π Daily Market Intelligence Report
Thursday, February 19, 2026
1:56 PM CST
π Top-Line Summary
Market volatility has intensified significantly over the last 24 hours as a 'triple threat' of severe weather, regulatory enforcement, and capacity dislocation hits the Midwest and West Coast simultaneously. While total load volumes remain healthy at 210,902, the spread between posted and paid rates has widened across all equipment types, signaling that brokers must pay premiums to secure coverage in affected zones. The most critical development is the convergence of a winter storm in Iowa, tornado watches in the Ohio Valley, and a massive regulatory crackdown on Illinois-based CDLs, which threatens to sideline thousands of drivers in a key freight hub. Brokers should prioritize covering Midwest outbound freight immediately before capacity tightens further into the weekend.
β½ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
π¦οΈ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Midwest Winter Storm & I-80 Disruption (Iowa (IA, Webster, Crawford, Carroll counties)): Heavy snow (5-8 inches) with rates over 1 inch/hour will create hazardous travel on I-80 and I-35, likely causing delays and capacity avoidance.
- Southern California Mountain Snow & Wind (California (CA, Ventura, Santa Barbara counties, I-5 Corridor)): Major disruption to the I-5 Grapevine with heavy snow and 60-70 mph gusts. High risk of road closures trapping capacity moving in/out of the LA basin.
- Ohio Valley Tornado Watch (Indiana, Kentucky (IN, KY, multiple counties including Clark, Floyd, Jefferson)): Severe convective weather and tornado risk across key freight corridors (I-65, I-64, I-71) could force trucks to park, delaying transit through the manufacturing belt.
- Central Valley Freeze Watch (California (CA, Kern, Kings, Tulare counties)): Sub-freezing temps in major produce regions (Bakersfield, Visalia) will spike demand for reefer capacity to protect sensitive crops.
- High Wind Warning - Mountain West (New Mexico, Colorado (NM, CO, Sangre de Cristo Mountains)): Gusts up to 60 mph creating blow-over risk for light/empty trailers on I-25, disrupting north-south flow through the Rockies.
βοΈ Weather Impact Cascade
- Immediate Operational Impact: Iowa is experiencing active heavy snow storm conditions today with temperatures around 40 degrees Fahrenheit and winds gusting up to 35 mph, creating hazardous travel on I-80 and I-35. Kentucky is seeing rain with approximately 0.5 inches of precipitation and an 89% probability of continued rain today, compounded by an active tornado watch for the Ohio Valley β this combination is likely causing truck parking and transit delays on I-65, I-64, and I-71. Indiana is experiencing light rain today with conditions expected to shift toward light snow by Friday as temperatures drop sharply from 62 degrees Fahrenheit to approximately 38 degrees Fahrenheit. Colorado is facing extreme cold β approximately 4 degrees Fahrenheit today β combined with wind gusts up to 46 mph, creating significant blow-over risk for light and empty trailers. New Mexico is also under a high wind event with gusts up to 41 mph today, disrupting north-south flow on I-25 through the Rockies.
- Secondary Market Effects: Freight diverted away from I-80 in Iowa may attempt alternate routing via I-90 to the north or I-70 to the south, potentially increasing load volumes and rate pressure on those corridors in ways that may not be fully reflected in current load board data. Tornado watch-driven truck parking in Indiana and Kentucky will create transit delays that ripple forward into delivery schedules, potentially triggering expedited demand on parallel lanes such as I-75 through Ohio. The I-5 Grapevine disruption in California could isolate LA basin freight, which may increase demand for intermodal alternatives β though this is a secondary effect that may take 24 to 48 hours to fully materialize in market data.
- Regional Spillover Analysis: Iowa's storm is forecast to begin clearing Friday, with mostly sunny conditions returning. However, temperatures are forecast to drop to approximately 27 degrees Fahrenheit Friday, around 25 degrees Saturday, and approximately 20 degrees Sunday β all well below freezing β which may slow road clearing and keep some routes operationally hazardous longer than the storm timeline alone suggests. Kentucky's weather shows a concerning multi-day pattern: after Friday's sunny clearing, a rain-and-snow mix returns Saturday with light snow possible Sunday and Monday at temperatures around 30 degrees Fahrenheit β this suggests the Ohio Valley corridor may experience intermittent disruptions through at least early next week, not just today. New Mexico's high wind event is forecast to moderate significantly by Saturday, when winds are expected to drop from the 30 to 47 mph range seen Thursday and Friday to approximately 9 to 16 mph β suggesting I-25 north-south flow should recover relatively quickly compared to the Midwest snow disruptions. Colorado's extreme cold and wind event is forecast to moderate gradually, with mostly sunny conditions returning Saturday at around 17 degrees Fahrenheit and improving further through Sunday and Monday.
