📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Saturday, March 14, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The spot market is experiencing intense volatility today as the national average diesel price hits a historic $4.942/gallon amid the ongoing Strait of Hormuz blockade, fundamentally altering carrier behavior and capacity availability. Real-time market data indicates total available loads have dropped 19.7% over the weekend to 146,242, yet the market average rate has ticked up to a firm $2.38/mile. This rate inflation is primarily driven by capacity exiting the market, with independent carriers parking trucks rather than absorbing crippling fuel costs. Flatbed continues its dominance with over 62,000 open loads, while a major blizzard in the Upper Midwest and severe 85mph winds across the Rockies are paralyzing transcontinental routing and triggering massive localized rate spikes.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Major Winter Storm & Blizzard (Upper Midwest (MN, WI)): 12-18+ inches of snow and 50mph winds causing whiteout conditions. I-90 and I-94 corridors will be nearly impassable, severely restricting capacity and delaying Monday morning commutes.
- Extreme High Winds (Southeast Wyoming (WY, I-80/I-25 Corridors)): 70 to 85mph wind gusts creating extreme blow-over risks for high-profile vehicles. Transcontinental freight on I-80 will face severe delays and capacity avoidance.
- Extreme High Winds (Central Utah (UT, I-70 Corridor)): 75mph wind gusts and blowing dust reducing visibility. Crosswinds will heavily impact I-70, forcing carriers to route around or park equipment.
- Heavy Mixed Precipitation (Eastern Upper Michigan (MI)): 1 to 3 feet of snow and significant ice accumulations. Power outages and impassable roads will halt regional freight movement through Tuesday.
⛈️ Weather Impact Cascade
- Immediate Operational Impact: As of today, the 85mph winds in Wyoming are actively halting high-profile van and reefer traffic on I-80, causing immediate choke points and delays for all transcontinental freight. The impending blizzard in Minnesota and Wisconsin is forcing preemptive shutdowns at shippers and receivers, with carriers already refusing to accept loads heading into the region. These events are not future possibilities; they are causing active network disruptions and load cancellations right now.
- Secondary Market Effects: The paralysis of the I-80 and I-90 corridors will trigger a cascading failure, pushing an unsustainable volume of rerouted freight onto the I-70 and I-40 corridors. This will lead to increased congestion, tighter capacity, and rate spikes in secondary markets like Denver, Kansas City, and Little Rock. Furthermore, the delay in westbound freight will cause equipment imbalances on the West Coast early next week, as trucks fail to arrive on schedule for their next load.
- Regional Spillover Analysis: The Midwest blizzard's impact extends far beyond its geographical footprint, disrupting supply chains nationwide. Automotive assembly plants in the Southeast that rely on just-in-time parts from Midwest suppliers will face imminent line-down situations. West Coast produce destined for East Coast markets will be delayed or forced onto longer, more expensive southern routes, impacting freshness and increasing costs for consumers. This demonstrates how a localized weather event can trigger national-level supply chain stress.
- Recovery Timeline: Based on weather forecasts, the I-80 corridor in Wyoming should see conditions improve by Sunday, March 15, but clearing the truck backlog will take until at least Monday evening. The Upper Midwest will be largely impassable through Monday, March 16, with a slow, phased recovery beginning Tuesday, March 17. However, due to the scale of the freight backlog, expect operational normalcy and rate stabilization to take until at least Friday, March 20, assuming no further weather events.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Energy markets remain highly volatile with crude oil reacting to Middle East tensions, suggesting diesel prices will remain elevated near the $5/gallon mark in the near term.
- Carrier Financial Health: Independent owner-operators are facing an existential threat as spot rates struggle to keep pace with the fastest diesel price spike in history, leading to an acceleration in carrier revocations.
