📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Thursday, February 12, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
Spot market momentum is accelerating significantly heading into the weekend, with total available loads jumping to 133,471—a strong increase from yesterday's 130,875. This surge has pushed the total market opportunity to $168.0M, the highest point this week. The most critical development for brokers is the widening spread in the Reefer sector, where paid rates ($2.70/mile) have now aggressively outpaced posted rates ($2.53/mile) by 17 cents. This indicates urgent, unposted premiums are being paid to secure capacity, likely driven by freeze protection needs and weather disruptions in the West. Flatbed volume remains the volume leader, but Van rates are also firming with paid rates ($2.25/mile) exceeding posted averages ($2.18/mile). Brokers should aggressively price reefer freight today and expect carriers to demand premiums on lanes touching the Rockies or Pacific Northwest due to severe winter weather.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe Winter Storm & Heavy Snow (Colorado (CO, West Jackson, West Grand Counties)): Heavy snow accumulation of 3-5 inches above 9000 feet will create hazardous driving conditions on high mountain passes, likely forcing re-routes or delays on I-70 corridors.
- Extreme Blizzard Conditions (Alaska Coastal Regions (AK, Western Arctic Coast, Bering Strait)): Blizzard conditions with gusts up to 45-60 mph and near-zero visibility will halt freight movement in affected coastal areas and impact air cargo feeder operations.
- Offshore Storm Warning (Gulf of Alaska (AK, Offshore Waters)): Severe storm force winds (50-65 kt) and seas up to 36-41 ft will disrupt maritime logistics and potentially impact port operations along the southern coast.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Diesel prices remain elevated at $3.667, putting sustained pressure on small carrier margins and keeping fuel surcharges a non-negotiable point in rate discussions.
- Carrier Financial Health: The widening gap between paid and posted rates in the van and reefer sectors suggests carriers are successfully negotiating higher rates, providing a temporary cash flow boost to operators navigating higher costs.
- Economic Indicators: Strong load volumes in flatbed and rising reefer rates indicate resilient demand in both industrial and consumer food sectors despite broader economic uncertainties.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
FMCSA Finalizes Stricter Non-Domiciled CDL Rules 🔗:
The FMCSA has finalized a rule requiring rigorous history checks for non-domiciled CDLs, limiting eligibility to specific visa holders (H-2A, H-2B, E-2). While a 5-year transition period softens the immediate blow, brokers should expect gradual tightening of cross-border capacity and potential rate increases on Mexico-US lanes as the pool of eligible drivers shrinks over time.
-
Rising Costs Drive 29-Year-Old Carrier to Bankruptcy 🔗:
Another established regional carrier, Robert Bearden Trucking, has filed for Chapter 11, citing spot rates failing to keep pace with inflation. This underscores the financial fragility of mid-sized fleets; brokers should vet carrier partners carefully and can use this narrative to justify fair rates to shippers to ensure service stability.
-
EPA to Roll Back Greenhouse Gas Findings 🔗:
The EPA is set to revoke a key scientific finding underpinning GHG regulations. While this creates long-term regulatory uncertainty for equipment manufacturers, the immediate impact for brokers is minimal. However, it may eventually alter the cost trajectory for new equipment, potentially affecting future carrier equipment investments.
🔍 Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Real-time data shows a distinct 'hidden market' in reefers where paid rates are $0.17 higher than posted. Brokers relying solely on posted averages will underbid and fail to cover loads.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is tightening rapidly in the Mountain West due to weather, while the Southeast remains a stable pocket for sourcing. Flatbed capacity appears ample relative to demand.
- Technology Disruptions: Digital matching efficiency is highlighting the spread between posted and paid rates faster than ever, forcing brokers to adjust pricing in real-time to compete.
👥 Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Van volumes are healthy, suggesting steady retail replenishment. Focus on weekend restocking lanes.
- Manufacturing: High flatbed volumes indicate continued industrial output, though rate stabilization suggests supply chain fluidity.
- Agriculture: Reefer demand is spiking, likely driven by temperature-controlled movements of produce and perishables requiring freeze protection.
- Automotive: Steady demand expected in cross-border automotive lanes, though new driver rules may impact long-term capacity planning.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast Region (Atlanta/Charlotte Hubs)
The Southeast remains the most reliable profit center for brokers today. While the West fights weather and the Northeast deals with congestion, the Southeast offers a balanced mix of volume and capacity. Rates are firming but manageable, and the region is insulated from the severe winter weather impacting other areas.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA → Columbus, OH:
This lane is a classic backhaul-to-headhaul connector. With national van rates firming, carriers leaving the robust Atlanta market for the Midwest will demand fair rates, especially given the potential for winter weather impacts further north. Capacity is generally available but tightening as the weekend approaches.
