π Daily Market Intelligence Report
Monday, March 02, 2026
7:00 AM CST
π Top-Line Summary
The spot market opens the week with sustained, elevated volume, currently showing 167,676 available loads and a strong national average rate of $2.25/mile. Flatbed freight continues to dominate the board with nearly 76,000 available loads as early spring construction and energy sector demands accelerate. For freight brokers, the most critical immediate catalyst is the escalating geopolitical tension in the Middle East, which threatens to rapidly inflate diesel costs from the current $3.77/gallon average and push operating expenses up by as much as 12%. Brokers must navigate these fuel-driven rate pressures, manage localized capacity constraints in the Southeast due to early produce staging and flooding, and leverage real-time rate intelligence to capture widening arbitrage opportunities in the tightening open-deck and temperature-controlled markets.
β½ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
π¦οΈ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Winter Storm Warning (Ice Accumulation) (West Virginia (WV, Greenbrier, Pocahontas, Randolph counties)): Heavy mixed precipitation with ice accumulations up to three-tenths of an inch will make travel nearly impossible on regional corridors (I-64, I-79). Expect severe capacity avoidance, localized power outages, and immediate inbound rate spikes as carriers refuse to risk equipment.
- Fire Weather Watch & High Winds (New Mexico (NM, Northeast Plains, Central Highlands)): Critical fire weather conditions with 40 mph wind gusts along the I-25 and I-40 transcontinental corridors. High profile vehicles (empty vans/reefers) face significant blow-over risks, likely causing transit delays and temporary routing detours.
- River Flooding (Georgia (GA, Johnson, Washington, Wilkinson counties)): Minor flooding along the Oconee River is impacting local infrastructure and secondary routes. While major interstates remain clear, expect delays in local agricultural pickups and potential rerouting for regional Southeast freight.
- Heavy Freezing Spray (Alaska Coastal Waters (AK, Valdez Narrows, Bering Sea)): Severe freezing spray and 35 kt winds are disrupting coastal and offshore maritime logistics. This will delay port operations and subsequent inland freight movements connected to Alaskan supply chains.
βοΈ Weather Impact Cascade
- Immediate Operational Impact: In Georgia, current forecast data shows mostly sunny to sunny conditions today through Wednesday, with temperatures reaching the mid-to-upper 70s. This is a strongly favorable signal that the minor Oconee River flooding affecting Johnson, Washington, and Wilkinson counties should recede and allow local agricultural pickup operations to normalize, potentially by mid-week. No significant precipitation is forecast for Georgia through Friday, with only a 15% precipitation chance noted for Wednesday and Friday β both at 0.0 inches. Brokers should plan for a gradual easing of pickup delays in that corridor beginning Tuesday or Wednesday. In West Virginia, conditions are notably different β the forecast shows persistent rain through the entire 5-day period, with approximately 0.2 inches Monday, 0.2 inches Tuesday, and 0.4 inches Wednesday, suggesting ongoing road hazard conditions on mountain corridors. Carriers are likely to continue avoiding the I-64 and I-79 corridors, and rate pressure for loads entering or exiting West Virginia may persist well into mid-week or beyond.
- Secondary Market Effects: The prolonged West Virginia rain pattern may push carriers who would otherwise traverse the Appalachian region to seek alternative routing via I-81 in Virginia or I-77 in the Carolinas. Virginia's forecast shows light rain Monday (approximately 0.1 inches) with conditions improving significantly by Tuesday through Friday, suggesting Virginia corridors may become a preferred alternative routing option beginning Tuesday. This could create temporary capacity tightening on Virginia north-south lanes as rerouted freight competes with existing demand. In New Mexico, the Fire Weather Watch conditions with 40 mph wind gusts on the I-25 and I-40 corridors present ongoing risks for high-profile empty vehicles, potentially causing transit delays on transcontinental lanes through the Southwest.
- Regional Spillover Analysis: The combination of West Virginia weather avoidance and Georgia flooding recovery creates a temporary capacity funnel through the Carolinas, particularly the I-77 and I-85 corridors. Brokers managing Charlotte-area freight should anticipate that carrier routing preferences will concentrate more equipment through the Carolinas this week, which may modestly improve availability on southbound lanes into Georgia and Florida but could tighten northbound capacity out of Charlotte toward Virginia and the Mid-Atlantic as demand increases on those alternative corridors. Alaska's extreme cold (forecast showing -4Β°F to -8Β°F with feels-like temperatures as low as -17Β°F to -18Β°F) will continue to impact coastal and port operations, though its direct effect on continental US freight markets remains secondary.
