📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Saturday, February 28, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The spot market is closing out February with intense, highly localized volatility, driven by a massive surge in open-deck demand and tightening regulatory environments. Real-time data shows 167,676 available loads and a national average rate of $2.25/mile, representing a significant volume floor compared to last week's 119k baseline. Flatbed freight is completely dominating the board with nearly 76,000 available loads as tender rejections in the sector skyrocket past 42%. For freight brokers, the most critical catalysts today are the intensifying FMCSA crackdowns on non-domiciled CDL holders—highlighted by high-profile wrong-way driver incidents—which are actively stripping van and reefer capacity from the Midwest and transcontinental routes. Compounding these structural capacity constraints are severe 65 mph crosswinds paralyzing transcontinental routes in Wyoming, freezing spray across the Great Lakes, and localized flooding in the Southeast. Brokers must navigate these intense capacity vacuums and leverage real-time rate intelligence to capture widening arbitrage opportunities, particularly in the booming flatbed sector.

⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe High Winds (65 mph gusts) (Wyoming (WY, Laramie and Snowy Range Foothills)): Extreme blow-over risk for high-profile vehicles and empty trailers along the critical I-80 and I-25 transcontinental corridors. Expect widespread parking, severe transit delays, and carriers demanding significant rate premiums to route through or around the state.
- Heavy Freezing Spray (Great Lakes Region (MI, WI, Lake Superior/Huron)): Rapid ice accretion and severe cold affecting northern Midwest freight hubs. This is driving intense demand for protect-from-freeze (PFF) reefer capacity and causing localized van capacity to tighten as carriers avoid the northernmost routes.
- Minor Flooding (Northern Georgia (GA, Fulton, Forsyth, Newton, Rockdale)): Localized flooding in the greater Atlanta metropolitan area and surrounding logistics hubs. Expect minor delays in warehouse loading/unloading and localized traffic bottlenecks impacting local drayage and short-haul regional distribution.
⛈️ Weather Impact Cascade
- Immediate Operational Impact: Wyoming: The most severe wind event (65 mph gusts) appears to be moderating. Forecast shows winds at 16-28 mph today (Saturday) and declining further to 8-16 mph Sunday, with continued improvement Monday through Tuesday. High-profile vehicles should be able to resume I-80/I-25 operations with appropriate caution by Sunday, though carriers may continue demanding wind-event premiums through the weekend. Georgia: The flooding alert (WX72048223) covering Newton, Rockdale, and Fulton counties is coinciding with rapidly improving weather — today's forecast shows sunny skies clearing to 66°F by afternoon. Ground saturation and warehouse access issues may persist into Saturday, but conditions should improve materially through the weekend. Great Lakes (Michigan/Wisconsin): Snow showers continue in Michigan (23°F Saturday, 19°F Sunday) and Wisconsin (snow Saturday with approximately 0.1 inch precipitation possible, 35% chance). Freezing spray conditions on Lake Superior and Lake Huron are likely to persist through at least Sunday given continued cold temperatures, maintaining PFF reefer demand and carrier avoidance of northern routes.
- Secondary Market Effects: Wyoming wind moderation should begin releasing parked transcontinental carriers back into the active market by Sunday afternoon. However, the freight that was delayed or rerouted during the wind event will create a backlog surge as shippers attempt to reschedule, potentially creating short-term appointment congestion at destination facilities in the Midwest and East. Atlanta metro flooding, as it clears, may release backed-up warehouse appointments, potentially creating a brief detention spike Monday as facilities process delayed freight from the weekend. Great Lakes reefer capacity that has been committed to PFF protection loads will remain constrained through early next week as temperatures stay below freezing in Michigan and Wisconsin.
- Regional Spillover Analysis: Wyoming capacity disruption has been redirecting flatbed carriers southward through Colorado and Utah — as Wyoming reopens, some of this diverted capacity may shift back northward, temporarily tightening capacity on southern transcontinental alternatives. The Great Lakes cold snap (Michigan forecast showing 19°F Sunday, Wisconsin 22°F Sunday) is pushing temperature-sensitive freight demand southward, adding incremental reefer demand pressure on Southeast corridors that are already tightening from produce season. Georgia flooding clearing will reduce friction on the Savannah-Atlanta corridor but will not reduce the underlying tariff-driven volume surge driving the lane.