- Recovery Timeline: Iowa corridor β I-80 and I-35: Storm is forecast to clear Friday, but sub-freezing temperatures through the weekend suggest full operational recovery is more likely by Saturday or Sunday at the earliest, with freight backlog keeping rates elevated into early next week. Ohio Valley β I-65, I-64, and I-71: Today's tornado watch and rain event clears Friday, but the forecast indicates a return of rain-and-snow conditions Saturday and light snow Sunday through Monday in Kentucky, suggesting intermittent disruptions may continue through the weekend. Full normalization should be treated conservatively and monitored day by day. New Mexico and I-25 Wind Corridor: Conditions are forecast to improve markedly by Saturday based on available data, suggesting a relatively faster recovery for this corridor compared to the Midwest snow disruptions. California I-5 Grapevine: Specific 5-day forecast data was not available for this location in the enhanced dataset β recovery timeline should be monitored directly through NWS alerts and cannot be reliably predicted from available information.
π° Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Crude volatility remains high, keeping diesel prices elevated and preventing any significant fuel surcharge relief for shippers.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small carriers in the Midwest face acute financial stress due to the Illinois CDL audit, which may force immediate fleet reductions or operational pauses.
- Economic Indicators: Resilient flatbed volumes suggest underlying industrial strength, contradicting fears of a broader manufacturing slowdown.
π° Impactful News Analysis
-
Illinois CDL Audit Threatens Midwest Capacity π:
The DOT's finding that nearly 20% of Illinois non-domiciled CDLs were improperly issued creates an immediate risk of driver shortages in the Chicago freight hub. Brokers should anticipate higher rates and potential service failures on loads originating in or transiting through Illinois as carriers scramble to verify driver eligibility.
-
FMCSA Crackdown on 'Sham' CDL Schools π:
The removal of 550 CDL training providers from the national registry signals a long-term tightening of the driver pipeline. While this improves safety, it will likely constrain new driver entry, supporting higher rate floors throughout 2026.
-
Strict Enforcement on Non-Domiciled CDLs π:
New FMCSA directives mandating 48-hour document production and immediate revocation of non-compliant licenses will force carriers to be extremely cautious. Expect delays in onboarding new capacity as compliance checks become more rigorous.
News Impact Timeline
- Immediate Operational Reality: The Illinois CDL audit is an active, same-day disruption. Carriers operating with flagged non-domiciled CDLs face immediate compliance risk under the FMCSA directive requiring 48-hour document production and authorizing immediate revocation. Brokers should be verifying CDL compliance status on all Illinois-based carrier dispatches today β this is not a future preparation step, it is a current operational requirement to protect loads from mid-route service failures.
- 3-Day Market Implications: Within approximately 72 hours β by Sunday, February 22 β the market should have a clearer picture of how many drivers have been effectively grounded by the Illinois audit. Carriers will have had time to conduct internal fleet audits and either confirm compliance or pull non-compliant drivers from active dispatch. This may produce a partial recovery in Chicago-area capacity as compliant carriers recommit to the market, though the overall pool will likely remain smaller than pre-audit levels. The Iowa storm backlog should begin clearing over the weekend as roads open, though sub-freezing temperatures will moderate the pace of that recovery.
- Week-Ahead Positioning: By approximately mid-next-week, the market may begin to stabilize from the acute phase of the current disruption, though the structural tightening from CDL school removals and the ongoing audit fallout will persist beyond any single-week resolution. Brokers who used this week to build relationships with compliant, winter-capable carriers will be better positioned to serve customers as demand normalizes. Rate floors are unlikely to return to pre-disruption levels quickly β the structural regulatory changes support a higher rate environment throughout 2026 that is not dependent on this specific disruption event.