- Recovery Timeline: Georgia flooding: Based on forecast data showing sunny conditions Monday through Wednesday with no meaningful precipitation through Friday, local infrastructure recovery and pickup normalization appears likely to occur mid-week, potentially by Tuesday afternoon or Wednesday morning. West Virginia disruption: Persistent rain through at least Friday (0.2 inches forecast) suggests capacity avoidance on mountain corridors may not fully resolve this week β brokers should plan for ongoing impact through the 5-day forecast horizon. Virginia alternative routing pressure: Should begin easing Tuesday as Virginia conditions improve, with full normalization expected Wednesday. New Mexico wind events: No multi-day forecast improvement data available β treat as ongoing through the week with conservative routing recommendations for high-profile vehicles.
π° Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Global oil markets are highly volatile due to Strait of Hormuz conflict risks. Traders are pricing in potential supply disruptions, which could rapidly translate to higher wholesale diesel costs and increased fuel surcharge demands from carriers.
- Carrier Financial Health: Smaller carriers remain highly vulnerable to sudden fuel price shocks. If diesel spikes as projected by geopolitical analysts, undercapitalized fleets may park equipment rather than operate at a loss, further tightening spot market capacity.
- Economic Indicators: Import volumes remain strong despite rising hidden destination fees at ports, pushing more shippers to utilize spot market drayage and transloading services to avoid exorbitant terminal storage penalties.
π° Impactful News Analysis
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Middle East Conflict Threatens to Spike Trucking Costs by Up to 12% π:
Escalating tensions in the Strait of Hormuz could drive global oil prices up significantly. For brokers, this means immediate pressure on carrier rates. You must proactively discuss potential fuel surcharge increases with shippers now, before the spot market reacts to pump price hikes, to protect your margins.
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Hidden Import Fees Driving Shippers to Alternative Logistics π:
As importers face unexpected terminal handling and storage fees at US ports, there is a growing opportunity for brokers to offer agile transloading and spot drayage solutions. Pitching reliable, fast port-to-warehouse moves can help shippers avoid demurrage, allowing brokers to capture premium rates.
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FMCSA Safety Violations Highlight Carrier Vetting Risks π:
With millions in penalties levied for motor vehicle safety violations, the regulatory environment is unforgiving. Brokers must double down on strict carrier compliance checks. Negligent selection lawsuits are a massive financial risk; prioritize safety scores over cheap capacity to protect the brokerage.
News Impact Timeline
- Immediate Operational Reality: The Middle East geopolitical tension and its potential impact on diesel prices is the single most operationally significant news factor this week. At $3.77 per gallon, diesel is already at a level that pressures smaller carrier margins. Any escalation in the Strait of Hormuz situation could translate to wholesale price increases that reach pump prices within days, not weeks. Brokers should treat today and tomorrow as the optimal window to have proactive fuel surcharge conversations with shippers before market sentiment hardens.
- 3-Day Market Implications: Within 72 hours, if oil market volatility persists or worsens, expect carriers to begin including explicit fuel escalation clauses in spot rate negotiations or to simply quote higher linehaul rates to build in a fuel buffer. Shippers who have not been prepared for this conversation will experience sticker shock. Brokers who have already set expectations and framed the fuel risk narrative will be positioned as trusted advisors rather than bearers of bad news. Additionally, the FMCSA safety enforcement environment will continue to generate compliance pressure β any broker who has not completed a recent carrier vetting review should prioritize that this week as regulatory scrutiny remains elevated.
- Week-Ahead Positioning: By the end of the week, the market will have largely priced in whatever fuel direction emerges from geopolitical developments. Brokers who have locked in capacity and rate agreements early in the week will hold a margin advantage over those reacting to mid-week or end-of-week market movements. The Savannah port transloading opportunity window is time-sensitive β if global shipping disruptions cause batched arrivals, the window for premium same-day recovery rates could open and close within a single day. Having carrier capacity committed in advance is the only reliable strategy for capturing that opportunity.