- Recovery Timeline: Wyoming wind event: Meaningful operational recovery likely by Sunday based on forecast; full normalization with reduced carrier premiums possible by Monday-Tuesday. Georgia flooding: Surface conditions should improve through Saturday afternoon and Sunday based on the sunny forecast; warehouse backlog clearing may extend into Monday. Great Lakes freezing spray: Continued cold temperatures in Michigan (19°F Sunday) and Wisconsin (22°F Sunday) suggest PFF conditions persist through at least Monday, with modest improvement possible mid-week as temperatures begin to rise (Michigan forecast 33°F Monday, Wisconsin 38°F Monday).
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Energy markets remain volatile amid global tariff announcements and shifting trade policies, keeping fuel surcharges high and squeezing small carrier margins.
- Carrier Financial Health: Intensifying FMCSA scrutiny on non-domiciled CDLs and English proficiency is creating a sudden compliance shock. Carriers relying on under-vetted drivers are facing immediate out-of-service orders, increasing the risk of load abandonment for brokers.
- Economic Indicators: Manufacturing PMI expansion (hitting 52.6) and a 5% year-over-year increase in raw steel output are directly fueling the massive surge in flatbed spot market demand.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
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Flatbed Tender Rejections Surge to Historic Highs Amid Construction Boom 🔗:
With flatbed tender rejections skyrocketing past 42%, brokers have a massive opportunity to capture routing guide fallout. The surge is driven by data center construction, manufacturing expansion, and early spring staging. Brokers should immediately pivot sales resources to industrial and construction shippers, as contract carriers are clearly failing to meet current demand. Secure flatbed capacity early in the day, as equipment is being absorbed at record rates.
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FMCSA Crackdown on Non-Domiciled CDLs Triggers Capacity Vacuums 🔗:
Federal investigations into improperly issued CDLs—highlighted by a recent wrong-way driver incident in Missouri—are actively pulling drivers off the road. Brokers must implement ultra-strict carrier vetting protocols immediately. Relying on unverified or newly established carriers right now carries massive liability and load-abandonment risk. Use this as a selling point to customers: ETA provides highly vetted, compliant capacity in a market plagued by regulatory purges.
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Tariff Uncertainty and Terminal Shifts Disrupt Ocean Freight 🔗:
Global tariff shifts and operational changes at the Panama Canal are creating severe unpredictability in import volumes. Shippers are front-loading freight to beat tariff deadlines, causing sudden, unpredictable spikes in port drayage and outbound truckload demand. Brokers should target shippers near major East and Gulf Coast ports, offering flexible spot capacity to handle overflow freight that their contracted routing guides cannot absorb.
News Impact Timeline
- Immediate Operational Reality: FMCSA CDL compliance enforcement is an active, ongoing disruption — not a future risk. Brokers should assume that any carrier sourced today through the spot market may face compliance scrutiny at Midwest weigh stations. The tariff front-loading surge is in full effect at Southeast ports today, with shippers actively competing for drayage and outbound van capacity. Flatbed tender rejections at 42.52% mean that routing guide failures are happening in real time across the country.
- 3-Day Market Implications: Within 72 hours (by Tuesday, March 3), the Wyoming wind situation should be substantially resolved, allowing transcontinental lane rates to begin moderating slightly for van freight. However, any freed transcontinental capacity is likely to be quickly absorbed by the backlog of delayed freight. The tariff front-loading urgency is unlikely to diminish within 72 hours — shippers will continue rushing imports through the weekend and into next week. Expect continued premium pricing on outbound port lanes. The FMCSA enforcement dynamic may intensify if federal authorities expand operations to additional states beyond the Midwest, though this cannot be confirmed from available data.
- Week-Ahead Positioning: By the end of the week of March 2, the market may begin to see early signs of flatbed rate stabilization if construction staging demand begins to be satisfied — though given the PMI and steel output signals, sustained demand is more likely. The Southeast reefer market is expected to tighten further as March produce season accelerates. Brokers should use the current week to lock in committed carrier capacity for key Southeast lanes before March produce season fully activates. Transcontinental lanes should see modest normalization by mid-week as Wyoming capacity re-enters the market.
- Regulatory Compliance Impacts: The FMCSA CDL crackdown represents a structural, not transient, compliance environment change. Brokers should immediately implement or reinforce carrier vetting protocols that verify CDL issuance state and domicile compliance. The competitive advantage of having a pre-vetted, compliant carrier network will compound over the coming weeks as enforcement continues. Brokers without robust compliance screening face escalating load abandonment risk.
