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📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report

Monday, March 30, 2026

7:00 AM CST


📊 Top-Line Summary

The national spot freight market is experiencing a robust start to the week, with total available loads surging 7.0% overnight to 174,169 and pushing the national average rate to $2.65/mile. While the national average diesel price provides a stable baseline of $3.694/gallon, severe regional fuel price shocks—with diesel eclipsing $8.00/gallon in parts of California and $5.75/gallon in New York—are fracturing capacity networks and forcing carriers to demand massive premiums on specific lanes. Brokers must leverage real-time market data to navigate these extreme regional fuel disparities and ongoing severe flooding in the Ohio Valley and Pacific Northwest, which are actively disrupting routing, tightening local capacity, and creating lucrative arbitrage opportunities for agile operations.

Insight

A two-speed spot market is taking shape

National averages are climbing, but the strongest broker margin is concentrated on lanes touching flood zones or high-fuel states rather than across the full network. The cleanest play today is premium pricing on execution-risk freight in Ohio, California, and New York while staying disciplined on dry reload lanes where carriers will still benchmark off the $3.694 national diesel average.

Daily market overview

⛽ Diesel Price Analysis

Price Trend Over Time

Diesel Price Trend Chart

🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence

U.S. freight weather impact map

Current Major Weather Events:

Weather Affected Corridors:

I-71
Interstate71
Severe
State
Hazards
Flood Warning
Alert Count
1
I-29
Interstate29
Severe
State
Hazards
Flood Warning
Alert Count
1
I-90
Interstate90
Moderate
State
Hazards
Winter Weather Advisory
Alert Count
1
Weather Insight

Ohio flooding risk extends beyond today's dispatch cycle

Eastern Ohio gets its best operating window today before light rain develops late, then scattered thunderstorms Tuesday and additional rain Wednesday keep low-lying road closures and secondary-route detours in play through midweek. That raises the odds of missed pickup windows, longer empty repositioning, and tighter same-day recovery options across the I-71 orbit.

💰 Financial Market Indicators

📰 Impactful News Analysis

  1. Severe California Fuel Spikes Threaten West Coast Capacity 🔗:
    With diesel eclipsing $8 per gallon at some California stations, brokers must anticipate immediate capacity shortages and extreme rate volatility on outbound West Coast lanes as smaller carriers refuse to operate at a loss.
  2. Northeast Diesel Prices Surge Past $5.75 🔗:
    Rising fuel costs in New York are squeezing carrier margins on I-95 corridor freight; brokers should proactively adjust pricing models and prepare for aggressive fuel surcharge negotiations on inbound Northeast loads.
  3. Global Tensions Sustain Upward Pressure on Freight Rates 🔗:
    Ongoing maritime disruptions are forcing more freight into domestic expedited and transloading networks, creating lucrative spot opportunities for brokers positioned near major ports.
  4. Digital Integration Becomes Critical for Load Coverage 🔗:
    As market volatility increases, brokers utilizing advanced CRM and load-matching integrations will secure capacity faster and prevent double-booking, providing a critical competitive advantage in tight markets.
News Insight

Fuel volatility is now reshaping lane behavior, not just surcharge math

On California and New York freight, carriers are increasingly pricing against their next fuel stop and reload prospects rather than a standard fuel table. Short-haul outbound loads from high-cost markets will be hardest to cover, while roundtrips, committed reloads, and freight that quickly pulls trucks into lower-cost states should see better acceptance and less quote churn.

🔍 Competitive Intelligence

👥 Customer Sector Analysis

🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis

📍 Primary Region Focus: Midwest & Ohio Valley

The Midwest is currently experiencing a perfect storm of severe weather disruptions and surging industrial demand. Widespread flooding across Eastern Ohio is forcing commercial detours and slowing velocity on the I-71 corridor, while regional flatbed demand remains exceptionally high. Carriers are leveraging these routing difficulties to demand rate premiums, particularly as they navigate around flooded low-lying areas. Despite the stable national fuel average, carriers operating in this region are highly sensitive to delays, meaning brokers must offer aggressive rates to secure reliable capacity.

🛣️ Key Lane Watch

Columbus, OH → Chicago, IL: This critical Midwest corridor is currently disrupted by severe flooding in Eastern Ohio, causing localized congestion and equipment positioning issues. Van and flatbed demand remains high, but carriers are reluctant to commit without premiums due to potential weather delays. The combination of strong industrial output and weather friction is driving rates upward.

Route map for Columbus, OH → Chicago, IL

Minneapolis, MN → Indianapolis, IN: Minor flooding in northwestern Minnesota and severe flooding in the Ohio Valley are creating a complex routing environment for this lane. Reefer and van demand is steady, but carriers are demanding higher rates to cover the operational friction at both the origin and destination points.

Route map for Minneapolis, MN → Indianapolis, IN
Regional Insight

Columbus-Chicago coverage favors carriers staged west of the flood belt

The lane is still coverable, but execution is cleaner with trucks positioned west or northwest of Columbus rather than equipment relying on reloads through eastern Ohio counties. Early pickups should command the best acceptance, and same-day Chicago appointments need extra transit slack because detours and appointment misses are more likely to show up on the front end than in linehaul.

