, but today’s cost is being set by live fuel, route disruption, and replacement-truck economics.”
- Bad language:
- apologetic, vague, or defensive rate framing
Itemize volatility instead of hiding it
- Break quotes into:
- linehaul
- fuel
- flood/detour premium
- Shippers are more likely to approve visible risk charges than a single inflated all-in number.
Set hard tender deadlines on volatile freight
- Especially for:
- Midwest long-haul
- reefer
- weather-exposed van
- heavy haul with route sensitivity
- Replacement cost is likely to worsen once carriers commit to shorter reloads.
Offer a menu, not a fight
- For rate-sensitive customers, give three paths:
- premium truckload
- flexible truckload
- LTL / Partial
- This preserves trust and reduces the chance they shop you purely on price.
Use consequence-based selling
- Ask the real question:
- “What does failure cost if this misses?”
- In markets like this, buyers often stop arguing about rate once they quantify:
- shutdown risk
- missed retail reset
- spoilage
- line-down exposure
- appointment penalties
🤝 How to win trucks without overpaying
Sell certainty to carriers
- Carriers respond faster when they get:
- exact commodity
- exact weight
- exact pickup and delivery windows
- dock or jobsite notes
- realistic reload logic
Reefer and Midwest rescue freight: don’t over-negotiate
- These are real tightening zones.
- Trying to grind too hard usually costs more later through:
- re-trades
- service failures
- after-hours recoveries
Open-deck: negotiate intelligently, not emotionally
- Because posted is above paid in several open-deck modes, you should challenge high asks when:
- site conditions are clean
- appointments are flexible
- reloads are visible
- specs are standard
- Pay up only when the load truly deserves it:
- flood detours
- crane timing
- tarping complexity
- muddy jobsites
- permit difficulty
Use reload logic as your main buying leverage
- Best examples:
- Midwest to Southeast
- Midwest to Texas
- Columbus to Atlanta
- A truck that sees its next load is often cheaper than a truck that only sees today’s chaos.
Tighten carrier risk controls
- In a cash-stressed market, same-day swaps and weak execution rise.
- Protect critical freight by:
- confirming assigned driver identity close to pickup
- rechecking contact numbers
- using trusted incumbents on high-risk freight
- avoiding “too cheap to be real” rescue coverage
⚠️ Hidden risks less experienced brokers will miss
1) Wind will slow execution even where radar looks cleaner
- On flatbed and high-profile equipment, the issue shows up first as:
- slow tarp work
- slower empty moves
- late arrivals
- missed reload windows
2) Recovery freight can reprice faster than weather headlines
- The market often loosens emotionally once storms fade from the screen.
- In reality, recovery freight tightens faster because:
- weekend misses stack up
- receivers compress schedules
- carriers get choosier about reload quality
3) Long-haul underpriced freight is the biggest margin trap
- With $5.61 diesel, the wrong 900-mile load can destroy the economics of an otherwise good day.
- This is especially true if:
- the reload is weak
- detention risk is high
- the shipper wants same-day acceptance
4) Specialized misclassification is expensive
- A large negative gap between posted and paid in specialized tells you the board contains a lot of inflated or noisy pricing.
- If you don’t validate exact equipment, you will either:
- overpay for ordinary freight, or
- underbuy a truly niche load and miss coverage
5) Expedited demand may spill into premium van/team markets
- Air cargo disruption is likely to pull urgency into domestic trucking first around:
- Chicago
- Detroit
- Toledo
- Columbus
- Those loads will price off certainty, not market averages.
📈 24–72 hour outlook
Base case — 60% probability
- Monday-Tuesday tighten in the Midwest on backlog and missed appointments
- Expect:
- firmer Midwest origin pricing
- reefer staying hot
- recovery van freight repricing quickly
- flatbed tightening most on site-sensitive and project freight
Secondary case — 25% probability
- Texas and Southeast normalize faster than the Midwest
- Best outcome for brokers already positioning trucks southbound
- This favors:
- Columbus to Atlanta
- Midwest to Georgia
- Midwest to Texas reload logic
Lower-probability case — 15% probability
- A faster operational reset develops by midweek
- Even then, rates likely stay elevated in:
- reefer
- expedited van
- open-deck project freight
- Diesel alone keeps a floor under pricing.
✅ Today’s execution checklist
Cover Midwest-origin freight before midday
- Prioritize Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and Chicago-area freight.
Pre-book Monday-Tuesday reefer and flatbed now
- These are the two modes most likely to punish late sourcing.
Treat Chicago → Dallas as an origin-risk quote
- Price pickup and routing risk first, not Dallas headline weather.
Buy Columbus → Atlanta aggressively from Southeast-oriented carriers
- That is one of the cleaner directional buys on the board.
Split every volatile quote into three buckets
- Linehaul
- Fuel
- Detour/disruption premium
Set same-day tender cutoffs on long-haul Midwest freight
- Don’t let quotes float while the replacement market worsens.
Use LTL / Partial to save price-sensitive relationships
- But state transit variability clearly before booking.
Reconfirm facility access and carrier identity on critical loads
- In this market, operational sloppiness is more expensive than rate error.
Push sales toward urgency-sensitive verticals
- Best same-day targets:
- retail replenishment
- produce and food
- manufacturing recovery
- automotive parts support
- expedited domestic replacements for disrupted air freight
Judge the day by execution quality, not just booked revenue
- A strong day looks like:
- fewer re-trades
- fewer missed appointments
- cleaner margin protection
- more loads sold with reload logic
📅 This Day in History
1792: United States President George Washington exercises his authority to veto a bill, the first time this power is used in the United States.
1902: A stand box collapses at Ibrox Park (now Ibrox Stadium) in Glasgow, Scotland, which led to the deaths of 25 and injuries to more than 500 supporters during an international association football match between Scotland and England.
1992: Alberto Fujimori, president of Peru, dissolves the Peruvian congress by military force.
💭 Quote of the Day
"It is easy to discover what another has discovered before."
— Christopher Columbus