- Economic Indicators: Consumer spending on durable goods remains sluggish, but manufacturing and infrastructure projects continue to provide a floor for flatbed and specialized freight demand.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
Historic Diesel Spike Threatens Independent Carrier Survival 🔗:
With diesel jumping over 85 cents in a week due to geopolitical conflicts, brokers must proactively address fuel costs in every negotiation. Carriers cannot absorb this expense; expect immediate demands for higher linehaul rates or explicit fuel surcharges. Brokers who secure fuel-adjusted rates from shippers will win the capacity war.
-
FMCSA Finalizes Mandatory eDVIR Compliance Rule for 2026 🔗:
The shift to mandatory electronic Driver Vehicle Inspection Reports (effective March 23) will temporarily slow down carrier operations and potentially sideline non-compliant equipment. Brokers should verify carrier compliance during onboarding to avoid loads being delayed by DOT out-of-service orders.
-
FMCSA Cracks Down on USDOT and MC Number Transfers 🔗:
As capacity tightens and margins shrink, fraud is rising. The FMCSA's warning about deactivated operating authorities highlights the critical need for brokers to maintain strict carrier vetting protocols. Double-brokering and chameleon carriers are major risks in the current high-rate environment.
-
New CDL Training Rule Delayed by Administration Pause 🔗:
The 60-day delay on new CDL training requirements provides a brief reprieve for driver pipelines, but the broader structural shortage remains. Brokers should not expect any immediate influx of new capacity, especially given the current fuel crisis driving existing operators out of the market.
News Impact Timeline
- Immediate Operational Reality: The historic diesel price spike is the most dominant factor in the market today, with carriers immediately rejecting loads that do not adequately compensate for fuel. This is not a future trend; it is the primary driver of routing guide failure right now. Similarly, the new eDVIR rule is in effect, meaning any non-compliant carrier can be placed out-of-service during a roadside inspection today, jeopardizing any load they are hauling.
- 3-Day Market Implications: Over the next 72 hours (through Tuesday), the full impact of the fuel crisis will manifest in a sharp increase in spot market freight volume as shippers' primary carrier networks collapse under the financial pressure. Brokers will see a surge in last-minute, urgent load requests from customers experiencing service failures. The FMCSA's fraud warnings will become more critical as desperate shippers may be less diligent, creating opportunities for bad actors.
- Week-Ahead Positioning: For the week ahead, the market will be defined by a clear divide between shippers who have adjusted their transportation budgets and those who have not. Strategic positioning requires focusing sales efforts on customers who understand the need for rate adjustments and fuel surcharges. For carrier operations, the focus must be on securing capacity for the Midwest recovery effort and managing the congested, but more predictable, southern freight corridors.
- Regulatory Compliance Impacts: The mandatory eDVIR rule requires an immediate update to all carrier onboarding and vetting procedures to prevent booking non-compliant carriers. Brokers must now explicitly verify a carrier's eDVIR solution to mitigate the risk of in-transit delays due to DOT violations. The FMCSA's crackdown on authority transfers also necessitates heightened diligence, requiring cross-referencing of DOT, MC, and insurance data to combat the rising threat of chameleon carriers in this volatile market.
🔍 Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Real-time load board data shows a 19.7% weekend drop in available loads, but paid rates remain stubbornly high at $2.38/mile. This divergence indicates that capacity constraints, rather than surging demand, are propping up the spot market.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is critically tight in the Upper Midwest due to impending blizzards, and across the transcontinental I-80 corridor in Wyoming due to 85mph winds. Carriers are demanding massive premiums to enter these zones.
- Technology Disruptions: The rapid enforcement of eDVIRs and the continued fallout from revoked ELDs are forcing smaller fleets to upgrade tech stacks, temporarily reducing available driving hours as fleets adjust to stricter digital compliance.