Regional Insight

Minneapolis-Indianapolis tightens after today

Northwestern Minnesota flooding remains localized, but the bigger issue is the colder, snowier pattern returning Tuesday through Friday just as Ohio turns stormy midweek. Freight that loads today or early Tuesday has a materially better chance of clean execution; later-week tenders will need a higher buy rate as weather drag builds on both ends of the move.

🚨 Actionable Alerts

Rate Spike Warnings:

Capacity Shortage Alerts:

Opportunity Zones:

🎯 Strategic Recommendations for Today

💼 For Customer Sales:

Narrative: Inform customers that while the national average fuel price remains stable, extreme regional fuel spikes and severe weather in the Midwest are creating localized capacity crises that require premium pricing to ensure execution.

Action: Proactively secure rate increases on lanes touching California, New York, and the Ohio Valley before capacity completely dries up.

🚛 For Carrier Reps:

Sourcing Focus: Focus heavily on securing flatbed capacity nationwide and prioritizing reefer carriers in the South/West. Lock in Midwest capacity early in the day before weather delays consume available hours of service.

Negotiation Leverage: Use the stable $3.694/gallon national average diesel price to negotiate favorable rates on lanes outside of the extreme fuel spike zones (CA/NY).

Strategic Insight

Shorten quote life where fuel or weather can move the buy side intraday

Volatile lanes need tighter pricing discipline to protect margin.

Strategic Takeaways

High-Signal Additions

🧭 Savvy Broker's Playbook

🔑 Executive Signal Summary

  1. This is a real Monday tightening move, not just a noisy overnight pop.

    • Total available loads are 174,169, up 7.0% from 162,717.
    • The national average rate is $2.65/mile, up from $2.53/mile yesterday.
    • When volume and rate rise together, the market is usually signaling replacement cost is moving higher faster than many shippers expect.
  2. The most important signal today is that paid rates are beating posted rates almost everywhere.

    • Van: $2.43 paid vs. $2.37 posted = +$0.06
    • Reefer (refrigerated): $2.94 paid vs. $2.80 posted = +$0.14
    • Flatbed: $3.02 paid vs. $2.92 posted = +$0.10
    • Heavy Haul: $2.97 paid vs. $2.98 posted = -$0.01
    • Specialized: $3.13 paid vs. $2.74 posted = +$0.39
    • LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload): $1.78 paid vs. $1.69 posted = +$0.09
    • Translation: the board is lagging the real market. If a broker quotes straight off posted rates today, margin leakage is very likely.
  3. Open-deck still deserves the majority of broker attention.

    • Flatbed + Heavy Haul + Specialized = 130,534 loads, which is 74.9% of the entire board.
    • Any desk spending most of its morning on routine dry van is likely under-allocating effort to the highest-value freight.
  4. Ohio is the clearest execution-risk market of the day.

    • Flooding in Holmes, Wayne, Coshocton, and Tuscarawas counties is turning Ohio freight into an appointment and routing problem, not just a linehaul problem.
    • The best premium is not just on miles; it is on certainty, early pickup, and clean recovery planning.
  5. Fuel is now a lane-behavior issue, not just a surcharge issue.

    • National diesel is $3.694/gallon, which still gives brokers a negotiation anchor on clean lanes.
    • But on California and New York freight, carrier decision-making is being driven by trip quality, reload certainty, and fuel exposure by geography, not by national averages.

📊 What the market is really saying


💰 Where margin lives today


🚚 Mode-by-Mode Trading Plan

🚛 Dry Van

❄️ Reefer

🏗️ Flatbed

🏋️ Heavy Haul

🧩 Specialized

📦 LTL/Partial


🗺️ Regional Playbook for Today

🌧️ Ohio / I-71 Corridor

🚛 Columbus, OH → Chicago, IL

🌨️ Minneapolis, MN → Indianapolis, IN

⛽ California and New York Lanes

🌊 Washington / Chelan County


🧠 Customer Sales Strategy for Today


🤝 Carrier Desk Playbook


🛡️ Risk Controls That Protect Margin Today


⏱️ Practical Execution Plan by Clock


🔮 24–72 Hour Outlook


🎯 Highest-Value Actions for Today

  1. Requote from paid-market reality, not posted-market comfort.
  2. Spend the majority of carrier-desk time on open-deck because 130,534 loads control the board.
  3. Treat Ohio as an execution-premium market and cover early.
  4. Shorten quote life on California, New York, and Ohio Valley freight.
  5. Use LTL/partial selectively to save customer relationships where truckload replacement cost is too high.
  6. Require full specs before quoting specialized or heavy haul aggressively.
  7. Build backup coverage before noon on next-day Midwest freight.

🧭 Bottom Line

Today’s market is tighter than the average broker screen makes it look. The real tell is not just 174,169 loads or a $2.65 national average. It is the fact that paid rates are beating posted rates across nearly the whole board while weather and fuel distortions are concentrating execution risk in very specific places.

The brokers who outperform today will: - price from replacement cost - lean hard into open-deck - cover Ohio early - separate fuel and weather from linehaul - sell certainty, not just miles - refuse to quote vague specs cheaply

📅 This Day in History

1949: Cold War: A riot breaks out in Austurvöllur square in Reykjavík, when Iceland joins NATO.
1972: Vietnam War: The Easter Offensive begins after North Vietnamese forces cross into the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) of South Vietnam.
2023: Donald Trump becomes the first former United States president to be indicted by a grand jury.

💭 Quote of the Day

"Enjoy when you can, and endure when you must."

— Johann Wolfgang von Goethe