- Regulatory Compliance Impacts: The removal of 550 CDL training providers from the national registry will reduce the flow of new drivers entering the market throughout 2026. This is a lagging effect that will be felt more acutely in Q3 and Q4 as the training pipeline thins. Brokers should begin building and deepening relationships with carriers who have access to compliant, registry-approved training programs and robust internal safety cultures, as these carriers will be better positioned to maintain or grow their fleets while competitors face driver supply constraints.
π Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Real-time data shows paid rates consistently exceeding posted rates across all equipment types, a clear indicator that the spot market has shifted to a carrier-favored environment in the short term.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is critically tight in Iowa and the I-5 corridor due to weather, while the Chicago market is tightening artificially due to regulatory pressures.
- Technology Disruptions: Enhanced digital freight matching is becoming crucial to navigate rapid capacity dislocations caused by weather and regulatory events.
Demand Shift Indicators
- Regional Demand Predictions: Outbound Midwest demand is likely to remain elevated through at least early next week as shippers attempt to clear backlogs created by the Iowa storm and Illinois regulatory disruption. Southbound lanes from the Midwest toward Dallas and the Southeast are expected to see sustained demand pressure as shippers prioritize moving freight to warmer, operationally stable destinations. Inbound freight to the Midwest may soften temporarily as carriers actively avoid the disruption zone, potentially creating a lane imbalance that keeps outbound rates elevated even after weather conditions clear. California outbound reefer demand may spike within the next 24 to 48 hours as produce shippers respond urgently to the Central Valley freeze watch, though the precise magnitude of that surge is difficult to predict from available data.
- Seasonal Transition Analysis: February historically represents the tail end of winter capacity tightening before the spring produce season begins in earnest. The current situation is atypical due to the simultaneous occurrence of a regulatory capacity shock from the Illinois CDL audit, an active winter storm in Iowa, and severe convective weather in the Ohio Valley. This combination is compressing what would normally be a gradual seasonal tightening into an acute, multi-day disruption event. The FMCSA crackdown on CDL training schools β removing 550 providers from the national registry β signals a longer-term structural tightening of the driver pipeline that extends well beyond typical seasonal patterns and will likely support higher rate floors throughout 2026.
- Economic Leading Indicators: Resilient flatbed volumes exceeding 91,000 loads suggest underlying industrial and construction demand remains strong, which is a constructive signal for sustained freight activity through Q1 and into Q2 2026. Diesel prices at $3.677 per gallon remain elevated, continuing to pressure small carrier margins, particularly those in the Midwest already stressed by the Illinois regulatory situation. The removal of 550 CDL training providers from the national registry is a leading indicator of a structurally tighter driver supply environment throughout 2026, supporting higher rate floors on a durable rather than cyclical basis.
- Capacity Flow Predictions: Equipment is likely repositioning away from Iowa and the I-80 corridor today as drivers seek to avoid active storm conditions. This displaced capacity may temporarily increase availability in adjacent markets such as southern Missouri, Nebraska, and Kansas before being absorbed by post-storm demand surges. Illinois-based carriers facing compliance uncertainty may temporarily shift dispatch activity toward Indiana, Ohio, and Michigan as alternative operational bases, which could moderately increase carrier availability in those markets while further concentrating the Illinois capacity deficit.
π₯ Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retail replenishment demand remains steady, but weather delays in the Midwest may force expedited re-orders for weekend stock.
- Manufacturing: Industrial output is driving strong flatbed demand, particularly in the Southeast and Texas, where weather impacts are minimal.
- Agriculture: Produce shippers in California are urgently seeking reefer capacity to move crops ahead of freezing temperatures, driving up rates out of the Central Valley.
- Automotive: Auto parts flow through the I-65/I-75 corridor faces disruption from tornado watches, potentially impacting JIT production schedules.
πΊοΈ Regional & Lane Analysis
π Primary Region Focus: Midwest (Chicago/Iowa/Ohio Valley)
The Midwest is currently the epicenter of market volatility due to a convergence of severe winter weather in Iowa, tornado risks in the Ohio Valley, and a massive regulatory disruption in Illinois. This 'triple threat' is creating a perfect storm for rate spikes and capacity shortages.
