📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Friday, March 13, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The spot market is accelerating into the weekend with total available loads climbing 2.0% to 182,150 and the national average rate pushing to $2.37/mile. This upward momentum is heavily influenced by a severe $4.892/gallon national diesel average, which continues to force carriers to reject low-yield freight and demand substantial fuel premiums. Transcontinental routing is currently facing massive disruptions as 80 mph crosswinds batter the Rockies and a looming blizzard threatens the Midwest, effectively paralyzing the I-80 and I-90 corridors. Meanwhile, flatbed and heavy haul sectors continue their absolute dominance of the spot market, absorbing over 120,000 combined loads as industrial and infrastructure projects compete fiercely for specialized equipment.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Extreme High Winds (Up to 80 mph) (Wyoming and Colorado (WY, CO, I-80, I-70, I-25)): Paralyzing transcontinental routing for light and high-profile vehicles. Severe blow-over risks are forcing carriers to detour or park equipment, severing East-West capacity flows and driving massive localized rate spikes.
- Impending Blizzard Conditions (Central and Northern Iowa (IA, I-80, I-35)): Threatening to shut down major Midwest freight arteries by Sunday. Driving urgent outbound escape capacity and causing inbound carriers to demand extreme hazard pay to enter the region.
- Major Winter Storm (Western Montana (MT, I-90)): Heavy snow (1-3 feet in mountains) causing dangerous travel conditions and widespread disruptions along the northern transcontinental corridor, severely limiting capacity into the Pacific Northwest.
- River Flooding (Illinois and Indiana (IL, IN, Wabash River Valley)): Extensive lowland flooding blocking secondary highways and access routes, forcing localized detours and delaying agricultural and manufacturing freight movements in the region.
⛈️ Weather Impact Cascade
- Immediate Operational Impact: Today's operational reality across the affected corridors is more nuanced than peak-alert language suggests. Iowa is currently running cloudy at 44°F with 25-37 mph WNW winds, creating hazardous but not yet closed highway conditions on I-80, meaning the outbound window is open right now but narrowing rapidly. Wyoming's forecast of 31-39 mph sustained westerly winds through Saturday represents serious operational hazard for high-profile and light vehicles on I-80 through Elk Mountain, though conditions are below the extreme 80 mph peak gust threshold, suggesting routes are constrained rather than completely severed. The Illinois and Indiana Wabash flooding zone is currently at 44°F and climbing toward 62°F today, which will accelerate snowmelt runoff into already elevated river systems and is likely to worsen secondary road flooding conditions throughout the afternoon and evening.
- Secondary Market Effects: The Midwest storm is triggering secondary tightening in the Chicago terminal market as outbound Iowa and Minnesota freight floods eastward, consuming available van and reefer capacity that would normally serve intra-Illinois and Michigan lanes. This Chicago capacity absorption will create a ripple effect on Great Lakes manufacturing corridors by Saturday, as auto parts and steel shippers find their standard carriers committed to storm-avoidance loads. The Colorado extreme cold forecast for Sunday, with temperatures reaching 9°F and a -8°F wind chill after Saturday's snow event with winds up to 59 mph, will create a secondary bottleneck on I-70 that compounds the existing Wyoming disruption, effectively closing both major transcontinental routes simultaneously through the Rocky Mountain region this weekend.
- Regional Spillover Analysis: The convergence of Wyoming I-80 wind disruption and Colorado I-70 snow and extreme cold creates a complete pinch point for East-West freight that will force transcontinental loads onto Southern routing via I-40 through New Mexico and Arizona, dramatically increasing transit times and fuel costs for shippers with coast-to-coast supply chains. This Southern rerouting will spike demand on I-40 lanes and tighten capacity in Albuquerque and Amarillo markets that are currently not pricing in this overflow demand. Meanwhile, the Iowa blizzard's northern extent into Minnesota and Wisconsin will block the I-94 and I-90 Northern corridors simultaneously, eliminating all three primary East-West transcontinental routes for a 48-72 hour window beginning Sunday, a scenario that will cascade into Northeast port market tightness by Tuesday as inbound West Coast container freight stalls.
