π Daily Market Intelligence Report
Wednesday, February 18, 2026
12:54 PM CST
π 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.
β½ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
π¦οΈ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- West Coast Winter Storm & I-5 Closure Risk (California, Oregon (CA, OR, Siskiyou & Ventura Counties)): Critical disruption to the primary North-South freight artery. Heavy snow (up to 20 inches) and high winds affecting the Grapevine and Siskiyou Summit will likely force road closures and chain controls, trapping capacity.
- Upper Midwest Blizzard Conditions (Minnesota (MN, Renville, Nicollet, Blue Earth Counties)): Whiteout conditions and wind gusts up to 55 mph are creating treacherous travel along the Minnesota River valley, impacting regional distribution and likely halting freight movement.
- Mountain West High Wind Event (Colorado (CO, Teller & El Paso Counties)): Severe wind gusts up to 75 mph along the Front Range and I-25 corridor pose extreme rollover risks for light and empty trailers, effectively grounding flatbed and light van capacity.
- Wasatch/Uinta Mountains Heavy Snow (Utah (UT, Wasatch & Uinta Mountains)): Heavy snow accumulations of 1-2 feet impacting I-80 and mountain passes, creating significant delays for east-west transcontinental freight moving through the Salt Lake City hub.
βοΈ Weather Impact Cascade
- Immediate Operational Impact: Today and tomorrow represent the most acute multi-corridor disruption window based on the available forecast data. California is forecasted for rain and snow Thursday with approximately 0.4 inches of precipitation and a 75% probability β the highest single precipitation probability in the California 5-day forecast window, making Thursday the most operationally critical day for the I-5 corridor. Colorado faces potentially its most challenging conditions Thursday, with temperatures projected near 3 degrees Fahrenheit and wind gusts possibly approaching 59 mph, conditions that pose extreme rollover risk for flatbed and light van operations on I-25 and the Front Range. Utah is showing a 99% precipitation probability today with approximately 0.3 inches of snow expected, directly impacting I-80 transcontinental freight moving through the Salt Lake City hub. Oregon is forecasted for snow showers Thursday with approximately 0.1 inches of precipitation at sub-freezing temperatures. Minnesota's snow showers today with approximately 0.2 inches of precipitation, combined with ENE winds of 16 to 27 mph and temperatures in the low 30s, are creating the conditions for sustained operational disruption in that region.
- Secondary Market Effects: The simultaneous disruption of the I-5, I-80, and I-25 corridors is likely to redirect freight toward alternative southern routes rather than canceling it outright. I-40 and I-10 southern corridors may see incremental demand increases as shippers route around disrupted mountain passes. Southeast and Texas corridors may absorb some of this diverted East-West freight, adding incremental demand pressure to those markets. Additionally, carriers who successfully navigate weather-impacted zones may command meaningful premiums for their availability and willingness to operate, creating a bifurcated market between equipped and willing operators versus those sidelined by conditions.
- Regional Spillover Analysis: The West Coast weather disruption is likely to create downstream agricultural supply chain effects that extend beyond the immediate storm window. Produce shipments from California and Oregon that are delayed this week may generate a concentrated demand surge when weather clears, as buyers who have been waiting for delayed shipments accelerate new orders. This dynamic could contribute to Florida produce season demand acceleration, as buyers pivot toward Florida sourcing to compensate for West Coast delays β a secondary spillover effect that would further tighten Southeast capacity sooner than typical seasonal timing. The Minnesota blizzard impact on manufacturing and automotive supply chains may create just-in-time production pressure that generates urgent, premium-rate spot moves once road conditions allow β a demand surge that could emerge later this week or early next week.
- Recovery Timeline: Based on the available forecast data, recovery timelines are tentatively as follows, though weather conditions are inherently uncertain and actual clearing may differ from projections: California β precipitation probability drops significantly after Thursday, with potentially clearer conditions emerging Friday through Sunday; Oregon β a similar pattern to California, with conditions potentially stabilizing by Friday-Saturday, though light rain is forecasted Sunday with moderate wind; Colorado β extreme wind conditions may moderate by Friday-Saturday based on the forecast showing calmer conditions by Sunday, though very cold temperatures will persist throughout; Utah β an intermittent snow pattern continues through Friday with approximately 0.1 inches possible, with potential clearing by the weekend; Minnesota β precipitation appears likely to subside after today, but temperatures are projected to continue falling through the forecast window, potentially reaching 13 degrees Fahrenheit by Sunday with near-zero wind chills, suggesting sustained operational difficulty even after active precipitation ends. Full capacity normalization across all disrupted regions may take 5 to 7 days from the storm peak, as equipment repositioning, driver hours resets, and post-storm demand surges contribute to a delayed and uneven recovery.
π° Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Rising diesel prices are re-introducing fuel surcharge volatility, pushing carriers to negotiate harder on all-in rates.
- Carrier Financial Health: Continued exits of smaller carriers are tightening the structural capacity floor, giving remaining operators more leverage during disruption events.
- Economic Indicators: Resilient consumer spending is keeping retail replenishment volumes steady, preventing the typical post-holiday freight lull from fully materializing.
π° Impactful News Analysis
-
Illinois CDL Audit Risks $128M Funding Cut & Capacity Fallout π:
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.
-
J.B. Hunt Reports Tightening Capacity & Positive Demand Signals π:
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.
-
Spot Rates Diverge: Flatbed Gains While Van/Reefer adjust π:
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.
-
Port Congestion & Demurrage Risks Rising in 2025 π:
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
- Immediate Operational Reality: The FMCSA audit of Illinois non-domiciled CDL programs is creating an immediate, if currently uncertain, compliance risk for brokers using Midwest-based carriers. While the full impact on driver availability may not materialize immediately, the risk of license revocations is real and the timeline for resolution is not yet clear. Any carrier operating with a non-domiciled Illinois CDL should be treated as a potential compliance liability in carrier vetting processes until audit outcomes are known. This is an operational action item brokers should address in carrier onboarding and vetting workflows starting today.
- 3-Day Market Implications: Within the next 72 hours, weather-driven rate premiums in van and reefer markets are likely to either sustain or intensify before beginning to moderate as storm systems track through their peak windows. The paid-versus-posted rate spread β currently at 10 cents for van and 6 cents for reefer β may widen further if road closures materialize in California and Colorado as weather peaks Thursday. Major carrier commentary confirming early capacity tightening and demand outperformance suggests that the spot rate premiums being observed today are likely to persist rather than revert to softer levels in the near term, even as individual weather events begin to clear.
- Week-Ahead Positioning: The week ahead may present a market with two distinct operational phases: an acute disruption phase through roughly Thursday and Friday driven by peak weather conditions across multiple corridors, followed by a partial recovery phase over the weekend as California and Oregon conditions potentially begin to improve. Brokers who secure capacity commitments during the acute phase should monitor whether the market rate justification remains intact as individual weather events clear. The Florida produce season transition is likely to become the dominant market narrative by early next week as weather disruption effects begin to fade and agricultural demand absorbs the repositioned Southeast capacity pool.
- Regulatory Compliance Impacts: The Illinois CDL audit represents a structural compliance risk that is distinct from and independent of the current weather disruption. If license revocations proceed, the effective removal of those drivers from the available capacity pool would represent a structural, rather than temporary, tightening event in the Midwest market. Brokers should begin identifying alternative carrier relationships for Midwest lanes that do not carry Illinois non-domiciled CDL exposure. Enhanced ELD compliance monitoring is also acting as a structural capacity filter in the broader market, and ensuring all spot carriers are fully compliant reduces service failure risk during high-demand periods when vetting shortcuts are most tempting.
π Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Real-time data shows a significant widening of the spread between posted and paid rates, especially in Van (+$0.10) and Reefer (+$0.06). This 'hidden' premium indicates that actual transaction prices are moving faster than posted averages.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is critically tight in the Pacific Northwest and Upper Midwest due to weather. Conversely, the Southeast remains relatively stable, offering a reliable pocket for volume.
- Technology Disruptions: Enhanced compliance audits on CDLs and ELDs are acting as a digital filter, removing non-compliant capacity from the market and structurally raising the floor on rates.