Demand Shift Indicators
- Regional Demand Predictions: Demand is predicted to undergo a significant southward shift over the next 72 hours as shippers desperately reroute transcontinental freight to avoid the Midwest blizzard and I-80 wind closures. This will artificially inflate demand and tighten capacity on I-40 and I-70 corridors, particularly in hubs like Dallas, Memphis, and Kansas City. Concurrently, expect a surge in urgent, high-priority demand for essential goods like food, fuel, and medical supplies into the Upper Midwest post-storm, beginning around Tuesday, March 17.
- Seasonal Transition Analysis: The current market volatility is severely disrupting typical early-spring freight patterns. While seasonal produce is beginning to move from the Southeast, the historic fuel costs are making reefer capacity prohibitively expensive, potentially delaying shipments. Similarly, the ramp-up of flatbed demand for construction is being met with a supply-side shock, as carriers prioritize high-margin industrial freight over lower-paying building materials to cover fuel, distorting normal seasonal capacity allocation.
- Economic Leading Indicators: The combination of sluggish consumer spending on durable goods and record-high fuel costs suggests a potential contraction in retail-driven van freight demand. However, sustained activity in manufacturing and infrastructure, insulated by longer-term project funding, will continue to prop up the flatbed and specialized sectors. This creates a bifurcated market where industrial freight remains strong while consumer-facing freight becomes increasingly sensitive to the inflationary pressures of high transportation costs.
- Capacity Flow Predictions: A significant migration of carrier capacity is predicted, flowing away from the weather-impacted Upper Midwest and Mountain West regions towards the Southeast and Texas. Owner-operators, in particular, will seek the operational stability and abundant reload opportunities in these southern markets to mitigate fuel costs and weather risks. This exodus will create a severe capacity vacuum in states like Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming that will persist for at least a week after the weather events subside.
👥 Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retailers are heavily relying on expedited and partial LTL services to manage inventory as maritime and air cargo disruptions from global conflicts force domestic supply chain realignments.
- Manufacturing: Industrial manufacturing remains the strongest sector, driving the massive 62,000+ load volume in the flatbed market. Shippers are paying premiums to secure specialized equipment.
- Agriculture: Produce staging in the Southeast is competing directly with the fuel crisis. Reefer carriers are demanding $2.65+/mile to move temperature-controlled freight, squeezing agricultural margins.
- Automotive: Just-in-time automotive freight is facing severe risks in the Midwest as the impending blizzard threatens to sever critical supply lines between Tier 1 suppliers and assembly plants.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest is currently the most volatile freight region in the country, caught between a historic blizzard threatening Minnesota and Wisconsin, and the crippling effects of $4.942/gallon diesel. Capacity is rapidly exiting the market as carriers refuse to risk equipment in whiteout conditions for standard rates. Inbound capacity is nearly non-existent without massive hazard premiums, while outbound carriers are demanding top-tier rates to escape the weather zone. The combination of weather delays, fuel costs, and routing guide failures is pushing unprecedented volume into the spot market.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL → Minneapolis, MN:
This lane is directly in the crosshairs of the impending blizzard. Carriers are outright rejecting standard contract rates, forcing urgent freight into the spot market. The combination of $4.942 diesel and severe weather risk has created a massive capacity vacuum.
Indianapolis, IN → Dallas, TX:
This North-South lane is serving as a critical bypass route for freight avoiding the transcontinental chaos on I-80 and the Midwest blizzards. However, the 800+ mile transit makes it highly sensitive to the recent 85-cent diesel spike.
🚨 Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Inbound Upper Midwest (MN, WI, IA) due to blizzard conditions
- Transcontinental I-80 (WY, UT) due to 85mph winds and blow-over risks
- Long-haul lanes over 500 miles due to $4.942/gallon diesel costs
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Severe shortages of Reefer equipment in the Midwest and Southeast, and a critical lack of Van capacity willing to run transcontinental routes through the Rockies.