- Recovery Timeline: Iowa road conditions will remain dangerous through Monday March 16, when the forecast shows 16°F with a -0°F wind chill and 23-36 mph NW winds, creating black ice and blowing snow conditions that will keep most commercial carriers parked. A secondary snow event is forecast for Tuesday March 17 at 30°F with SW 10-16 mph winds, potentially extending the closure window and pushing full recovery to Wednesday March 18 at the earliest. Wyoming and Colorado conditions show improvement by Sunday March 15 for Wyoming (partly sunny, 23°F, winds dropping to 12-19 mph) and a gradual moderation in Colorado through Monday-Tuesday, suggesting transcontinental I-80 Wyoming segment recovery by Sunday evening while I-70 Colorado recovery extends into Monday. Montana conditions ease modestly by Monday with rain at 40°F and WSW 18-36 mph winds, allowing cautious I-90 northern corridor operations to resume by Monday afternoon.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Global crude volatility tied to Middle East conflicts continues to pressure diesel futures upward, offering no short-term relief for carriers and cementing high fuel surcharges as a permanent fixture for Q2.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small to mid-sized fleets are facing critical cash flow crunches as the $4.892 diesel average outpaces their ability to collect fuel surcharges, leading to increased market exits and structural capacity tightening.
- Economic Indicators: Rising transportation costs are beginning to cascade into agricultural and retail sectors, threatening to stall disinflationary trends and forcing shippers to aggressively audit their supply chain spend.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
Class 8 Truck Orders Surge, Signaling Long-Term Capacity Shifts 🔗:
A massive 156% year-over-year jump in Class 8 orders indicates large, well-capitalized fleets are preparing for a market recovery in 2026. For brokers, this suggests a widening gap between mega-fleets expanding their footprint and small carriers being squeezed out by $4.89+ diesel. Brokers should focus on building relationships with mid-sized fleets that have new equipment arriving, as they will be hungry for consistent freight to service their new debt.
-
Diesel Crisis Hits Agricultural Sector, Threatening Reefer Margins 🔗:
The record weekly surge in diesel prices is devastating cattle and agricultural producers, driving up transportation costs across the food supply chain. For freight brokers, this means agricultural shippers will be hyper-sensitive to rates, while reefer carriers will absolutely refuse to move without heavy fuel compensation. Expect intense rate negotiations on outbound rural lanes and prepare to educate customers on the reality of carrier operating costs.
-
Ocean Carriers Implement Emergency Fuel Surcharges on Key Routes 🔗:
Major maritime operators like MSC are slapping emergency fuel surcharges on global trade routes due to the ongoing energy crisis. This directly impacts domestic brokers by forcing shippers to absorb higher international costs, which often leads them to seek cheaper domestic drayage and transloading options. Brokers with strong port-drayage networks can capitalize on this by offering agile, spot-market transload solutions for shippers trying to bypass congested, expensive traditional routing.
-
Macro Inflation Risks Rise Alongside Diesel Spikes 🔗:
Mainstream economic indicators are flashing warning signs that the sustained $4.89+ diesel average will reignite broader inflation. For brokers, this means shippers' transportation budgets will be under extreme executive scrutiny. Sales teams must pivot from selling purely on 'price' to selling on 'routing guide resilience'—proving that paying a fair market rate today prevents catastrophic supply chain failures tomorrow.
News Impact Timeline
- Immediate Operational Reality: The ocean carrier emergency fuel surcharge implementation by operators like MSC is creating immediate pressure on port drayage markets today, as shippers facing elevated international costs accelerate transloading decisions to capture cheaper domestic spot rates before those rates spike further. This drayage demand acceleration is drawing van capacity away from inland lanes toward port markets in Los Angeles, Long Beach, and Savannah, compounding capacity tightness that is already being driven by weather events. The diesel crisis hitting agricultural producers simultaneously is manifesting as same-day shipper calls demanding rate holds on reefer lanes, as farm operations face margin compression that makes even modest rate increases operationally unsustainable for smaller producers.
- 3-Day Market Implications: Over the next 72 hours through Monday March 16, the Iowa blizzard's full operational impact will materialize, transforming the current pre-storm urgency into a complete capacity drought across the Upper Midwest. Brokers who fail to secure outbound Iowa capacity today and Saturday will face a market where inbound Iowa rates will be commanding 20-35% premiums above current levels by Monday, with carriers demanding guaranteed return load commitments before entering the storm zone. The Indiana weather swing from 70°F Sunday to snow showers Monday at 35°F will blindside shippers who planned weekend moves based on favorable Sunday forecasts, creating a surge of emergency Monday freight that will compete for extremely limited cold-weather-capable capacity.