Demand Shift Indicators
- Regional Demand Predictions: The Southeast is likely to experience accelerating capacity tightening over the next 5 to 7 days as two dynamics converge: carriers displaced from weather-impacted Western and Midwest corridors continue repositioning southward, and Florida produce season begins absorbing that repositioned capacity on the outbound side. This could create a relatively brief window of favorable inbound Florida rates followed by a meaningful tightening as produce volumes build. Outbound Southeast freight β particularly from Atlanta and Charlotte β may become incrementally more expensive or harder to cover as capacity gravitates toward Florida produce economics. The pace of this transition is uncertain but may arrive earlier than typical seasonal patterns given the current weather-driven repositioning dynamic.
- Seasonal Transition Analysis: The current market is deviating from typical post-holiday freight patterns in notable ways. February normally represents a softer demand environment with rate moderation before spring construction and produce season acceleration. Instead, the combination of severe multi-region weather disruption, earlier-than-expected capacity tightening confirmed by major carrier commentary, resilient consumer spending preventing the typical post-holiday freight lull from fully materializing, rising diesel prices pressuring carrier margins, and structural capacity reduction from smaller carrier exits is producing a firmer rate floor earlier in the year than historical seasonal patterns would suggest. Brokers should consider calibrating customer rate expectations against a spring market that may arrive ahead of schedule.
- Economic Leading Indicators: Rising diesel at $3.67 per gallon is functioning as a structural rate floor mechanism β carriers with thin margins will resist rate concessions, and smaller operators who cannot absorb continued fuel cost increases may exit the market, further tightening available capacity. Resilient consumer spending is sustaining retail replenishment demand, providing base freight volume that prevents meaningful rate softening even during weather disruptions. Major carrier commentary confirming that capacity has notably tightened and demand is outperforming early Q1 expectations is a credible leading indicator that the broader market may be approaching an inflection point earlier than seasonal norms would predict.
- Capacity Flow Predictions: Based on current weather patterns and market signals, equipment is likely β though not certain β to be flowing in the following directions over the next 3 to 5 days: away from the Pacific Northwest and I-5 corridor as weather peaks Thursday; toward the Southeast and Florida as drivers seek stable conditions and produce season positioning; some equipment may be effectively idled at staging areas along I-80 and I-5 as hazardous mountain pass conditions make transit impractical; and Upper Midwest equipment may be operating at reduced capacity or effectively grounded in portions of Minnesota due to blizzard conditions. Exact flow volumes are difficult to quantify from available data.
π₯ Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retail replenishment remains steady, with weather disruptions in the West likely to cause localized stockouts and urgent restocking orders next week.
- Manufacturing: Industrial output is driving consistent flatbed demand, particularly for energy and infrastructure projects unaffected by consumer seasonal lulls.
- Agriculture: Produce shipments from the West Coast are at high risk of delay; expect a shift in sourcing to imports or Southeast alternatives where possible.
- Automotive: Auto parts flow through the Midwest may face delays due to blizzard conditions in MN and wind events in CO, impacting just-in-time production schedules.
πΊοΈ Regional & Lane Analysis
π 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.
π£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.
π¨ Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Outbound Southern California & Oregon (Weather driven)
- Midwest Regional (Blizzard impact)
- Reefer freight nationwide (Premium spread widening)
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Critical shortages in I-5 corridor (CA/OR) and Upper Midwest (MN) due to road closures and hazardous conditions. Flatbed capacity grounded in CO due to wind.
Opportunity Zones:
- Southeast Region (Stable, reliable capacity)
- Inbound Florida lanes (Carrier positioning opportunity)
π― Strategic Recommendations for Today
πΌ 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.
π 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.
π 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.'
π Executive Signal Summary
- Carrier leverage is expanding fast in weather corridors β paid rates exceed posted across all major equipment: Van +$0.10, Reefer +$0.06, Flatbed +$0.02, Heavy Haul +$0.01; diesel at $3.67/gal is reinforcing firm floors.
- Iβ5, Iβ80, and Iβ25 disruptions are the price driver, not volume β equipment is getting trapped or rerouted; the Southeast remains the clean margin zone with stable service and controllable reloads.
- Spot market velocity is rising β Truckstop shows 214,569 available loads and a growing market opportunity; expect 24β72 hours of elevated premiums in West/Midwest lanes, then a bumpy, uneven recovery.