Opportunity Zones:
- Outbound Midwest (carriers looking to escape the storm)
- Texas Triangle (stable weather, high volume, strong reload opportunities)
🎯 Strategic Recommendations for Today
💼 For Customer Sales:
Narrative: The market is facing a dual-threat crisis: the fastest diesel price spike in history ($4.942/gal) combined with severe weather paralyzing the Midwest and Rockies. Routing guides are failing because carriers cannot afford to run contract rates. We need to adjust pricing immediately to secure reliable capacity.
Action: Proactively contact all shippers with freight moving through the Midwest or on I-80. Request immediate rate increases or temporary fuel surcharges to prevent service failures.
🚛 For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Target carriers in the Midwest looking for escape loads to the South or Southeast. Prioritize owner-operators by offering transparent, fair fuel surcharges to build loyalty.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the promise of consistent, weather-free reload opportunities in the South to negotiate better rates on outbound Midwest freight. Emphasize our quick-pay options to help them manage cash flow amid high fuel costs.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a smaller board, not an easier board: Total available loads are 146,242, down from 182,150 at the comparable time, yet the national average rate is still $2.38/mile and diesel is $4.942/gallon. That is the fingerprint of capacity retreat, not demand collapse.
Execution is cleaner than yesterday on the freight that deserves to move: Loads moved today are 60,180, up from 56,527 yesterday even though posted volume fell sharply. Experienced read: bad freight is getting pulled, repriced, or delayed; executable freight is still clearing.
Open-deck remains the center of gravity: Flatbed + Heavy Haul + Specialized = 108,437 loads, or about 74.1% of the board, and those same segments account for 50,439 moved loads, or about 83.8% of all loads moved. If your desk is still van-heavy in attention, it is aimed at the wrong revenue pool today.
The paid-vs-posted spread is the real trading map:
- Flatbed: $2.69 posted / $2.73 paid = +$0.04
- Heavy Haul: $2.75 posted / $2.77 paid = +$0.02
- Reefer: $2.63 posted / $2.65 paid = +$0.02
- Van: $2.18 posted / $2.16 paid = -$0.02
- LTL (Less Than Truckload) / Partial: $1.54 posted / $1.53 paid = -$0.01
- Specialized: $2.54 posted / $2.35 paid = -$0.19
That spread structure matters: this is not a universally tight market. It is a selective market. You should buy early where the screen is underpricing replacement cost, and negotiate hard where postings are inflated by uncertainty.
Weather and fuel are turning national averages into a trap: the board average says $2.38/mile; your lane reality may be very different if it touches the Upper Midwest blizzard zone, the I-80/I-90 northern corridor, or any route where fuel-heavy long haul and recovery risk collide.
📊 What the board is really saying
The market is firmer than the volume drop suggests:
- Today: 146,242 loads, $2.38/mile
- Yesterday: 182,150 loads, $2.37/mile
- Two days ago: 178,627 loads, $2.34/mile
- One week ago: 143,597 loads, $2.27/mile
Translation: even with the weekend pullback in board volume, the rate floor has not broken. That tells you the market is being supported by replacement-cost pressure, especially from fuel, weather detours, and carrier selectivity.
Market opportunity fell to $196.3M from $243.4M, but that is mostly a volume effect, not a pricing collapse. Brokers who look only at the lower opportunity number will misread the day and start discounting freight that still requires a premium truck.
OTRI (Outbound Tender Rejection Index) above 8% matters here: contract freight is still leaking into spot because carriers are rejecting undercompensated tenders. That means more “last-minute” freight will appear, but not all of it will be good freight.
The practical lesson:
- Do not quote off the board alone
- Do not assume fewer postings mean cheaper trucks
- Do qualify the lane, the facility, the reload, and the weather before you price
🚚 Equipment-by-equipment trading plan
1) Flatbed: still the best use of desk time
- Data: 62,004 loads, $2.69 posted, $2.73 paid, 27,634 moved
- Read: Flatbed is still the main revenue engine. The positive spread is smaller than yesterday, but it is still telling you real trucks are clearing above the screen.