- Week-Ahead Positioning: By Wednesday March 18, the post-storm recovery freight surge in Iowa and Minnesota will create one of the highest-margin inbound rate environments of the quarter, as warehouses depleted by pre-storm evacuation loads require rapid replenishment. Brokers who have pre-positioned carrier relationships and load commitments around the perimeter of the storm zone in Chicago, St. Louis, and Kansas City will be able to surge into recovery lanes at 25-40% premiums over current rates. The produce season in the Southeast will be accelerating simultaneously, creating a national reefer tightness event that aligns with the Midwest recovery demand around Thursday-Friday March 19-20, the most challenging national reefer supply-demand environment of Q1.
- Regulatory Compliance Impacts: The extreme wind events in Wyoming at sustained 31-39 mph with gusts previously reported at 80 mph may trigger state DOT wind restriction orders for high-profile vehicles on I-80, requiring carriers to comply with mandatory parking requirements that are legally enforceable and cannot be waived by shipper pressure. Colorado's forecast of 24-59 mph winds Saturday with subsequent extreme cold Sunday may prompt Colorado DOT chain law requirements and potential commercial vehicle restrictions on I-70 mountain passes, adding hours of delay for any carrier attempting transcontinental routing. Brokers must communicate these regulatory realities to shippers immediately, as failure to disclose known regulatory risks on confirmed loads creates liability exposure and damages carrier relationships when compliant drivers are forced to park.
🔍 Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: The gap between posted rates ($2.14 van) and paid rates ($2.21 van) is widening, indicating that brokers who rely solely on automated pricing algorithms are failing to cover loads. Manual intervention and direct carrier negotiation are currently outperforming digital freight matching.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is critically tight in the Upper Midwest (IA, MN, WI) due to impending blizzards, and across the Rockies (WY, CO) due to 80 mph winds. Conversely, outbound capacity from the Northeast remains relatively loose as carriers seek to escape high toll/fuel regions.
- Technology Disruptions: The increasing reliance on AI-driven pricing models by mega-brokerages is creating arbitrage opportunities for agile brokers. These rigid algorithms often fail to account for hyper-local weather events (like the WY wind storms), allowing human brokers to step in and secure freight at premium margins.
Demand Shift Indicators
- Regional Demand Predictions: The Midwest is entering a critical 48-hour pre-storm demand surge window, with Iowa forecast data confirming snow showers arriving Sunday March 15 (42°F, NNE 26-36 mph winds) and a severe crash to 16°F with a -0°F wind chill by Monday March 16. This creates a two-phase demand structure: an emergency outbound spike today and Saturday as shippers evacuate freight, followed by a near-total demand freeze Sunday through Tuesday, and then a massive inbound recovery surge by Wednesday March 18. Indiana's dramatic temperature swing from 70°F Sunday to snow showers at 35°F Monday will generate a secondary, compressed demand event that shippers are currently underestimating, creating late-breaking freight urgency on Sunday afternoon that brokers should pre-position for now.
- Seasonal Transition Analysis: March traditionally marks the transition from winter freight patterns to early produce season in the Southeast, but the current weather cycle is delaying that seasonal shift by approximately one week in the Midwest. Reefer carriers that would normally be repositioning southward for Florida and Georgia produce lanes are instead being diverted into storm-response and food-sector emergency repositioning in Iowa and Minnesota, creating a temporary supply gap in Southeast staging markets that will self-correct aggressively once Midwest roads clear by mid-next week. The early spring produce surge in the Southeast will collide with post-storm Midwest recovery demand around Wednesday-Thursday March 18-19, creating a brief window of extreme national reefer tightness that brokers should build pricing strategies around today.
- Economic Leading Indicators: The 156% year-over-year surge in Class 8 truck orders is a lagging capacity signal with no near-term relief value, as new equipment will not enter service for 12 to 18 months, meaning the current structural capacity tightness will persist through at least Q3 2026. The $4.892 diesel average is simultaneously accelerating small carrier exits while motivating large fleet expansion, creating a bifurcated market where mega-fleets gain market share at the expense of owner-operators and small fleets that cannot absorb fuel cost volatility. Rising transportation costs cascading into agricultural and retail sectors are now beginning to suppress shipper demand on lower-margin freight lanes, which paradoxically tightens the market further by concentrating available loads into fewer, higher-yielding moves that carriers prefer.