Charlotte, NC → Orlando, FL:
A strong southbound lane into a consumption market. Florida demand remains consistent. With the Southeast being a stable pocket, this lane offers reliable volume. However, carriers may be reluctant to go deep into Florida without a guaranteed backhaul, keeping rates firm.
🚨 Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Reefer lanes originating in or transiting through the Mountain West (CO, WY) due to storm delays.
- Cross-border lanes potentially reacting to new driver regulatory news.
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Reefer capacity is critically tight nationally (paid rates +$0.17 over posted). Specialized flatbed capacity may also be tight in storm-affected areas.
Opportunity Zones:
- Southeast Region (GA, NC, SC) for stable van/flatbed operations.
- Reefer freight requiring freeze protection – high rates but high margin potential.
🎯 Strategic Recommendations for Today
💼 For Customer Sales:
Narrative: National data shows a distinct firming in the market, with paid rates exceeding posted averages in both Van and Reefer sectors. We are seeing significant weather disruptions in the West that are tightening capacity nationally as drivers reposition. To ensure on-time delivery for weekend freight, we need to price at current market levels to secure reliable trucks.
Action: Proactively adjust quotes for any reefer freight or loads moving through the Mountain West. Advise customers of potential weather delays.
🚛 For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Prioritize sourcing for Reefer loads immediately – the spread is huge. Look for carriers in the Southeast who want to stay regional.
Negotiation Leverage: For flatbed, use the data showing paid rates are slightly below posted to negotiate fair market rates. For van/reefer, acknowledge the tight market but emphasize quick payment and reliable lanes to win capacity.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
- Reefer is the day’s profit engine; seize Protect From Freeze (PFF) freight early and price above posted
- Paid $2.70/mi vs posted $2.53/mi (+$0.17). The spread screams hidden premiums driven by freeze protection and weather avoidance. Itemize cold-chain SOPs and lock proven carriers before midday.
- Van tightness is real; buy calendars and sell reliability
- Paid $2.25/mi vs posted $2.18/mi (+$0.07). Weekend leverage will favor carriers on headhaul lanes; secure capacity early on lanes northbound out of the Southeast.
- Flatbed is volume-rich but price-disciplined; win on schedule control
- Paid $2.35/mi vs posted $2.39/mi (−$0.04). Keep buys near/below posted and monetize crane/appointment certainty.
- Southeast is today’s safest margin pocket
- Stable capacity with rising demand; build round-trips around Atlanta/Charlotte hubs and avoid weather-challenged Mountain West flows.
- Weather risk is tightening the national reefer pool; embed clauses and pad ETAs
- Storm-driven avoidance in Rockies/PNW increases premiums and delays. Use route alternatives and set customer expectations now.
- Diesel steady at $3.667/gal; protect margin via aligned FSC (Fuel Surcharge) and explicit winterization costs
- Keep surcharge line-items transparent; carriers will push for recognition of fuel and idle time in cold.
- Total loads: 133,471
- Market opportunity: $168.0M
- Market average rate: $2.23/mi (range $1.48–$2.70)
- Diesel (AAA): $3.667/gal
- By equipment (Posted | Paid):
- Van: 21,525 loads | $2.18 | $2.25 (+$0.07)
- Reefer: 8,051 loads | $2.53 | $2.70 (+$0.17)
- Flatbed: 54,336 loads | $2.39 | $2.35 (−$0.04)
- Heavy Haul: 27,338 loads | $2.44 | $2.43 (−$0.01)
- Specialized: 14,663 loads | $2.30 | $2.25 (−$0.05)
- LTL/Partial: 7,558 loads | $1.48 | $1.51 (+$0.03)
⚙️ Market Context: What’s Driving Today
- Weather-induced dislocation tightens effective capacity
- Carriers are avoiding blizzard/ice corridors in the West; reroutes extend transit and consume hours, pushing paid above posted in Van/Reefer.
- Behavioral dynamic: carriers hold out for weekend premiums
- As loads accelerate into Friday, carriers price the “pain” of cold lanes and uncertain reloads, especially into OH/MI/PA and across I-70/I-80.