- Regulatory Compliance Impacts: The documented pattern of FMCSA penalties for safety violations requires that brokers maintain rigorous carrier vetting protocols regardless of capacity pressure. In tight markets, the temptation to accept lower-safety-score carriers increases β this must be resisted. Negligent selection liability is a documented financial and reputational risk. Compliance checks should be treated as non-negotiable operational standards, particularly for high-value or time-sensitive freight where the pressure to accept any available carrier is highest.
π Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: The gap between posted rates and paid rates is narrowing across all equipment types, indicating that carriers are successfully negotiating upward. The massive 75k+ flatbed load count is creating a 'halo effect', pulling driver attention away from standard van freight.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is critically tight in the Southeast due to early produce and in the Mid-Atlantic due to ice storms. Conversely, the Northeast is seeing a slight surplus of outbound capacity as carriers look to escape the region following weekend weather disruptions.
- Technology Disruptions: AI-driven port congestion management tools are gaining traction, but immediate implementation gaps are causing unpredictable wait times at major terminals, making real-time tracking and flexible appointment scheduling vital for broker success.
Demand Shift Indicators
- Regional Demand Predictions: The Southeast will likely see accelerating reefer demand through mid-March as produce staging transitions to active harvest and outbound movement. The current early-staging phase is absorbing equipment without generating corresponding outbound volume, meaning the real rate pressure point may still be ahead. Van demand in the region should remain steady as retail spring inventory positioning continues. Flatbed demand nationally appears likely to sustain or increase given that construction and energy sector activity typically accelerates through March and April in the Southeast and Midwest.
- Seasonal Transition Analysis: The current market is behaving consistent with an early and aggressive seasonal transition. Flatbed loads at nearly 76,000 represent an unusually high volume for early March, suggesting construction and energy sector mobilization is running ahead of typical seasonal timing. Reefer capacity tightening in the Southeast also appears to be occurring earlier than historical norms would suggest, potentially indicating that agricultural stakeholders are staging equipment proactively in anticipation of an early harvest cycle. Brokers should treat this as an accelerated seasonal curve rather than a standard early-March market.
- Economic Leading Indicators: Strong import volumes at Southeast coastal ports, despite rising hidden terminal fees, suggest underlying consumer and industrial demand remains resilient. The willingness of shippers to pay premium spot drayage rates to avoid demurrage costs indicates that inventory replenishment pressure is real and immediate. If geopolitical tensions further disrupt global shipping schedules, the batched arrival effect at major ports could create sudden, unpredictable demand spikes in drayage and transloading throughout the week.
- Capacity Flow Predictions: Equipment is likely to continue flowing into the Southeast as carriers follow flatbed and reefer rate premiums. This may temporarily ease capacity in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic, where carriers are already motivated to exit post-weather disruption. However, this inflow may be offset by carriers staging in Florida for produce season, creating a net neutral to slightly tight capacity environment in Georgia and South Carolina port markets. West Virginia and the broader Appalachian corridor may see prolonged capacity avoidance given the multi-day rain forecast continuing through the week.
π₯ Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retailers are accelerating spring inventory positioning. Expect steady van demand, but be prepared for shippers to push back on rate increases driven by fuel volatility.
- Manufacturing: Industrial and construction manufacturing is driving the massive flatbed boom. Heavy machinery and building materials are moving at premium rates, absorbing specialized capacity nationwide.
- Agriculture: Early produce season in the Southeast is beginning to absorb reefer capacity. Localized flooding in GA may delay some harvests, creating sudden, urgent surges in outbound freight once waters recede.
- Automotive: Auto parts freight remains steady, but any disruption in transcontinental routing due to high winds in the Southwest (NM) could delay just-in-time manufacturing schedules.
πΊοΈ Regional & Lane Analysis
π Primary Region Focus: Southeast
The Southeast is currently the most dynamic and profitable region for freight brokers. A convergence of early produce season preparations, strong import volumes at coastal ports, and localized weather disruptions (GA flooding) is creating significant capacity imbalances. Reefer equipment is being hoarded for agricultural yields, leaving standard food-and-beverage shippers scrambling for temperature-controlled units. Simultaneously, the threat of rising diesel prices is causing regional carriers to demand higher rates on long-haul outbound lanes. This volatility provides excellent arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can secure reliable capacity ahead of the spot market curve.