- Capacity Flow Predictions: Equipment will flow east and south from Iowa and Minnesota with urgency through Saturday afternoon as drivers race to escape the incoming blizzard, concentrating surplus capacity in Chicago, Milwaukee, and Kansas City by Saturday evening before those assets are absorbed by recovery-stage repositioning. Montana's ongoing light snow and overcast conditions through Sunday will redirect Pacific Northwest-bound capacity south toward I-84 and the Oregon corridor, creating secondary tightness in the Northern Plains. Colorado's forecast of extreme cold Sunday at 9°F with a -8°F wind chill following Saturday's light snow with 24-59 mph gusts will effectively freeze Rocky Mountain corridor equipment repositioning through at least Monday morning, prolonging the transcontinental I-70 disruption into early next week.
👥 Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retailers are scrambling to reposition inventory ahead of the Midwest blizzard, driving a surge in expedited van demand and forcing them to pay premium spot rates to guarantee weekend delivery.
- Manufacturing: Heavy industrial and AI data center construction continues to monopolize the flatbed sector, leaving traditional manufacturing shippers struggling to find open-deck capacity for standard machinery moves.
- Agriculture: Early produce staging in the Southeast is colliding with the diesel price crisis, forcing agricultural shippers to accept significantly higher contract rates or face massive routing guide failures on the spot market.
- Automotive: Auto parts suppliers are heavily utilizing LTL and partial truckload services to maintain just-in-time inventory while avoiding the exorbitant fuel costs associated with full truckload dedicated runs.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Midwest (Focus: Iowa, Illinois, Indiana)
The Midwest is currently the most volatile and opportunistic freight region in the country. A looming blizzard threatening Iowa and Minnesota is causing massive capacity displacement, while simultaneous river flooding in Illinois and Indiana is forcing inefficient detours. Combined with the $4.892 national diesel average, carriers are demanding extreme hazard and fuel premiums to enter the region. However, carriers currently trapped in the Midwest are desperate for outbound 'escape' freight before the snow hits, creating massive arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can match inbound premium freight with discounted outbound loads.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Des Moines, IA → Chicago, IL:
This critical I-80 corridor is under severe threat from impending blizzard conditions and high winds. Shippers are panic-pushing agricultural and food products out of Iowa before the weekend, while carriers are demanding massive premiums to operate in the hazardous conditions.
Indianapolis, IN → Atlanta, GA:
This traditional North-South corridor is being complicated by Wabash River flooding in southern Indiana and the crippling $4.892 diesel average. Carriers are rejecting standard routing guide rates, demanding fuel surcharges for the 500+ mile transit.
🚨 Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Inbound Des Moines, IA (Blizzard hazard pay)
- Transcontinental I-80 through Wyoming (80 mph wind avoidance)
- Outbound Southeast agricultural hubs (Produce staging + Fuel costs)
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Critical shortages of Reefer equipment in the Upper Midwest ahead of the storm, and a severe lack of Flatbed capacity nationwide as 80,548 open loads overwhelm the specialized carrier base.
Opportunity Zones:
- Outbound Iowa/Minnesota (Carriers desperate to escape the storm)
- Inbound Atlanta/Florida (Carriers positioning for produce season)
🎯 Strategic Recommendations for Today
💼 For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Lead all conversations with the reality of the $4.892 diesel average and the severe weather paralyzing I-80. Explain that the 2.0% overnight increase in spot loads means their competitors' routing guides are failing, and ETA's premium spot rates are the only way to guarantee weekend delivery.
Action: Proactively audit all Midwest and transcontinental freight scheduled for the weekend. Call shippers immediately to secure hazard pay approvals before the blizzard and wind storms fully close the highways.
🚛 For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Focus entirely on securing Flatbed capacity for industrial projects (where margins are highest) and Reefer capacity in the Midwest. Use outbound Midwest freight as a lifeline to carriers looking to escape the blizzard.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the impending weather as leverage. Tell carriers in the Midwest: 'Take this load to Chicago now, or you'll be snowed in until Tuesday.' For flatbeds, leverage the massive 80,548 load volume to build dedicated, high-paying project lanes.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a fuller board and a firmer real market.
- Total available loads are 182,150, up 2.0% from 178,627 yesterday.
- National average rate is $2.37/mile, up from $2.34/mile yesterday.
- That combination matters: more freight is being exposed to the market at higher clearing levels, not lower.
The national average is understating how selective the market has become.