🔍 Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: The spot market is heavily skewed toward specialized and open-deck freight today, with flatbed representing nearly 45% of all available loads. Van and reefer posted rates are trailing paid rates, indicating brokers are having to negotiate upward to secure reliable capacity.
- Capacity Alerts: Wyoming is a virtual dead zone for high-profile transcontinental freight due to 65 mph winds. The Midwest is experiencing artificial capacity tightening due to CDL compliance audits pulling drivers out of service at weigh stations.
- Technology Disruptions: The integration of automated compliance tracking is becoming a critical differentiator. As the FMCSA cracks down on driver qualifications, brokerages utilizing real-time license and safety monitoring APIs are avoiding the out-of-service traps currently plaguing the spot market.
Demand Shift Indicators
- Regional Demand Predictions: The Southeast is poised to see accelerating capacity tightening through the first week of March as two demand engines converge: the tariff front-loading surge at Savannah, Charleston, and Jacksonville ports, and the onset of the spring produce season pulling reefer equipment southward. The Midwest is likely to see modest van capacity recovery as FMCSA enforcement actions are absorbed by the carrier community and compliant drivers re-enter the active pool — though the timeline for this recovery remains uncertain. Flatbed demand nationally is unlikely to soften materially before mid-March given the construction staging and manufacturing expansion signals.
- Seasonal Transition Analysis: The current market is behaving anomalously for late February. Typically, flatbed demand builds gradually through March as construction season ramps. The current 42.52% tender rejection rate — driven by the intersection of manufacturing PMI expansion, data center builds, and early construction staging — suggests the seasonal surge has arrived 3-4 weeks ahead of its typical pace. This means brokers should not expect the usual early-March rate softening window that historically precedes the spring surge. The tariff-driven import front-loading is also compressing what would normally be a 6-8 week ramp into an intense multi-week burst.
- Economic Leading Indicators: Manufacturing PMI at 52.6 and raw steel output up 5% year-over-year are leading indicators of sustained flatbed demand through at least Q1 end. Continued global tariff policy uncertainty is likely to sustain elevated port freight volumes as shippers hedge their supply chains. These indicators collectively suggest the current tight capacity environment may persist longer than a typical weather-driven disruption cycle.
- Capacity Flow Predictions: As Wyoming wind conditions moderate (forecast shows winds declining to 8-16 mph by Sunday), transcontinental flatbed and van carriers who have been parked or holding in the region will likely begin repositioning eastward Sunday through Monday. This could create a brief window of slightly improved transcontinental capacity early next week before the broader structural demand absorbs any freed-up equipment. Reefer equipment is expected to continue migrating southward toward Florida produce origins through the first two weeks of March.
👥 Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retailers are aggressively repositioning inventory inland from ports to avoid impending tariff hikes, creating strong outbound van demand from coastal distribution centers.
- Manufacturing: Industrial output is surging, particularly in raw steel and architectural metals, driving the historic spike in flatbed demand and open-deck spot market volumes.
- Agriculture: Early preparations for the Southeast produce season are beginning to absorb regional reefer capacity, creating a slight capacity deficit for non-produce temperature-controlled freight in the region.
- Automotive: Auto parts suppliers are expediting cross-border and regional freight to ensure inventory buffers ahead of potential trade policy shifts, utilizing premium LTL and expedited van services.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast is currently experiencing a perfect storm of tightening capacity drivers. Early produce season preparations in Florida and Southern Georgia are beginning to absorb reefer equipment, while East Coast ports (Savannah, Charleston, Jacksonville) are seeing a surge of front-loaded import freight due to global tariff uncertainties. Additionally, localized flooding in the Atlanta metro area is causing short-term delays in regional distribution hubs. This combination of agricultural demand, import overflow, and weather-related friction is pushing both van and reefer rates upward, creating lucrative arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can source reliable capacity.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Savannah, GA → Atlanta, GA:
This critical port-to-inland corridor is experiencing heavy volume surges as shippers rush to move front-loaded import freight away from the coast ahead of tariff deadlines. Capacity is tight, and localized flooding in the Atlanta destination market is causing carriers to demand detention pay and higher linehaul rates to offset anticipated unloading delays.
Jacksonville, FL → Charlotte, NC:
Early produce movement and temperature-controlled beverage freight are competing for a shrinking pool of reefer equipment in Northern Florida. Simultaneously, flatbed demand is surging as construction materials move northward into the Carolinas.