π£οΈ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA β Orlando, FL:
This heavily trafficked consumer lane is experiencing rate pressure as carriers demand premiums to enter the Florida peninsula, fearing empty miles on the return. Strong retail demand and localized GA flooding are complicating pickup schedules, keeping capacity tight.
Savannah, GA β Charlotte, NC:
A critical port-to-distribution hub corridor. High import volumes and hidden port fees are driving shippers to utilize spot drayage and immediate transloading. Flatbed demand for imported industrial materials is exceptionally high.
π¨ Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Outbound West Virginia (Ice Storm impacts)
- Inbound Florida (Carriers demanding return-trip premiums)
- Heavy Haul/Specialized nationwide (Extreme demand)
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Severe shortages in specialized and flatbed equipment nationwide (75k+ loads). Reefer capacity is critically tight in the Southeast due to produce staging.
Opportunity Zones:
- Northeast outbound (Carriers looking to escape post-storm)
- Savannah port transloading (High urgency, premium rates)
π― Strategic Recommendations for Today
πΌ For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Geopolitical tensions are threatening to spike diesel prices significantly this week. We need to secure your capacity now before the spot market reacts to pump prices, and we may need to review fuel surcharge structures to ensure your freight doesn't get left on the dock.
Action: Proactively contact top clients today to discuss fuel volatility and lock in volume for the week before rates potentially jump.
π For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Prioritize securing flatbed and specialized equipment, as this sector is dominating the board. Build relationships with carriers in the Southeast by offering consistent round-trips into and out of Florida.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the threat of rising fuel costs to lock carriers into dedicated weekly runs now, offering them stability and guaranteed miles in exchange for favorable linehaul rates.
π Customer Communication Scripts
Rate Increase Justification Driven By Fuel Volatility And Flatbed Market Pressure
Opening Script: "Good morning β I wanted to reach out first thing today because the spot market opened this week with over 167,000 active loads and a national average rate of $2.25 per mile. More critically, the escalating conflict in the Middle East is creating real upside pressure on diesel, which is currently sitting at $3.77 per gallon. Industry analysts are projecting operating cost increases of up to 12% if a supply disruption materializes. I want to make sure we have your freight secured before the pump prices catch up to the futures market."
Value Proposition: By locking in capacity and confirming rates today, you insulate your supply chain from what could be a rapid mid-week rate correction. Carriers are already pricing in fuel risk on outbound Southeast lanes β acting now protects your budget and guarantees equipment availability.
Urgency Creator: Diesel futures markets are reacting in real time to geopolitical headlines. The window to secure capacity at current rates may close within 48 to 72 hours if oil markets spike. Carriers are already selectively rejecting contracted tenders in favor of spot market premiums.
Objection Handler: If the customer says rates are too high right now: 'I understand that perspective, and I want to be transparent with you β paid rates across all equipment types are running above posted averages because carriers are pricing in fuel risk before the pump reflects it. The flatbed market alone is showing nearly 76,000 loads competing for specialized equipment. What we're quoting today actually reflects where the market is heading, not where it has been. Locking in now is the lower-cost option compared to where spot rates may be by Wednesday or Thursday.'
Reefer Capacity Shortage Communication For Southeast Produce And Food-And-Beverage Shippers
Opening Script: "I'm calling with an important heads-up for your temperature-controlled freight this week. Nationwide reefer capacity is extremely tight β only about 8,000 available loads on the board β and the Southeast is the epicenter of that squeeze. Early produce season preparations are absorbing specialized equipment, and carriers are being very selective about which loads they accept. If you have any refrigerated shipments moving out of Georgia, Florida, or the Carolinas in the next five to seven days, I strongly recommend we confirm coverage today."
Value Proposition: Securing your reefer capacity now, before the produce season fully accelerates, means you avoid the scramble that typically hits mid-to-late March when every agricultural shipper in the Southeast is competing for the same limited pool of refrigerated units. We have established carrier relationships in this market and can offer you continuity that the spot board simply cannot guarantee.