π£οΈ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL β Atlanta, GA:
This high-volume lane is under significant pressure. Outbound Chicago capacity is constrained by the CDL audit fallout, while the destination remains open. Carriers are demanding premiums to leave the disruption zone.
Des Moines, IA β Dallas, TX:
Severe winter weather (Alert WXB274BB46) is hitting the origin, making travel on I-35 hazardous. Shippers are desperate to move freight before road conditions deteriorate further.
π¨ Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Outbound Chicago (IL) due to CDL audit fallout
- Outbound Des Moines (IA) due to winter storm
- Outbound Central Valley (CA) due to freeze urgency
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Critical shortages in Iowa (Snow), Southern California (Mountain Snow), and Illinois (Regulatory). Flatbed capacity tight nationwide.
Opportunity Zones:
- Southeast (GA, FL) remains stable with good capacity availabilityβuse as a sourcing hub for inbound Midwest freight.
π― Strategic Recommendations for Today
πΌ For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Inform customers about the 'triple threat' in the Midwest: severe snow in Iowa, tornado risks in the Ohio Valley, and a major DOT crackdown on Illinois drivers. Explain that these factors are simultaneously restricting capacity and driving up rates.
Action: Secure rate increases on all Midwest outbound freight immediately. Advise customers to ship early or expect delays.
π For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Focus on carriers based outside of Illinois for Midwest loads to avoid compliance issues. Prioritize carriers with winter equipment for I-80/I-35 lanes.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the stable diesel price and strong flatbed volumes to negotiate fair rates on non-impacted lanes. For weather zones, focus on safety and quick turns to entice drivers.
π Customer Communication Scripts
Rate Increase Justification β Midwest Cdl Audit Combined With Active Weather Disruption
Opening Script: "Good morning β I'm reaching out because there are several significant market developments today that directly impact your freight moving out of the Midwest. We are seeing a rare convergence of disruptions: a DOT audit has flagged nearly 20% of non-domiciled Illinois CDLs as improperly issued, which is pulling a substantial portion of Chicago-area truck capacity offline almost immediately. On top of that, a winter storm is actively hitting Iowa right now β heavy snow conditions with winds gusting up to 35 mph β making I-80 and I-35 hazardous. The result is that available, compliant capacity in this corridor is genuinely scarce today, and spot rates are reflecting that reality in real time."
Value Proposition: By working with us now, you are getting access to pre-vetted carriers whose CDL compliance we have already confirmed β which means you are not just getting a truck, you are getting a truck that will not be pulled off the road mid-route due to a regulatory flag. In this environment, that certainty has real dollar value that a lower-quoted load without verification cannot guarantee.
Urgency Creator: The CDL audit impact is spreading through the market as the day progresses. Carriers that were quoting this morning are pulling capacity as they work through their own internal compliance reviews. The pool of available, qualified carriers is shrinking with each passing hour, and rates are moving accordingly. This is a today decision, not a tomorrow decision.
Objection Handler: I understand it feels elevated compared to what you were paying recently. Here is the market reality: paid rates across all van equipment are now running above posted averages β brokers are paying premiums just to secure coverage, not to pad margins. The driver shortage in Illinois caused by the CDL audit is not a temporary price blip; it is a structural capacity reduction that will take multiple days to resolve. What I am quoting you reflects what it actually costs to move your freight reliably and without compliance risk today.
Capacity Shortage Communication β Multi-Region Weather Disruption Urgency
Opening Script: "I wanted to flag something time-sensitive for your shipments this week. Current capacity indicators show critical tightening across three key zones simultaneously: Iowa is in an active winter storm right now with heavy snow and winds gusting to 35 mph, Southern California's I-5 Grapevine is facing a major disruption from mountain snow and wind gusts reportedly in the 60 to 70 mph range, and the Ohio Valley has an active tornado watch affecting I-65 and I-64 in Indiana and Kentucky. Carriers are actively avoiding or pausing in these corridors, which means the effective truck supply available to us is materially smaller than what the total load board volumes suggest."
Value Proposition: The customers who get their freight moved reliably this week are the ones acting on this information now, before the broader market fully prices in the disruption. We have established relationships with carriers who are willing and equipped to operate in these conditions β but that window closes quickly as they commit to other loads.