- What to do today:
- Prioritize project, industrial, steel, machinery, and infrastructure freight
- Recheck tarp, securement, loading method, and site control before you quote
- Do not let sales sell open-deck like dry van with chains
- Margin trap:
- tarp not disclosed
- crane not ready
- jobsite unload confusion
- “easy” construction loads with ugly wait time
2) Heavy Haul: operationally tight, fast-clearing
- Data: 30,858 loads, $2.75 posted, $2.77 paid, 16,042 moved
- Read: Heavy haul is not a giant rate-spread story; it is an execution discipline story. With weather disrupting northern routes, the biggest losses will come from bad routing, permit issues, and unrealistic transit promises.
- What to do today:
- Verify dimensions, axle requirements, permits, escorts, and route restrictions before selling
- Avoid standard-transit promises through wind-affected northern lanes
- Use repeat carriers first
- Best broker edge: clean information beats high posted rates
3) Specialized: your best negotiation pocket
- Data: 15,575 loads, $2.54 posted, $2.35 paid, 6,763 moved
- Read: This is the clearest sign on the screen that posted rates are often defensive, not executable. A -$0.19 spread is large. That means uncertainty is being posted, but detail is buying the truck cheaper.
- What to do today:
- Push back on vague premium asks
- Use exact dimensions, commodity, handling method, and load/unload details to negotiate
- Lean into specialized freight you understand
- Big mistake: confusing “specialized” with “unlimited pricing power”
4) Reefer: still buy-first, but more lane-selective
- Data: 7,560 loads, $2.63 posted, $2.65 paid, 2,046 moved
- Read: Reefer is still above the screen, but only slightly. That means it is not broad panic pricing; it is lane- and service-risk pricing. Weather into the Midwest and early produce staging keep this segment sensitive.
- What to do today:
- Pre-cover Midwest, food, and service-sensitive temp-control freight
- Confirm setpoint, pallet count, appointment type, and receiver hours before tendering
- Charge for risk, not just miles
- Where reefer losses start:
- unclear temperature
- unexpected lumper or unload delay
- missed weekend receiver assumptions
- no reload on the back end
5) Van: negotiable nationally, dangerous selectively
- Data: 20,584 loads, $2.18 posted, $2.16 paid, 3,914 moved
- Read: Van is not broadly tight on the screen. But that does not mean all van freight is cheap. It means the good broker separates:
- dense regional van from
- weather-exposed long haul and
- northbound or transcon problem freight
- What to do today:
- Negotiate dense regional lanes
- Protect any quote touching the Upper Midwest or northern transcon corridors
- Reprice long-haul van with fuel and delay cushion
- Best van plays:
- outbound repositioning freight
- short-to-mid haul with reload density
- flexible appointment freight
- Data: 9,661 loads, $1.54 posted, $1.53 paid, 3,781 moved
- Read: This is still an active consolidation market, but the negative spread says brokers should control the math, not assume the market will save them.
- What to do today:
- Use it in dense corridors
- Convert weak truckload freight only when you can manage routing and stop complexity
- Avoid one-off partials with ugly delivery timing
- Best use case: turning customer fuel pain into a managed consolidation service, not a rate concession
🌨️ Weather and corridor playbook for the next 24–72 hours
1) Upper Midwest inbound: premium and fragile
- Major winter storm conditions across parts of Minnesota and Wisconsin are the biggest immediate service risk on the board.
- Chicago, IL → Minneapolis, MN is exactly the kind of lane that will punish anyone quoting off normal assumptions.
- Broker move:
- Sell appointment flexibility
- Get pre-approval for layover, detention, and weather delay
- Verify both shipper and receiver hours before dispatch
2) Northern transcon: do not sell “normal transit”
- The I-80 / I-90 corridor remains vulnerable from wind and winter disruption.
- Even when roads are technically passable, many carriers will self-restrict high-profile equipment.