- Industrial demand steady; construction pauses temper flatbed rate pressure
- High flatbed volume with sufficient capacity yields a buyer’s edge by a few cents; service quality is the differentiator, not pennies.
- Reefer PFF arbitrage (national, emphasis on Mountain West crossers)
- Actions:
- Pre-verify heater capability, continuous mode, fuel level, and temp-log photos at PU/DEL.
- Itemize winterization (additives, continuous mode, extra fuel burn) on quotes; don’t bury in linehaul.
- Bundle a warm-region return (e.g., FL/GA/TX) to reduce the carrier fear premium on cold northbound moves.
- Targets: 14–22% GM, zero temp claims, SOPs documented on every stop.
- Van reliability bundles from Southeast hubs
- Actions:
- Buy 2–3 load calendars per driver ex-ATL/CLT into OH/KY/TN; reserve safer corridors away from Rockies/NE storms.
- Anchor buys near paid average where headhaul tightens; sell shippers on OTIF (On-Time, In-Full) with padded ETAs.
- Targets: 12–16% GM, ≤3% fall-offs.
- Flatbed schedule control > rate games
- Actions:
- Pre-clear crane windows, tarping, site readiness, and staging; lock buys at or below posted.
- Offer guaranteed show-times to justify holding shipper rate while buys stay disciplined.
- Targets: 9–12% GM, zero crane misses.
- LTL/Partial consolidation sprints (SE/Mid-South)
- Actions:
- Curate multi-stop partials on open-deck/dry vans to beat LTL time-in-transit; charge premium for speed and single-handling.
- Targets: 12–18% GM, damage-free delivery.
🗺️ Regional Tactics
- Primary focus: Southeast (ATL/CLT hubs)
- Why: Capacity stable, weather-lighter, dependable reloads.
- Plays:
- ATL, GA → CMH, OH (Van): Price modestly above posted; pre-book CMH→ATL reloads to keep buy cost contained.
- CLT, NC → ORL, FL (Van): Florida inbound firm; pre-sell backhauls (JAX/TLH/TPA to GA/NC) before committing to reduce deep-Florida risk.
- SE Flatbed regionals: Lock site-ready shippers; use schedule control to sustain margin.
- Caution zones: Mountain West and PNW (all modes; highest in Reefer)
- Moves:
- Avoid pass-dependent routings on I-70/I-80 when closures loom; reroute via lower-elevation corridors or stagger departures.
- Insert “no punitive LDs (Liquidated Damages) during declared closures” clauses and pre-approve layover/detention.
- Cross-border awareness (Automotive/Manufacturing)
- FMCSA non-domiciled CDL rule tightening over time; quote with contingency for capacity creep on MX–US lanes and prioritize vetted partners with stable visa status.
💵 Pricing Guardrails (protect margin with transparency)
- Anchor linehaul to the national average $2.23/mi, then adjust
- Reefer: Add premium for PFF and weather-exposed lanes; back it with SOP documentation.
- Van: Add modest premium on headhaul lanes and weekend picks/deliveries.
- Flatbed: Hold buys ≤ posted; monetize crane certainty.
- Heavy Haul: Market slightly favors brokers (−$0.01 vs posted); still pre-clear permits/pilots before final quote.
- Fuel & winterization
- Align FSC to $3.667/gal and separate winterization line-items to avoid margin erosion in negotiations.
🤝 Carrier Ops & Negotiation Talk Tracks
- Reefer (PFF)
- Ask: “Can you run continuous mode and share time-stamped reefer display photos at PU/DEL?”
- Offer: “We cover additives and documented weather delays; your southbound reload is pre-booked.”
- Van (reliability over roulette)
- Ask: “Open to a 2–3 load sequence ATL→OH/KY with returns to GA/NC?”
- Offer: “Tight appointments, low deadhead, no storm corridors, and fast paperwork.”
- Flatbed (service premium)
- Ask: “Confirm tarp spec, edge protection, and crane window?”
- Offer: “Site readiness verified—no lost crane time; we hold detention at posted-level buys.”
- Heavy Haul (discipline first)
- Ask: “Axle spacings, pilot availability, and curfew experience for target states?”
- Offer: “Permits and escorts queued before tender; route survey included.”
🌦 Weather-to-Freight Playbook (72 hours)
- Colorado high mountain passes (I-70 corridor):
- Impact: Accumulating snow above 9,000 ft; traction/closure risk.
- Actions: Reroute via lower elevations; stagger pickup times; add layover buffers.