- Florida produce positioning is under way β brief window to buy inbound FL at value before outbound demand flips economics; expect Southeast tightening within 5β7 days.
- Compliance risk is real-time β Illinois CDL audit can yank capacity mid-load; tighten vetting in the Midwest and maintain alternates to prevent service failures.
- National averages (spot, all-in)
- Rate: $2.28/mi (range $1.53β$2.61)
- Diesel: $3.67/gal
- Equipment (loads | posted vs paid)
- Van: 31,312 | $2.19 vs $2.29 (+$0.10)
- Reefer: 13,837 | $2.55 vs $2.61 (+$0.06)
- Flatbed: 93,610 | $2.45 vs $2.47 (+$0.02)
- Heavy Haul: 41,321 | $2.50 vs $2.51 (+$0.01)
- LTL/Partial: 11,107 | $1.53 vs $1.67 (+$0.14)
- Truckstop live pulse
- Total available loads: 214,569
- Loads moved today: 397,318
- Market opportunity: $283.6M
- Market avg rate: $2.31/mi
- Read it right: The paid>posted spreads mean the market has repriced already. Quotes anchored to posted averages will miss trucks unless you add risk premiums or calendar control.
π¦οΈ Weather-Driven Playbook (Next 72 Hours)
- Primary disruptions to price for
- Iβ5 corridor (CA/OR; Grapevine & Siskiyou): Winter Storm Warnings; intermittent closures/chain controls; treat as constrained artery.
- MN river valley (Renville, Nicollet, Blue Earth; Blizzard Warnings): Sub-ΒΌβmile visibility, whiteouts; expect stoppages and post-storm urgency.
- CO Front Range (Iβ25): 59β75 mph gust risk; flatbeds/light vans face rollover hazards; meter exposure.
- UT Wasatch/Uinta (Iβ80): High snow probability; transcon delays at SLC hub.
- Route and service tactics
- Reroute transcons via Iβ40/Iβ10 when service matters more than miles.
- Stage in TX/NM/AZ/OK for a FriβSun West rebound; pre-clear weather clauses and layover.
- Bundle SE loops (ATL/CLT/JAX/BNA) for reliability and rate control while the West clears.
- Recovery baseline
- West/North improves into the weekend, but full normalization lags 5β7 days due to equipment repositioning, HOS (Hours of Service) resets, and backlog surges.
π― 24β48 Hour Money Moves
- Customer Sales (protect service, justify premiums)
- Proactively re-quote West/Midwest with a clear message: βpaid is running above posted; weβre buying reliability before closures.β
- Secure flexible appointments and pre-approve weather accessorials (detention/layover/TONU with weather clauses).
- Exploit Southeast stability: Offer 48-hour capacity locks on ATL/CLT/JAX/BNA loops at predictable buys; upsell on-time performance.
- Carrier Reps (sourcing focus)
- Target carriers domiciled in problem zones (CA/OR/MN/CO) who prefer familiarity/home-time angles; pay fair, avoid overbids.
- Pre-build inbound Florida with returns (e.g., GA/AL/TNβFLβGA/SC); carriers will trade rate for certainty plus quick dispatch.
- Flatbed wind mitigation: Prioritize heavier, low-profile loads; defer light/empty repositioning until winds ease; confirm tarping/wind policy at dispatch.
- Negotiation psychology
- Sell certainty as value: βRound-trip + fast payment terms + same-day reload planβ beats an extra nickel.
- Anchor with paid averages, price the risk delta rather than debating posted board rates.
π΅ Pricing Guardrails (Anchor to Paid; Add Risk Premiums)
- Van (paid anchor: $2.29)
- SE loops (clean conditions): $2.23β$2.33 with reload commitment.
- Iβ5/Iβ80 exposure: add +$0.15β$0.35/mi, weather clause mandatory.
- Into MN blizzard zone: add +$0.10β$0.25/mi plus buffer day.
- Reefer (paid anchor: $2.61)
- Freeze-protect North/Midwest: add +$0.08β$0.20/mi; document set-point, temp downloads, fuel policy.
- West Coast weather lanes: add +$0.15β$0.30/mi; priority to experienced mountain fleets.