Urgency Creator: Historical patterns and current staging activity both point to reefer capacity tightening further through mid-March. With paid rates already at $2.43 per mile and posted averages at $2.47, the market is signaling that carriers have pricing power. Waiting even 48 hours could mean paying significantly more for the same lane.
Objection Handler: If the customer pushes back on reefer pricing: 'The $2.43 paid rate reflects a genuine market shortage β there are only about 8,000 reefer loads available nationally, which is a fraction of the total load board. Carriers operating fuel-intensive refrigerated units are under real margin pressure with diesel at current levels and rising. The rate you're seeing today is not a broker markup β it is what carriers require to accept the load. We can show you the market data directly if that would help build internal alignment on the budget.'
π― The Veteran's Monday Playbook: Securing Capacity Ahead of the Curve
Welcome to Monday, March 2nd. The spot market is opening with a sustained, elevated volume of 167,676 available loads and a firm national average rate of $2.25/mile. As a veteran broker, I am looking past the load count directly at the macro-environment: escalating Middle East tensions threatening a 12% spike in diesel costs, and a massive 75,000+ flatbed load count cannibalizing the open-deck market.
The brokers who win today will not be the ones reacting to the board; they will be the ones preemptively locking in capacity, securing fuel surcharge agreements, and leveraging compliance as a premium service. Here is your actionable 72-hour tactical playbook.
π The Spread: Margin Capture Matrix
Margin is found in the delta between shipper panic (posted rates) and carrier reality (paid rates). Here is exactly how to trade today's spreads based on this morning's data.
- Specialized (Massive Broker Leverage): 18,091 loads | Posted $2.42 > Paid $2.31
- The Play: A massive +$0.11/mile spread. Shippers are panicking over specialized equipment scarcity and over-posting their rates.
- Execution: Capture this double-digit margin by controlling the complex logistics. Buy access to reliable carriers at the $2.31 average by offering clear securement plans, handling the permit legwork, and ensuring strict FMCSA (Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration) compliance.
- Heavy Haul (Strong Broker Leverage): 33,571 loads | Posted $2.57 > Paid $2.52
- The Play: A healthy +$0.05/mile spread.
- Execution: With Alaskan coastal freight halted by severe freezing spray, redirect your heavy haul sourcing focus entirely to the lower 48 energy and construction sectors. Quote shippers at the $2.57 posted average, but buy at the $2.52 paid average.
- Van (Standard Broker Leverage): 21,892 loads | Posted $2.13 > Paid $2.09
- The Play: A +$0.04/mile spread. Volume is steady but capacity is shrinking due to carrier exits.
- Execution: Quote shippers at the $2.13 posted average. Focus your sourcing on regional distribution hubs where retail spring inventory positioning is creating consistent, predictable outbound volume.
- Reefer (Fading Broker Leverage): 8,085 loads | Posted $2.47 > Paid $2.43
- The Play: A +$0.04/mile spread, but capacity is dangerously scarce (only 8k loads nationally).
- Execution: Pre-book all Tuesday and Wednesday freight today. As Southeast produce staging accelerates, this spread will rapidly flip to carrier leverage. Do not float reefer freight this week.
- Flatbed (Carrier Leverage): 75,858 loads | Paid $2.49 > Posted $2.48
- The Play: Carriers are entirely dictating terms. With nearly 45% of the total market volume sitting on open decks, you are in a knife fight for trucks.
- Execution: You must pay for securement and tarping time upfront. Win trucks by offering guaranteed reloads. Do not haggle over $50 if you have a verified, compliant driver ready to roll.
β½ Geopolitical & Regulatory Shockwaves
Amateurs look at the load board; professionals look at the macro-environment. These three factors will dictate your margin this week.
- The Middle East Oil Threat & Diesel Volatility
- The Threat: Escalating conflicts in the Strait of Hormuz threaten global oil supplies. Diesel is currently sitting at $3.77/gallon, but futures are highly volatile, with analysts projecting up to a 12% increase in operating costs.
- The Action: Shorten your quote validity windows immediately. Do not offer 7-day or 14-day spot quotes this week. Limit all spot quotes to 24-48 hours, and ensure your contract freight has an airtight FSC (Fuel Surcharge) mechanism. Have proactive fuel conversations with shippers today before pump prices jump.
