📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The freight market is experiencing a severe tightening cycle today, driven by a massive 15.1% overnight surge in total available load volume to 187,516 loads and a rising national average rate of $2.51/mile. Capacity is being aggressively squeezed by crippling national diesel averages hitting $5.345/gallon, forcing carriers to reject low-yield freight and demand substantial fuel surcharges. National tender rejections are hovering around 13-14%, with the Midwest region spiking above 18% due to a combination of surging industrial demand and regional flooding. Brokers must act decisively to secure reliable capacity, particularly in the flatbed sector which saw a 15.9% jump in volume, while transparently communicating the realities of this inflationary and capacity-constrained environment to shippers.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- High Wind Watch & Warnings (Wyoming and Montana (WY, MT)): Wind gusts up to 60 mph are creating severe blow-over risks for high-profile vehicles along the critical I-80 and I-90 transcontinental corridors, causing carriers to delay transit or demand significant hazard pay to route through the region.
- Regional River Flooding (Midwest (WI, IL, IN, MN)): Multiple river systems are cresting above flood stage, threatening secondary highways and causing localized detours. This is exacerbating already tight capacity in the Midwest by slowing transit times and reducing equipment turnaround efficiency.
- Pacific Northwest Flooding (Washington (WA, Yakima and Benton counties)): Minor flooding along the Yakima and Naches rivers is impacting low-lying agricultural areas and local routes, potentially delaying early season agricultural loading and tightening regional outbound capacity.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Wyoming and Montana wind risk extends beyond today
The northern transcon wind threat is not limited to a single shift. Wyoming winds remain elevated into Wednesday, which keeps blow-over exposure high on I-80 and I-90 for empty vans, reefers, and light flatbeds and raises the odds of late acceptances or last-minute turn-downs. Service-sensitive freight will price more cleanly on southern alternates or on departures pushed into a safer window.
Weather Insight
Upper Mississippi flooding will keep slowing Midwest turns
Around western Wisconsin, southeast Minnesota, northern Illinois, and adjacent river corridors, the bigger issue is now access friction rather than fresh rainfall. Even with drier conditions through midweek, flooded secondary roads and detours will continue to stretch pickup windows and trailer turns for at least the next 48 hours, especially on freight that loads away from interstate corridors.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Global geopolitical tensions continue to drive energy markets upward, suggesting fuel costs will remain a primary headwind for carrier profitability and a major driver of spot rate inflation through Q2.
- Carrier Financial Health: The rapid spike in operating costs is accelerating the exit of marginal carriers who cannot secure adequate fuel surcharges, concentrating capacity among larger, more disciplined fleets that command higher rates.
- Economic Indicators: A resurgence in industrial manufacturing and construction activity is providing strong underlying freight demand, particularly in the open-deck sector, supporting higher rate floors despite broader economic uncertainties.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
Spot Market Hits New Cycle High as Midwest Rejections Surge 🔗:
With spot rates reaching new cycle highs and Midwest tender rejections topping 18%, brokers must abandon outdated pricing models. The shift of capacity toward the West Coast to capture surging import volumes is draining the interior US of equipment. Brokers should aggressively pre-book Midwest outbound freight and prepare customers for significant rate increases to secure reliable coverage.
-
Major Logistics Providers Implement Emergency Fuel Surcharges 🔗:
The introduction of Emergency Fuel Surcharges (EFS) by major global logistics providers gives brokers critical leverage in customer negotiations. Sales teams should use these industry-wide announcements to justify necessary rate adjustments to shippers, explaining that transparent fuel surcharges are currently the only way to prevent catastrophic routing failures.
-
FMCSA Scrutiny on Vehicle Maintenance Violations Increases 🔗:
As regulatory bodies crack down on systemic maintenance violations, carrier vetting becomes a critical risk management tool for brokers. In a tight capacity market, the temptation to use unverified carriers is high, but the liability of negligent selection is severe. Brokers must ensure their compliance teams are strictly monitoring carrier safety scores before dispatching.