- Inbound FL positioning: buy at/near anchor; trade rate for planned FL outbound or quick turn.
- Flatbed (paid anchor: $2.47)
- CO Front Range winds: add +$0.20β$0.40/mi or reroute timing; avoid light/high-profile.
- SE industrial lanes: $2.40β$2.52 with calendar control; bundle multi-drop for margin.
- Heavy Haul (paid anchor: $2.51)
- Win on process (permits/pilots pre-cleared, precise scheduling) to hold near anchor; small +$0.05β$0.15/mi in weather corridors is justified.
- LTL/Partial (paid anchor: $1.67)
- Consolidate aggressively; sell shippers on multi-stop efficiency; spot premiums rise in disruption windows.
π£οΈ Lanes To Prioritize vs. Price Heavy
- Prioritize (buy value, sell reliability)
- ATL, GA β MIA, FL (Van/Reefer): Carriers are positioning south; lock 48-hour rounders now.
- JAX, FL β BNA, TN / ATL, GA (Van/Reefer): Backhaul-friendly exits; bundle returns into FL to hold buys.
- SAV/CHS β ATL/CLT (Van): Port-adjacent stability; use same-carrier reloads for rate discipline.
- Price Heavy / Reroute
- CA/OR Iβ5 crossings (all types): Price elevated, include chain law compliance; prep Iβ10/Iβ40 alternatives.
- Iβ80 UT/NV and MN river valley entries: Add buffers and premiums; offer delayed pickup for cost control.
π‘οΈ Risk, Compliance, and SOPs That Prevent Fall-Offs
- Illinois CDL audit (immediate action)
- Screen for non-domiciled IL CDLs; require license state confirmation at dispatch; maintain alternates for Midwest tenders.
- ELD/driver readiness
- Verify ELD make/model and last inspection date; avoid non-compliant devices.
- ELP (English Language Proficiency) live-check: Driver reads back route, weather, and accessorials; document pass/fail.
- Weather clauses & documentation
- Insert force majeure/weather language, pre-approve detention/layover/TONU.
- Reefer SOP: set-point on BOL, continuous-run, fuel top-off at pickup, temp checks at midpoints.
π Capacity Flows and Opportunity Windows
- Near-term flows
- Away from Iβ5/Iβ80/Iβ25 during peak weather; toward Southeast/Florida for stability and season prep.
- Idled/staged near SLC, NV, SoCal yards until passes open.
- Actionable window
- Inbound Florida buys are favorable for ~5β7 days before produce flips pricing; build GA/AL/TN β FL β GA/SC circuits now.
π KPIs To Manage The Day
- Time-to-cover (storm lanes): β€ 90 minutes with pre-vetted winter fleets.
- SE loop book-to-award: β₯ 40% with reload commitments on rate con.
- Carrier fall-off: β€ 3% overall; β€ 2% in weather corridors (with SOPs).
- Avg deadhead (SE): β€ 45 miles via bundling.
- On-time pickup (SE): β₯ 95%; track weather-coded exceptions West/Midwest.
β
8-Hour Execution Checklist
- Reprice and lock all CA/OR/MN/CO tenders with premiums, weather clauses, and flexible windows.
- Publish reloads on rate cons for ATL/CLT/JAX/BNA to secure 48-hour carrier commitments.
- Stage 5β10 trucks in TX/NM/AZ/OK for FriβSun West recovery; pre-clear layover rates.
- Audit active loads for IL CDL exposure; tag alternates and notify customers of compliance steps.
- Reefer freeze-protect blitz: Verify set-points, seal policy, temp monitoring, and mid-transit check calls.
π£οΈ Micro Scripts (Concise, Field-Ready)
- Weather-driven rate realism (Van/Reefer):
- βPaid is already running above posted β Van +$0.10, Reefer +$0.06. We can lock a confirmed truck today with weather protections before closures push rates higher.β
- SE stability pitch (Inbound FL):
- βWe can buy inbound Florida at value now and hold your outbound with pre-booked returns. This flips in a few days as produce ramps β letβs commit the 48-hour window.β
π
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.
π Quote of the Day
"Not doing it is certainly the best way to not getting it."
β Wayne Gretzky