- Open-deck freight dominates the board:
- Flatbed: 80,548
- Heavy Haul: 40,829
- Specialized: 19,299
- Combined, that is 140,676 loads, or about 77.2% of the entire board.
- Translation: headline averages are being heavily shaped by project freight and specialized demand, so do not let dry van customers anchor you to a blended national number.
Today’s most important overnight change is that van firmed.
- Van paid is $2.21/mile versus $2.14/mile posted, a +$0.07/mile spread.
- Yesterday’s softer van posture is gone in many lanes.
- This is no longer a broad “buy van cheap” day. It is now a lane-by-lane van market, especially where weather, fuel, or weak reloads are involved.
Reefer and flatbed remain buy-side danger zones.
- Reefer: $2.65 paid vs. $2.56 posted = +$0.09/mile
- Flatbed: $2.72 paid vs. $2.63 posted = +$0.09/mile
- Heavy Haul: $2.76 paid vs. $2.71 posted = +$0.05/mile
- These are replacement-cost markets, not “quote first and figure it out later” markets.
Diesel at $4.892/gallon is doing more than raising cost. It is changing behavior.
- Carriers are not just pricing miles.
- They are pricing:
- fuel burn
- weather exposure
- detour risk
- reload quality
- time-to-cash certainty
- In practical brokerage terms: uncertainty is now a surcharge.
📊 What the board is really saying
The market is stronger than one-week and one-month comparisons suggest.
- 182,150 loads today
- 163,116 one week ago
- 130,875 one month ago
- That is a materially stronger freight environment than both comparison periods.
- Add $4.892 diesel and major corridor disruption, and you get functional tightness even before true panic-buying starts.
Market opportunity is expanding faster than the board alone shows.
- $243.4M market opportunity today
- $230.3M yesterday
- $211.4M one week ago
- That tells me revenue is rising not just because of volume, but because the cost to secure execution is rising too.
Execution is still concentrated in open-deck.
- Total loads moved today: 56,527
- Open-deck moved today (Flatbed + Heavy Haul + Specialized): 47,982
- That is about 84.9% of all moved volume.
- This is the kind of market where brokers who are staffed like a van shop leave money on the table.
The paid-versus-posted spread is your fastest truth signal.
- Flatbed: +$0.09/mile
- Reefer: +$0.09/mile
- Van: +$0.07/mile
- Heavy Haul: +$0.05/mile
- LTL (Less Than Truckload)/Partial: +$0.03/mile
- Specialized: -$0.04/mile
- The message:
- Most freight is clearing above the screen
- Specialized is the main pocket where disciplined buying still exists
🚚 Equipment-by-equipment trading plan
Dry Van — no longer broadly soft
- 21,623 loads | $2.14 posted | $2.21 paid
- The most important lesson for today: van has firmed faster than lazy pricing models will reflect.
- Best freight to pursue:
- short-to-mid haul
- dense reload markets
- flexible appointment freight
- weather-escape freight outbound from at-risk regions
- Freight to avoid underpricing:
- transcontinental lanes
- Midwest inbound freight
- Rockies crossings
- rigid appointment loads with poor backhaul
- Broker move:
- Reprice uncovered weekend van immediately
- Shorten quote validity
- Separate linehaul from fuel surcharge on any long-haul quote
Reefer — still buy first, sell second
- 8,458 loads | $2.56 posted | $2.65 paid
- A +$0.09/mile spread with a 9.7% load increase is the definition of a tightening temp-controlled market.
- Early produce staging plus storm-related food repositioning makes reefer structurally fragile for the next 48–72 hours.
- Broker move:
- Secure trucks before finalizing customer numbers
- Require exact temperature, pallet count, weight, and appointment rules before posting
- Do not hold reefer rates open through the afternoon
Flatbed — still the best revenue pool on the board
- 80,548 loads | $2.63 posted | $2.72 paid
- Flatbed is not just large; it is dominant.
- Loads moved today: 27,955, which confirms this is real demand, not just noisy posting activity.
- Broker move:
- Move top reps onto open-deck today
- Audit every tarp, securement, crane, and loading-hour assumption before quoting
- Call core carriers before posting any project freight
- Margin on flatbed is won through detail control, not clever quoting.
Heavy Haul — strong market, but operational mistakes will erase margin
- 40,829 loads | $2.71 posted | $2.76 paid
- Loads moved today: 14,404
- Strong turnover plus weather risk means this is an execution market first, pricing market second.