- Broker move:
- Route service-sensitive freight south when possible
- Price the detour before the carrier asks
- Write reroute and weather-delay language into the rate confirmation
3) Southern bypass lanes: opportunity with discipline
- Freight avoiding northern weather will keep flowing toward I-70, I-40, and southern reload markets.
- Indianapolis, IN → Dallas, TX is a great example of a bypass lane that looks attractive but becomes expensive fast when fuel and reload risk are not handled upfront.
- Broker move:
- Book southbound capacity early
- Pair it with reload-friendly Texas or Southeast outbound freight
- Use the south as a recovery network, not just a detour
4) Texas: still attractive, but not friction-free
- The Fire Weather Watch in North and Central Texas is not the same threat as a blizzard, but it can still affect open-deck loading conditions, visibility, yard operations, and weekend jobsite scheduling.
- Broker move:
- Keep Texas as a reload zone
- Double-check outdoor loading plans on flatbed and specialized freight
💰 Where the best brokers make money today
Buy early where paid is above posted:
- Flatbed
- Heavy Haul
- Reefer
- Weather-exposed Midwest and northern corridor freight
Negotiate where postings are inflated:
- Specialized
- Dense regional van
- LTL/Partial corridor freight
Decline or heavily protect the “bad geometry” freight:
- Long-haul van with weak reload
- Midwest inbound without flexibility
- Transcon freight needing fixed transit through storm/wind exposure
- One-off partials with strict appointments and no margin room
This is the behavioral edge most brokers miss:
- Carriers are not just asking, “What does it pay?”
- They are asking:
- “What will fuel do to my net?”
- “Will I get stuck?”
- “Will I unload on time?”
- “What is my next move after this load?”
- If you answer those questions before they ask them, you buy the truck cheaper and faster.
🧠 Customer sales strategy for today
1) Lead with replacement cost, not national averages
- Customers will hear $2.38/mile and assume they can wait.
- Your message should be:
- “The national average is not your lane.”
- “Fuel, weather, and recovery risk are setting today’s replacement cost.”
- “If this touches the Upper Midwest or northern corridor, delay will likely cost more than action.”
2) Call these accounts first
- Midwest inbound shippers
- Reefer and food accounts
- Manufacturing and project freight buyers
- Any shipper with freight moving across northern transcon lanes
- Automotive or just-in-time freight exposed to Midwest disruptions
3) Commercial asks you should make today
- Shorter quote validity windows
- Separate FSC (Fuel Surcharge) from linehaul
- Advance approval for weather detours and layovers
- More appointment flexibility
- Backup delivery windows on service-sensitive freight
4) Best customer-facing language
- “We can cover this, but the truck is pricing route risk, fuel risk, and facility risk today.”
- “If this waits until the recovery wave, your options will be worse, not better.”
- “We need to protect service now, not negotiate after a routing guide failure.”
🤝 Carrier desk tactics that win today
1) Change your call order
- First: flatbed and heavy haul core carriers
- Second: reefer carriers with regional density
- Third: Midwest carriers looking for southbound escape freight
- Fourth: regional van carriers on short-to-mid haul
- Fifth: specialized carriers after the specs are fully cleaned up
2) Reduce the carrier uncertainty premium
- Lead every call with:
- exact commodity
- exact weight and dimensions
- appointment type
- facility status confirmation
- weather-aware route plan
- detention expectations
- reload opportunity
3) Use carrier psychology correctly
- Owner-operators under $4.942/gallon diesel do not want speeches about market averages.
- They want:
- clean freight
- realistic routing
- fast decision-making
- reload confidence
- Sell the total trip, not just the first leg.
🛡️ Compliance and fraud controls you should not skip
High-volatility markets attract bad carriers: double-brokering, identity swaps, and authority misuse get worse when rates rise and customers get desperate.