Urgency Creator: Iowa's storm is active today, with the forecast showing clearing beginning Friday. However, temperatures are forecast to drop to the mid-to-upper 20s degrees Fahrenheit on Friday and remain well below freezing through the weekend, which may slow road clearing significantly. Freight that is not booked in the next few hours risks sitting until road conditions fully normalize, likely into early next week.
Objection Handler: Nobody wants to pay more β I hear you. But consider the alternative: a delayed shipment that misses your delivery window costs far more in downstream penalties, expedited re-orders, or missed production schedules than the rate difference we are discussing today. The capacity shortage we are seeing is verified by real-time load board data, active NWS weather alerts, and confirmed FMCSA regulatory actions β this is not a manufactured urgency.
π Executive Signal Summary
- Buy reliability now in the Midwest and Iβ5 corridors β paid rates are outpacing posted in most equipment, and compliance/weather are removing βeffectiveβ trucks from the pool; do not anchor to posted.
- Reprice and lock Midwest outbound today β Illinois CDL audit + Iowa winter storm + Ohio Valley severe weather = rapid tightening into the weekend; expect spillovers on Iβ70/Iβ90 and elevated backlogs SatβMon.
- Exploit Southeast stability for margin control β stage rounders ATL/CLT/JAX/BNA; use the SE as your reload base for Midwest returns and as a safe haven while storms/regulatory noise clear.
- Treat California reefer as a service play, not a price play β parity at $2.49/mi signals a firm price floor; win with SOPs (set-point, temp audits, continuous-run) as the Central Valley freeze drives urgent PFF (protect from freeze).
- Tighten compliance SOPs immediately for IL-based capacity β live-verify non-domiciled CDL documentation pre-dispatch (48-hour production mandate) to avoid mid-route revocations and service failures.
π Live Market Snapshot (Tradeable Anchors)
- Total loads (Truckstop): 210,902 (+ strong market velocity)
- National average (all-in): $2.28/mi | Range: $1.54β$2.53/mi
- Diesel (AAA): $3.677/gal
- Vans: 29,796 loads | Posted $2.13 vs Paid $2.18 (+$0.05 spread)
- Reefer: 13,110 loads | Posted $2.49 vs Paid $2.49 (parity; firm floor)
- Flatbed: 91,496 loads | Posted $2.45 vs Paid $2.50 (+$0.05 spread)
- Heavy Haul: 41,901 loads | Posted $2.51 vs Paid $2.53 (+$0.02 spread)
- Specialized: 23,264 loads | Posted $2.38 vs Paid $2.48 (+$0.10 spread)
- LTL/Partial: 11,335 loads | Posted $1.54 vs Paid $1.65 (+$0.11 spread)
How to read it:
- Paid > Posted β βfat marginβ β it means the market already repriced. Quote to Paid anchors plus corridor risk, especially Midwest, Iβ80/Iβ5, and wind corridors.
π¦οΈ 24β72 Hour Corridor Playbook
- Midwest (IL/IA/IN/KY/OH)
- Action: Front-load tenders today; accept higher buys for Fri/Sat coverage. Expect intermittent disruption Iβ65/Iβ64/Iβ71; Iβ80/Iβ35 backlog clears slower due to sub-freezing temps FriβSun.
- Tactics: Widen PU/DEL windows, pre-approve weather accessorials (TONU/detention/layover), and stage alternates 150β250 miles out (MI/OH/IN border, MO) to backfill fall-offs.
- California Iβ5 Grapevine (LA basin access)
- Action: Quote with chain/closure risk; condition commitments on NWS (National Weather Service) reopeners. Offer Iβ10/Iβ40 reroutes when time beats miles.
- Tactics: Favor short-haul reefer turns in Central Valley to de-risk closures; keep mountain-experienced fleets on call with snow chain SOPs.
- Rockies Iβ25 (CO/NM winds)
- Action: Defer light/high-profile flatbeds until winds ease (Sat). Prioritize heavy/low-profile loads; meter exposure.
- Tactics: Route via US 287/Iβ40 alternatives when schedules are tight; add rollover safety buffer time to appointments.