🚨 Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- All transcontinental lanes routing through Wyoming (I-80/I-25) due to 65 mph crosswinds
- Outbound Savannah, GA and Charleston, SC due to tariff front-loading
- National flatbed lanes, particularly out of the Midwest and Southeast manufacturing hubs
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Severe national shortage of flatbed equipment (42.5% tender rejections). Localized van shortages in the Midwest due to FMCSA out-of-service orders. Reefer shortages in the Great Lakes due to PFF requirements.
Opportunity Zones:
- Inbound to the Carolinas (carriers looking for positioning)
- Short-haul port drayage transloading in the Southeast
- Open-deck freight nationwide for brokers with strong flatbed carrier networks
🎯 Strategic Recommendations for Today
💼 For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Lead with compliance and reliability. Inform customers that FMCSA crackdowns are pulling unverified drivers off the road, and routing guide failures in the flatbed sector are at historic highs. Position ETA as the heavily-vetted, fail-safe solution.
Action: Call every flatbed and industrial shipper in your book immediately. With tender rejections at 42%, their asset-based carriers are failing them today. Offer immediate spot capacity.
🚛 For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Lock down flatbed capacity nationwide. For vans, focus on sourcing compliant, heavily-vetted carriers in the Midwest to backfill the capacity lost to regulatory audits.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the severe weather in Wyoming and the Great Lakes to negotiate better inbound rates for carriers looking to escape those regions. Remind carriers of the high volume of consistent freight available if they commit to dedicated lanes.
📞 Customer Communication Scripts
Rate Increase Justification For Flatbed Shippers
Opening Script: "Good morning — I want to give you a heads-up on what we're seeing in the open-deck market right now. Nationally, flatbed tender rejections have surged past 42%, which means nearly half of all contracted flatbed shipments are failing their routing guides today. With nearly 76,000 flatbed loads competing for an extremely limited carrier pool, the spot market is absorbing equipment faster than it's being replenished. Manufacturing PMI just hit 52.6 and raw steel output is up 5% year-over-year — your competitors are staging construction and industrial materials right now, and they're pulling the same carriers you rely on."
Value Proposition: We have established flatbed carrier relationships and real-time compliance vetting in place. In a market where unvetted carriers are being pulled off the road by FMCSA audits mid-transit, our network is pre-screened and ready to move your freight without abandonment risk.
Urgency Creator: Flatbed capacity is being absorbed at record rates this morning. The carriers available at 8am are not the same carriers available at noon. Every hour of delay increases your risk of paying a significant premium or not finding capacity at all today.
Objection Handler: If a customer says 'your flatbed rates are too high compared to last quarter' — respond: 'I understand the comparison, but the market has fundamentally shifted. With 42% tender rejections nationally, your contract carriers are statistically failing on nearly half their flatbed commitments. The rate you see today reflects real-time supply and demand, not last quarter's contracted environment. What I can offer you is confirmed, compliant capacity — and in this market, that certainty has real dollar value when you consider the cost of a missed delivery or a load abandoned mid-route.'
Capacity Shortage Communication For Van And Reefer Shippers
Opening Script: "I'm reaching out because the capacity environment changed significantly overnight, and it directly affects your freight. The FMCSA has intensified its crackdown on non-domiciled CDL holders following recent high-profile incidents, and carriers who rely on drivers with compliance gaps are getting hit with out-of-service orders at weigh stations — right now, today. This is creating artificial but very real capacity vacuums across Midwest and transcontinental van lanes. Simultaneously, reefer capacity nationally is down to roughly 8,000 available loads with paid rates averaging $2.43/mile, and that number is tightening as the Southeast produce season ramps up."
Value Proposition: ETA's carrier vetting process specifically screens for CDL compliance, licensing legitimacy, and safety scores. While other brokers are scrambling to replace carriers who just got pulled out of service mid-lane, your freight stays moving because our network has already been filtered for compliance.
Urgency Creator: The FMCSA enforcement actions are ongoing and unpredictable — the next wave of out-of-service orders could hit this weekend. Carriers who looked available yesterday may not be available tomorrow. Locking in your capacity now with a vetted provider is the only way to insulate your supply chain from this regulatory shock.