- Broker move:
- Do not quote until dimensions, axle setup, permit path, and site contacts are confirmed
- Avoid western corridor promises without wind restriction review
- Use only proven carriers on time-sensitive over-dimensional freight
Specialized — the main disciplined buy-side pocket
- 19,299 loads | $2.48 posted | $2.44 paid
- This is the one major segment where paid is below posted.
- That usually means the market still rewards brokers who are specific, informed, and lane-selective.
- Broker move:
- Lean into repeat commodities you understand
- Push harder on cleanly defined freight
- Do not assume every industrial load is hot just because flatbed is hot
LTL/Partial — firmer than yesterday, but still a precision game
- 11,393 loads | $1.55 posted | $1.58 paid
- This segment is telling you that shippers are still seeking cost control through consolidation, but the market is charging more for reliable execution.
- Broker move:
- Work density, not random one-offs
- Use corridor-based consolidations
- Avoid promising tight transits into storm-affected terminal regions
🌪️ Corridor and regional playbook
Upper Midwest — outbound opportunity now, inbound premium later
- The Iowa winter storm watch and broader Upper Midwest storm setup are creating a classic two-step market:
- Step 1: outbound escape freight today and Saturday
- Step 2: inbound recovery freight Monday through Wednesday
- Broker move:
- Sell outbound Iowa/Minnesota/Wisconsin freight now to carriers who want out
- Start building inbound recovery lists today
- Pre-negotiate with carriers staged in Chicago, St. Louis, and Kansas City
Wyoming and Colorado — do not sell standard transit through abnormal wind
- Wyoming alerts include gusts up to 80 mph.
- Colorado Front Range areas near and north of I-70 have gusts up to 70 mph.
- For high-profile equipment, this is not a “maybe delayed” situation. It is a routing and parking compliance issue.
- Broker move:
- Price detours before you need them
- Route service-sensitive freight south when possible
- Put weather-delay and layover protection into rate confirmations
Illinois and Indiana — local-access risk matters more than headline map risk
- Flooding and secondary road issues create a different kind of failure:
- shipper says “facility open”
- truck arrives and local access is compromised
- Broker move:
- Call the dock, not just the transportation contact
- Verify truck-access roads
- Get written detention and redelivery approval before dispatch where access is questionable
Southern alternatives — do not assume they stay cheap
- As Rockies and northern corridors tighten, freight naturally falls south.
- That means I-40 and related connectors can tighten faster than most rate tools recognize.
- Broker move:
- Quote fallback lanes as premium lanes, not untouched lanes
- Use direct carrier calls instead of algorithm-only pricing
🧠 Market psychology: what others will miss today
Carrier psychology — certainty is now worth real money
- With $4.892 diesel, drivers and dispatchers care about:
- exact miles
- exact delay exposure
- exact reload prospects
- exact facility behavior
- A broker with a clean load packet will often buy cheaper than a broker with a messy one.
Customer psychology — many will still anchor to averages
- Shippers will hear $2.37/mile national average and think that is a usable budgeting number.
- It is not.
- In this market, equipment type + lane + weather + timing determine replacement cost.
- Your job is to move the conversation from “What’s the average?” to “What does the actual truck cost today?”
Competitor psychology — automation will miss the ugly freight
- AI pricing and digital boards work best in normal lanes.
- They struggle when:
- corridor conditions change quickly
- permit/wind risk matters
- local access risk matters
- southbound reroutes distort capacity
- That is where strong human brokers win margin.
💼 Sales desk priorities for today
Lead with replacement cost, not rate defense
- Best framing:
- fuel is elevated
- weather is distorting capacity
- weekend execution is more valuable than theoretical savings
- Sell routing guide resilience, not cheap optimism.
Call these customers first
- Midwest shippers
- Transcontinental shippers
- Food and beverage
- Industrial/open-deck accounts
- Port-adjacent importers considering transload or drayage pivots
Push commercial discipline
- Ask for:
- shorter quote validity
- earlier tender cutoffs
- appointment flexibility
- written approval for weather delay, detention, and reroute
Use lane-specific talk tracks
- For Midwest customers:
- “Today is your outbound window. Monday is likely your replenishment problem.”
- For transcon customers:
- “We can move it, but we should price the route that will actually run, not the route that looked normal yesterday.”