- Alaska coastal blizzards / Gulf of Alaska storms:
- Impact: Port/maritime and feeder air disruption; possible ripple to West Coast consolidations.
- Actions: Build buffers for AK-linked moves; sequence dray/intermodal handoffs conservatively.
- Southeast clear window:
- Impact: High on-time probability; best region for round-trip calendars.
- Actions: Consolidate volumes here for predictable turns and margin.
📰 What This News Means for Today
- FMCSA non-domiciled CDL final rule:
- Today: Minimal immediate effect;
- Action: Start tagging cross-border carriers with verified eligibility; prepare to justify slightly higher cross-border quotes.
- Carrier bankruptcy (mid-sized regional):
- Today: Heightened service-risk sensitivity;
- Action: Tighten vetting (insurance, BASICs, recent inspections) and use the narrative to defend shipper rate realism amid paid>posted spreads.
- EPA GHG roll-back signals:
- Today: No pricing change;
- Action: None short-term; track equipment refresh cycles for 2H–next year planning.
🛡 Risk Controls and SOPs (non-negotiable)
- Contract armor
- Insert weather/closure clauses, pre-approved detention/layover, explicit PFF verbiage (continuous mode, temp range, documentation).
- Carrier vetting
- Active authority, insurance match, BASICs review, recent clean inspections, ELD compliance; callback verification on banking/dispatch changes.
- Temperature control audit
- BOL notes with set-point and mode; photo/time-stamped logs at PU/DEL; verify fuel and door seal numbers.
🔭 24–72 Hour Scenario Map
- Base (60%)—Persistent tightness in Reefer/Van; Flatbed balanced
- Move: Front-load PFF and headhaul vans by late morning; hold flatbed buys ≤ posted; sell reliability bundles.
- Escalation (25%)—Storm closures extend; PNW tightens
- Move: Lift PFF surcharges; restrict risky lanes to SOP-proven carriers; increase ETA buffers; throttle cross-mountain tenders.
- Easing (15%)—Weather underperforms; weekend premiums compress
- Move: Pivot to SE regionals and partials; protect booked margins and avoid re-pricing downward.
📋 AM → PM Execution Checklist
- AM (Coverage first)
- Lock PFF reefers on any cold-lane tenders; confirm SOP and temp logs in writing.
- Buy van calendars ex-ATL/CLT for Fri–Mon turns; avoid storm corridors.
- Flag pass-dependent West moves; reroute or reschedule now.
- Midday (Margin and risk)
- Re-quote cold-lane customers with explicit PFF/winterization and padded ETAs.
- Flatbed: Verify crane windows and staging; keep buys at/under posted.
- Heavy haul: Confirm permits/pilot lines before rate commits.
- PM (Continuity)
- Audit temp-control files (photos/logs/seals).
- Refresh weather/closure map and re-validate ETAs; push proactive updates.
- Stage southbound reloads for all northbound vans/reefers.
📈 Midday Metrics To Recheck
- Reefer paid vs posted spread by market (CHI/CMH/PHL/BOS); aim to keep buy ≤ paid and sell at premium with SOP value.
- Carrier accept/decline on northbound vs southbound offers ex-SE (leverage “escape-the-cold” psychology).
- Detention/layover pre-approvals across storm lanes; confirm shippers signed updated terms.
🧠 Sales Talk Tracks (use as-is)
- Reefer PFF shipper
- “Paid is clearing well above posted because real freeze protection requires continuous mode, additives, and weather buffers. We’ll itemize those and provide time-stamped temp logs so your product arrives uncompromised.”
- Van headhaul shipper (SE → Midwest)
- “Capacity is tightening into the weekend. We’re buying multi-day driver calendars and routing around weather, so you get reliability—not surprises—on critical replenishments.”
- Flatbed shipper (construction/industrial)
- “Rates are stable; our edge is appointment control and site readiness, which eliminates crane downtime and protects your total landed cost.”
🧮 Quick Reference Spreads (today)
- Reefer +$0.17, Van +$0.07, LTL/Partial +$0.03 (paid > posted; premium environment)
- Flatbed −$0.04, Heavy Haul −$0.01, Specialized −$0.05 (broker-favorable buys; sell service)
📅 This Day in History
1771: Gustav III becomes the King of Sweden.
1963: Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 705 crashes into the Everglades shortly after takeoff from Miami International Airport, killing all 45 people on board.
1992: The current Constitution of Mongolia comes into effect.
💭 Quote of the Day
"Unless you change how you are, you will always have what you got."
— Jim Rohn