Objection Handler: If a customer pushes back with 'we'll just find someone cheaper on the load board' — respond: 'That's absolutely your call, and I respect it. But the load board right now is populated with carriers who are one weigh station check away from an out-of-service order. The $0.15/mile you save upfront could easily become a $2,000+ recovery cost if your load gets stranded in Missouri on a Saturday night. We've already done the vetting — that's what you're buying.'
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
- The Weekend Setup: Secure Monday Capacity Before the Traps Close
- Market Context: We are closing out February with a massive spot volume floor of 167,676 total available loads and a national average rate of $2.25/mi. For a Saturday, this level of liquidity indicates severe routing guide failures in the contract market. Diesel remains a firm baseline at $3.758/gal.
- The "Hidden" Margin Killer: Intensifying Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) CDL proficiency audits in the Midwest are causing real-time Out-Of-Service (OOS) orders. Booking unvetted, bottom-dollar capacity today carries an extreme risk of stranded freight over the weekend.
- The Weather Arbitrage: Wyoming's 65 mph crosswinds (I-80/I-25) and Great Lakes heavy freezing spray are paralyzing traditional northern transcontinental and regional routes, forcing capacity south and driving up localized premiums.
- The Tariff Wave: Import front-loading continues to flood Southeast coastal ports (Savannah, Charleston, Jacksonville), creating highly lucrative outbound drayage and van opportunities that require immediate coverage.
📊 Pricing & Leverage Matrix (Posted vs. Paid)
As a 25-year veteran, I don't just look at the rate—I look at the spread between what shippers are posting and what carriers are accepting. This tells us exactly who holds the leverage at the negotiation table this weekend.
- Flatbed (Carrier Leverage): 75,858 loads | Paid $2.49 > Posted $2.48
- Strategy: Carriers are dictating terms. With nearly half the entire market volume sitting on open decks and an unprecedented 42.52% Outbound Tender Rejection Index (OTRI), contract carriers are abandoning shippers. You must pay for securement time and weather delays. Win trucks by offering guaranteed reloads and safe-parking authorizations.
- Van (Broker Leverage): 21,892 loads | Posted $2.13 > Paid $2.09
- Strategy: This 4-cent spread is your primary margin capture zone. Quote shippers at the posted average, but buy at the paid average. Focus your sourcing on outbound coastal ports where tariff front-loading is creating urgency, but capacity is still manageable.
- Reefer (Broker Leverage): 8,085 loads | Posted $2.47 > Paid $2.43
- Strategy: Capacity is incredibly scarce (only 8k loads nationally), but the 4-cent spread favors brokers who move early. Pre-book your Monday freight this morning. By Sunday afternoon, as carriers finalize their positioning for the week, this spread will flip to carrier leverage.
- Specialized (Strong Broker Leverage): 18,091 loads | Posted $2.42 > Paid $2.31
- Strategy: A massive 11-cent spread. Shippers are overpaying for perceived scarcity. Buy access with strict compliance vetting and clear securement plans to capture this double-digit margin.
- Heavy Haul (Broker Leverage): 33,571 loads | Posted $2.57 > Paid $2.52
- Strategy: Margin is won in the permit office and route planning, not just the rate per mile. Control the schedule to control the cost.
- LTL/Partial (Carrier Leverage): 10,179 loads | Paid $1.55 > Posted $1.54
- Strategy: Consolidate into milk-runs to manufacture your own margin. Do not rely on standard LTL carriers for urgent tariff-driven freight.
🚨 The "Weekend-to-Monday" Risk Corridors
Amateurs look at the rate; professionals look at the risk. Here is where your freight will get stuck this weekend if you aren't proactive.
- The Midwest Regulatory Trap (MN, MO)
- The Threat: The FMCSA is actively pulling drivers OOS for English proficiency and non-domiciled CDL violations following recent high-profile crashes.
- The Action: Do not rely solely on a carrier's MC active status. Mandate live driver verification (a phone call to the actual driver) before dispatch. Sell this compliance rigor to your shippers as a premium, load-saving service.
- The Wyoming Wind Blockade (I-80 / I-25)
- The Threat: 65 mph crosswinds are creating extreme blow-over risks. Transcontinental freight is effectively paralyzed on the northern route through the weekend.
- The Action: Route all weekend transcon freight via I-40 or I-10. Add explicit detour mileage (+150-300 miles) and fuel adders ($200-$400) directly into the Rate Confirmation (RC). Set wind thresholds (>45 mph = no dispatch) for high-cube vans and empty flats.