- For reefer customers:
- “The posted market is behind executable cost, so waiting usually raises your replacement cost.”
🤝 Carrier desk priorities for today
Reorder your call sheet
- First: flatbed core carriers
- Second: reefer carriers with Midwest/Southeast flexibility
- Third: heavy haul specialists with proven permit discipline
- Fourth: regional van carriers in dense reload markets
- Fifth: LTL/partial partners only where density exists
Phone before post on scarce equipment
- On flatbed, reefer, and heavy haul, direct outreach is outperforming passive board strategy.
Reduce the carrier’s risk premium
- Give exact details:
- commodity
- weight
- dimensions
- loading method
- appointment type
- site restrictions
- weather expectations
- Uncertainty costs money. Clean detail reduces the premium.
Use today’s outbound Midwest freight as relationship capital
- A truck that wants out of Iowa or Minnesota today can become your inbound recovery truck next week.
- Think roundtrip, not one load at a time.
⚠️ Risk and compliance watch
Weather restrictions are operational facts, not negotiation points
- High winds, mountain restrictions, and storm-driven parking requirements can create legally enforceable delays.
- Do not let customer urgency pressure you into promising non-compliant service.
HOS (Hours of Service) risk rises during detours and shutdowns
- Weather detours can turn a normal legal run into a layover run.
- Document every schedule change and customer approval.
Carrier vetting matters more in stressed markets
- When markets get expensive, bad actors appear.
- Keep discipline on:
- FMCSA (Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration) authority checks
- ELD (Electronic Logging Device) status
- live driver verification
- cargo/theft-sensitive lane controls
- That is not overhead. That is margin protection and liability protection.
📈 24–72 hour scenario map
Base case — most likely
- Selective tightening continues through the weekend
- Outbound Midwest freight moves today/Saturday
- Inbound Midwest recovery premiums build for Monday-Wednesday
- Flatbed and reefer remain the hardest buys
Higher-stress case
- Wind restrictions and storm impacts last longer than expected.
- Southern alternates tighten quickly.
- Monday replacement costs gap higher on:
- Midwest inbound
- reefer
- transcon freight
- Best response:
- buy early
- shorten quote life
- build backup carriers now
Relief case
- Corridor recovery is quicker than feared.
- Even then, backlog release will likely support pricing into midweek.
- This is not a collapse scenario. It is at best a delayed release scenario.
✅ Highest-value actions before the day ends
Reprice every uncovered van, reefer, and flatbed quote
- Van is firmer.
- Reefer and flatbed are clearly above screen.
Split the desk by market reality
- Put more labor into flatbed, heavy haul, and reefer.
- Keep van reps focused on regional, reload-dense, weather-light lanes.
Audit every Midwest and Rockies shipment
- Verify:
- facility status
- route plan
- appointment flexibility
- weather language in rate con
- realistic transit
Use Specialized as your main tactical buy-side segment
- It is the cleanest place to negotiate below screen today.
Start building Monday-Wednesday inbound Midwest coverage now
- The best trucks for recovery freight are often booked before the storm fully hits, not after.
Measure the right numbers tonight
- Quote-to-cover time
- Margin erosion from first quote to covered truck
- Percentage of weather-exposed loads with facility confirmation
- Percentage of open-deck and reefer loads fully specified before pricing
🧭 Bottom line
- The market is firmer, but not evenly firmer.
- Today’s opportunity is in understanding where the screen is lying to you.
- Right now, that means:
- buy early in flatbed, reefer, and heavy haul
- treat van as lane-selective and no longer broadly soft
- use Specialized as a disciplined negotiation segment
- sell risk management, not just transportation
- The brokers who win today will be the ones who quote cleaner, source faster, and explain lane-specific replacement cost better than their competitors.
📅 This Day in History
483: Election of Pope Felix III following the death of Pope Simplicius earlier that month.
1323: Siege of Warangal: Sultan Ghiyath al-Din Tughluq sends an expeditionary army led by his son, Muhammad bin Tughluq, to the Kakatiya capital Warangal – after ruler Prataparudra has refused to make tribute payments. He besieges the city and finally, after a campaign of 8 months, Prataparudra surrenders on November 9.
1825: Pope Leo XII publishes the apostolic constitution Quo Graviora in which he renewed the prohibition on Catholics joining freemasonry.
💭 Quote of the Day
"Our greatest fears lie in anticipation."
— Honore de Balzac