Minimum controls for every new carrier today:
- Call the FMCSA (Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration)-registered phone number
- Cross-check USDOT and MC authority
- Verify insurance directly
- Review SAFER (Safety and Fitness Electronic Records) data
- Document identity checks inside your TMS (Transportation Management System)
Elevated-risk freight that deserves extra vetting:
- Reefer
- High-value cargo
- Weather-affected loads
- Heavy haul and specialized
- Any load covered unusually fast by a new profile
Digital compliance is now an operational issue, not an admin issue:
- With eDVIR (electronic Driver Vehicle Inspection Report) pressure rising and ongoing ELD (Electronic Logging Device) scrutiny, brokers should verify digital readiness during onboarding, not after a truck is dispatched.
📈 Probability-weighted 24–72 hour outlook
Base case — 55% probability:
- Midwest inbound stays premium through the early-week recovery
- Southern bypass lanes tighten
- Flatbed and heavy haul stay firm
- Van stays negotiable nationally but expensive on bad lanes
- Broker posture: segment aggressively, buy early only where necessary, negotiate everywhere else
Higher-stress case — 30% probability:
- Weather recovery is slower than expected
- Northern backlogs build into Monday and Tuesday
- Carrier selectivity broadens beyond reefer/open-deck into more long-haul van
- Broker posture: pre-book trucks, get customer approvals now, and protect every risk lane in writing
Relief case — 15% probability:
- Corridors reopen cleaner than expected
- Van and specialized soften first
- Reefer and open-deck still hold a floor from seasonal and industrial support
- Broker posture: take back margin on van and specialized, but do not get lazy on weather freight
🎯 Highest-value actions before the day ends
Reprice every uncovered load touching the Upper Midwest, the northern transcon corridor, or any long-haul lane with weak reloads
- Add fuel protection
- Add delay protection
- Add detour language
Move more desk time into open-deck immediately
- 108,437 loads
- 74.1% of the board
- 83.8% of moved volume
- That is where the day is paying
Use Specialized as your margin-defense segment
- $2.54 posted / $2.35 paid
- Do not overpay for ambiguity
Pre-cover reefer before you promise it
- Especially anything Midwest-bound, food-grade, or time-sensitive
Negotiate national van, but protect weather-exposed van
- Van is not broadly hot
- Some lanes absolutely still are
Convert only the right freight into LTL/Partial
- Dense corridor = yes
- Ugly one-off rescue move = usually no
Tighten new-carrier vetting
- Today’s fraud loss will erase multiple good-margin loads
Track these four metrics tonight
- First quote vs booked buy
- Quote-to-cover time
- Percent of loads with facility reconfirmation
- Percent of risk-lane loads with written fuel/detour protection
🧭 Bottom line
- The market is smaller, firmer, and more selective than it looks at first glance.
- 146,242 loads does not mean easy coverage.
- $2.38/mile does not mean average execution.
- $4.942 diesel means carriers are pricing survivability, not just miles.
The brokers who win today will do three things better than everyone else:
- Separate negotiable freight from replacement-cost freight
- Sell lane-specific risk instead of national averages
- Put their time where the money is: open-deck, reefer risk lanes, and disciplined specialized buys
💡 Tony's Tip
Check out
https://dmir.remote.etaagencyinc.com for an archive of previous newsletters.
National Data Dashboard is now programmatically generated, the image generation AI became too unreliable, should get much more consistent results moving forward.
📅 This Day in History
1780: American Revolutionary War: Spanish forces capture Fort Charlotte in Mobile, Alabama, the last British frontier post capable of threatening New Orleans.
1942: Anne Miller becomes the first American patient to be treated with penicillin, under the care of Orvan Hess and John Bumstead.
1945: The R.A.F. drop the Grand Slam bomb in action for the first time, on a railway viaduct near Bielefeld, Germany.
💭 Quote of the Day
"It is dangerous to be right in matters on which the established authorities are wrong."
— Voltaire