- Southeast (GA/TN/NC/FL)
- Action: Bundle rounders; sell guaranteed reloads to buy sub-anchor on clean-weather lanes. Use SE as a capacity reservoir for Midwest recovery next week.
- Tactics: Pre-book GA/AL/TN β FL β GA/SC loops; promise fast turns + same-day reload plan.
π΅ Pricing Guardrails (Anchor to Paid; Add Corridor Risk)
- Van (Paid anchor: $2.18/mi)
- Outbound Chicago/IL compliance zone: +$0.12β$0.25/mi; add 1 buffer day for potential checks.
- Des Moines/Iβ80 snow lanes: +$0.15β$0.35/mi; weather clause mandatory (force majeure + TONU/layover).
- SE loops (stable): Target $2.12β$2.22/mi with reload commitment to hold buys below anchor.
- Reefer (Paid anchor: $2.49/mi)
- Central Valley freeze/PFF: +$0.10β$0.25/mi; strict SOP (set-point on BOL, continuous-run, mid-transit temp checks).
- MW freeze-protect (inbound/outbound): +$0.05β$0.15/mi; fuel policy and fuel surcharge clarity.
- SE food/bev turns: $2.44β$2.52/mi with quick-turn reloads.
- Flatbed (Paid anchor: $2.50/mi)
- CO/NM high-wind corridors: +$0.20β$0.40/mi; avoid light/empty repositioning, confirm tarping limits.
- Industrial SE/TX lanes: $2.45β$2.58/mi with calendar control; bundle multi-drop to increase revenue per day.
- Heavy Haul (Paid anchor: $2.53/mi)
- Weather corridors: +$0.05β$0.15/mi; win by pre-clearing permits/pilots and precise time slots.
- LTL/Partial (Paid anchor: $1.65/mi)
- Consolidation strategy: Sell multi-stop efficiency; price density and dwell, not just miles.
Note: Add accessorials up front (layover, detention, chain use, weather delays). Publish them on the rate confirmation.
π¦ Compliance, Vetting, and SOPs (Prevent Mid-Load Failures)
- Illinois CDL audit (immediate risk)
- Verify non-domiciled IL CDL docs at dispatch: CDL copy, medical card, immigration/work authorization where applicable; confirm license state and validity.
- Require driver live-call to confirm ID, language comprehension (ELP), and route hazards; document time/date.
- Keep alternates staged for every IL-origin load; never single-thread high-risk tenders.
- Weather SOPs
- Rate con language: Force majeure/weather clause, pre-approved TONU/layover, detention start times, chain usage reimbursement.
- Reefer SOP: Set-point on BOL, continuous-run, fuel top-off at pickup, temperature check calls mid-route, seal numbers recorded.
- Flatbed SOP: Wind thresholds in writing; tarping policy; stop-work authority to driver without penalty.
- Tech/Payments Security
- No banking/factoring changes by email link; enforce callback to vetted numbers (FMCSA phishing risk elevated during regulatory turmoil).
- ELD (Electronic Logging Device) compliance: Verify make/model; avoid revoked devices to prevent roadside OOS (Out of Service).
π Opportunity Radar (Where to Lean In)
- Short-haul reefer in CA Central Valley β high urgency + SOP value lets you win service at/above floor without overbidding.
- SE rounders (van/reefer) β predictable reloads; sell on-time performance while the rest of the map is messy.
- Flatbed industrial in SE/TX β volumes are robust; margin from calendar control and multi-stop bundling, not just rate per mile.
- Southbound MW β TX/SE β aligns with carrier avoidance of cold/wind; pay slightly above anchor to capture quick commitments.