- The Hidden Port Fee Transloading Boom
- The Threat: Importers are facing unexpected, exorbitant terminal handling and storage fees at US ports (particularly in the Southeast).
- The Action: Pitch agile transloading and spot drayage solutions to your import clients today. By offering reliable, fast port-to-warehouse moves, you save them thousands in demurrage fees, allowing you to capture premium rates on the drayage leg.
- The FMCSA Safety Violation Crackdown
- The Threat: Millions in penalties are being levied for motor vehicle safety violations. Negligent selection lawsuits are a massive financial risk for brokerages.
- The Action: Double down on strict carrier compliance checks. Do not let the tight flatbed market tempt you into using unvetted carriers. Sell your rigorous vetting process to shippers as a premium "Liability Shield."
πΊοΈ Regional Arbitrage & Weather Routing
Weather and regional imbalances are creating distinct arbitrage opportunities today.
- West Virginia Ice Storms (Rerouting Arbitrage)
- The Situation: Heavy mixed precipitation and ice accumulations are making I-64 and I-79 nearly impassable. Carriers will actively avoid this region.
- The Tactic: Expect a capacity funnel through the Carolinas (I-77) and Virginia (I-81). Sell outbound capacity out of VA and NC, where rerouted trucks will be looking for their next load. Add significant premiums for any freight that must enter or exit WV this week.
- Georgia River Flooding (Pent-Up Ag Demand)
- The Situation: Minor flooding along the Oconee River is delaying local agricultural pickups in Johnson, Washington, and Wilkinson counties. However, the forecast is sunny through Friday.
- The Tactic: Plan for a gradual easing of pickup delays beginning Tuesday afternoon. Stage reefer capacity in northern FL or southern SC today to capture the sudden surge of delayed outbound agricultural freight that will hit the board on Wednesday.
- New Mexico I-25 / I-40 Fire Winds (Risk Zone)
- The Situation: Southwest winds gusting to 40 mph combined with critical fire weather are creating severe blow-over hazards for high-profile trailers (empty vans, light reefers).
- The Tactic: Proactively reroute transcontinental freight south to I-10 or pad ETAs (Estimated Times of Arrival) by 12-18 hours. Add $150-$250 to carrier pay for the detour, and itemize it on the shipper's invoice.
π Monday Execution Scripts
Equip your floor with these exact narratives to control the conversation today.
1. The "Fuel Lock" Script (For Customer Sales facing rate pushback)
"Good morning [Name]. I'm calling because the spot market opened with over 167,000 loads today, but more importantly, the escalating conflict in the Middle East is creating massive upside pressure on diesel. Analysts are projecting up to a 12% jump in operating costs if supply disruptions hit. I am quoting you slightly above your routing guide today because I want to lock in your capacity right now, before the spot market reacts to the pump prices. Locking in today insulates your supply chain from a rapid mid-week rate correction."
2. The "Port Rescue" Script (For Import/Drayage Shippers)
"John, we are seeing a massive spike in hidden terminal handling and storage fees hitting importers at the Southeast ports this week. If you have containers arriving that are at risk of demurrage, I have verified spot drayage and transloading capacity ready to deploy today. We can pull those boxes, transload them immediately, and save you thousands in terminal penalties. Send me your priority container list and let's get them moving."
3. The "Reefer Scarcity" Script (For Food & Beverage Shippers)
"Hey [Name], I need to give you a heads-up on your temperature-controlled freight. There are only about 8,000 reefer loads available nationally right nowβcapacity is dangerously tight. The early produce staging in the Southeast is absorbing all the specialized equipment. If you have any refrigerated shipments moving out of the Southeast or Mid-Atlantic in the next five days, we need to confirm coverage today. If we wait until Wednesday, we will be fighting every agricultural shipper for the same limited pool of trucks."
π
This Day in History
1901: United States Steel Corporation is founded as a result of a merger between Carnegie Steel Company and Federal Steel Company which became the first corporation in the world with a market capital over $1 billion.
1978: Czech VladimΓr Remek becomes the first non-Soviet or non-American to go into space, when he is launched aboard Soyuz 28.
1991: Establishment of Kuwait Democratic Forum, center-left political organization in Kuwait.
π Quote of the Day
"Surround yourself only with people who are going to take you higher."
β Oprah Winfrey