- The Great Lakes Ice Box (MI, WI)
- The Threat: Heavy freezing spray accumulating at 2 cm/hour on Lake Superior and Lake Huron, with severe cold pushing inland.
- The Action: Treat all temperature-sensitive freight touching this region as strict Protect-From-Freeze (PFF). Add +$0.15-$0.30/mi to carrier pay for PFF compliance, and mandate continuous temp readings on the Bill of Lading (BOL).
🎯 Tactical Playbook by Equipment
- Flatbed: The Early Spring Blitz
- The Play: With nearly 76k loads and a 42.52% OTRI, flatbed is the undisputed king of the board today. Construction (fueled by a 52.6 PMI) and energy staging are running 3-4 weeks ahead of historical norms.
- Execution: Target Sunbelt short-hauls (TX, OK, South) where diverted Wyoming equipment is temporarily pooling. Call every industrial shipper in your CRM today—their asset carriers are failing them right now. Pay carriers for tarping and securement time upfront.
- Van: The Port Surge Arbitrage
- The Play: Shippers are front-loading imports to beat global tariffs. This freight is hitting the Southeast docks now, while the Atlanta market clears out from localized flooding.
- Execution: Target outbound lanes from Savannah, Charleston, and Jacksonville. Offer shippers 3-day capacity blocks. Build round-trip "milk runs" for your core carriers to keep them out of the spot market entirely and insulated from FMCSA sweeps.
- Reefer: The Scarcity Squeeze
- The Play: Southeast produce prep is pulling trucks south, while Great Lakes freezing spray is pushing trucks away from the north.
- Execution: Lock in Southeast to Midwest/Northeast lanes immediately. Negotiate cheaper inbound rates to Florida and Southern Georgia by guaranteeing carriers a lucrative outbound produce load for late next week.
🛡️ Compliance & Carrier Vetting (The Margin Protector)
- FMCSA Non-Domiciled CDL Crackdown
- Impact: The market is actively purging non-compliant capacity. Marginal carriers are being sidelined today at weigh stations.
- Action: Use this in your sales pitch. "Mr. Customer, the brokers quoting you 10 cents cheaper are using unvetted capacity that is actively being targeted by FMCSA roadside audits today. I am charging a premium because my trucks will actually deliver."
- CLP Exemption Renewal (Wilson Logistics)
- Impact: FMCSA renewed an exemption allowing Commercial Learner's Permit (CLP) holders to drive solo sooner at certain fleets.
- Action: While this adds slight capacity to the overall pool, do not put these drivers on high-value, hazardous, or severe-weather (WY/Great Lakes) loads. Verify driver experience levels on all critical weekend freight.
📞 Customer Sales Scripts for Today
1. The "Routing Guide Rescue" Script (Flatbed / Industrial Shippers)
"Good morning. I'm calling because we are seeing a historic anomaly in the open-deck market today. Nationally, flatbed tender rejections have surged past 42%, meaning nearly half of all contracted flatbed shipments are failing their routing guides. With PMI expanding and early construction staging absorbing 76,000 loads, your competitors are pulling the same asset carriers you rely on. We have a pre-vetted, fully compliant flatbed network ready to step in. When your primary truck falls off this afternoon, call me directly. We have the capacity to ensure your materials don't sit all weekend."
2. The "Regulatory Shield" Script (Van / Reefer Shippers)
"I'm reaching out because the capacity environment changed significantly overnight. The FMCSA has intensified its crackdown on non-domiciled CDL holders, and carriers who rely on drivers with compliance gaps are getting hit with out-of-service orders at weigh stations—right now. This is creating artificial capacity vacuums, especially in the Midwest. While other brokers are scrambling to replace carriers who just got pulled out of service mid-lane, your freight stays moving with us because our network is strictly vetted for CDL compliance. Let's lock in your Monday shipments today before the spot market panics."
📅 This Day in History
1959: Discoverer 1, an American spy satellite that is the first object intended to achieve a polar orbit, is launched but fails to achieve orbit.
1975: In London, an underground train fails to stop at Moorgate terminus station and crashes into the end of the tunnel, killing 43 people.
1993: Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) agents raid the Branch Davidian church in Waco, Texas with a warrant to arrest the group's leader David Koresh, starting a 51-day standoff.
💭 Quote of the Day
"Outstanding people have one thing in common: an absolute sense of mission."
— Zig Ziglar