π§ Sales Psychology and Scripts (Concise, Field-Ready)
- Midwest Rate Realism (Van)
- Open: βWeβre in a triple-disruption: IL CDL audit is sidelining drivers, Iβ80/Iβ35 are snow-impacted, and Ohio Valley weather is pausing transit. Paid is running above posted, and compliant capacity is genuinely scarce today.β
- Value: βWeβre booking vetted, winter-equipped carriers whose CDL compliance weβve already confirmed to avoid mid-route revocations.β
- Close: βIf we lock this now, we hold a confirmed, compliant truck. If we wait, we compete with a shrinking pool at higher buys.β
- CA Reefer Freeze (Service Sell)
- Open: βCentral Valley freeze is pushing urgent PFF shipments. Price is at floor-parity; service is the edge.β
- Value: βWe guarantee set-point on BOL, continuous-run, temp audits, and mid-transit checks. Thatβs what prevents claims in this cold shot.β
- Close: βApprove accessorials and a 2-hour window, and weβll move this ahead of the surge.β
πΊοΈ Lane Focus You Can Trade Today
- Chicago, IL β Atlanta, GA (Van): Price +$0.12β$0.25/mi above $2.18 anchor; book today with alternates; push flexible delivery.
- Des Moines, IA β Dallas, TX (Van): Price +$0.15β$0.35/mi; stage winter fleets; enforce weather clause and buffer day.
- Bakersfield/Visalia short-hauls (Reefer): + $0.10β$0.25/mi over $2.49 anchor; tight SOPs; use quick turns to compound revenue/day.
- CO/NM outbound (Flatbed): Hold for heavier freight or delay 24β36 hours; otherwise +$0.20β$0.40/mi and route via safer corridors.
π‘οΈ Risk Dashboard (What Can Burn Your Day + Fixes)
- Mid-route CDL revocation (IL non-domiciled): Fix = pre-dispatch document capture + live driver verification + backup truck pre-aligned.
- Road closures/chain control (Iβ5 Grapevine): Fix = conditional rate cons tied to NWS status + reroute options priced in.
- Rollover risk (Iβ25 winds) for flatbed/light vans: Fix = payload minimums, defer light moves, written wind thresholds.
- Appointment brittleness in MW: Fix = proactive rescheduling, 2β4 hour windows, and weekend gate availability.
π Capacity Flow Outlook (48β96 Hours)
- Away from Iβ80/Iβ35 today, then snapping back SatβMon as roads clear; expect imbalance that keeps MW outbound rates elevated into early next week.
- Iβ25 winds ease by Saturday, enabling faster northβsouth recovery than the Midwest snow belt.
- LA basin volatility persists until Grapevine stabilizes; expect some bleed to intermodal requests within 24β48 hours.
- Southeast remains the reload backbone; continue building circuits for consistent margins.
π 8-Hour Execution Checklist (Do These Now)
- Reprice all MW/Iβ5/Iβ25 tenders to Paid anchors plus corridor premiums; insert weather/accessorial clauses on every RC (rate confirmation).
- Audit IL-linked carriers for non-domiciled CDL docs; tag high-risk drivers; stage alternates 150β250 miles out.
- Book 6β10 SE rounders (ATL/CLT/JAX/BNA) with same-carrier reload commitments; publish reloads on the RC to hold buys.
- Launch CA reefer PFF blitz: confirm SOPs, target short-hauls for speed, set fuel policies, and temp-check cadence.
- Throttle flatbed exposure in CO/NM; prioritize heavy/low-profile; delay light/high-profile by 24β36 hours or reroute.
π KPIs To Track Before EOD
- Time-to-cover (MW/Iβ5 lanes): β€ 90 minutes with pre-vetted winter fleets.
- Carrier fall-off (weather/reg zones): β€ 2.5% with alternates pre-staged.
- SE loop book-to-award: β₯ 40% with reload commitment printed on RC.
- Avg dwell reduction (reefer PFF short-hauls): β₯ 20% vs. last week through SOP discipline.
- Appointment flexibility secured: β₯ 70% of storm-corridor loads with 2β4 hour windows.
π
This Day in History
1594: Having already been elected to the throne of the PolishβLithuanian Commonwealth in 1587, Sigismund III of the House of Vasa is crowned King of Sweden, having succeeded his father John III of Sweden in 1592.
1978: Egyptian forces raid Larnaca International Airport in an attempt to intervene in a hijacking, without authorisation from the Republic of Cyprus authorities. The Cypriot National Guard and Police forces kill 15 Egyptian commandos and destroy the Egyptian C-130 transport plane in open combat.
2012: Forty-four people are killed in a prison brawl in Apodaca, Nuevo LeΓ³n, Mexico.
π Quote of the Day
"A memory is a beautiful thing, it's almost a desire that you miss."
β Gustave Flaubert