News Insight
Fuel surcharges need lane logic, not a flat add-on
Emergency fuel surcharge announcements carry more weight when they are converted into a mileage-based formula instead of a flat per load increase. On short and mid-length Midwest freight, fuel is now too large a share of the all-in move for carriers to treat it as incidental, and blunt add-ons will still miss the market on stop-heavy shipments. Indexed surcharge language tied to current diesel averages should reduce re-bids and speed shipper approvals.
🔍 Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Real-time market data shows a massive 15.1% daily increase in available loads, vastly outpacing equipment posts. The spread between posted and paid rates is widening, indicating that brokers are frequently having to pay above their initial targets to secure trucks.
- Capacity Alerts: The Midwest is currently the tightest region in the country, followed closely by the West Coast where import volumes are rebounding. Conversely, some pockets of the Northeast remain relatively loose, offering potential inbound rate leverage.
- Technology Disruptions: The rapid escalation of fuel prices is driving accelerated adoption of dynamic pricing APIs and automated fuel surcharge calculators among top-tier brokerages, allowing them to adjust quotes in real-time and protect margins.
👥 Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retailers are scrambling to position inventory ahead of the spring season, driving urgent demand for expedited and team transit, particularly out of Southern California ports.
- Manufacturing: Industrial output is surging, evidenced by the 15.9% jump in flatbed load availability. Shippers in this sector are highly sensitive to service failures and are willing to pay premiums for guaranteed specialized capacity.
- Agriculture: Early produce staging in the Sunbelt is absorbing temperature-controlled equipment, creating localized reefer shortages and driving up rates for standard food-grade shipments.
- Automotive: Automotive freight remains steady, though tier-1 suppliers are increasingly utilizing partial truckload services to manage just-in-time inventory without paying full truckload premiums.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest is currently the most volatile and opportunity-rich freight market in the US. Tender rejections have spiked above 18%, indicating a severe mismatch between contracted routing guides and actual carrier availability. This is being driven by a combination of surging industrial flatbed demand, carriers rejecting low-yield freight due to $5.345/gallon diesel, and localized flooding disrupting equipment turnaround times. Carriers are actively repositioning equipment toward the West Coast or demanding massive premiums to run standard Midwest outbound lanes.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL → Dallas, TX: This major cross-regional lane is experiencing severe rate pressure as carriers demand heavy fuel surcharges for the 900+ mile transit. Capacity in Chicago is tight due to regional flooding and high industrial demand, while Dallas remains a desirable destination, creating a complex pricing environment.
Indianapolis, IN → Atlanta, GA: Outbound capacity from Indiana is constrained by localized flooding and high tender rejections. The lane into Atlanta is highly sought after by carriers looking to access Southeast freight networks, but the initial rate must cover the high operational costs of leaving the tight Midwest market.
Regional Insight
Chicago to Dallas will reward early tendering, not same-day coverage
Chicago-Dallas is still a strong destination sell, but pickup friction in northern Illinois is becoming the real cost driver. Carriers will sharpen linehaul for a clean Dallas delivery and reload path; they will not absorb extra deadhead, fuel, or detention on the front end. Loads tendered by late morning with flexible pickup windows should clear materially better than late-day same-day freight, where rescue pricing is moving fastest.
Regional Insight
Indianapolis to Atlanta gets more expensive after Wednesday
The best buying window on Indianapolis-Atlanta is today through Wednesday morning. Indiana turns warmer and more unstable into Thursday, which increases the odds of appointment slippage just as end-of-month demand tightens the market further. Atlanta remains a strong reload pitch, but loads with strict Friday delivery requirements should be booked with backup coverage at the outset rather than after a rejection.
🚨 Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Midwest outbound lanes (specifically IL, IN, OH origins)
- Transcontinental routes passing through WY/MT (I-80/I-90) due to severe wind risks
- All flatbed and heavy haul project freight
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Critical shortages of flatbed equipment nationally, and severe dry van constraints in the Midwest and West Coast regions due to fuel-driven carrier selectivity.
Opportunity Zones:
- Inbound freight to the Midwest (carriers are eager to enter the tight market)
- Short-haul Southeast port drayage and transloading
🎯 Strategic Recommendations for Today
💼 For Customer Sales:
Narrative: The market has fundamentally shifted. With diesel at $5.345, load volumes up 15%, and major carriers implementing emergency fuel surcharges, we must adjust rates to ensure your freight doesn't fail on the routing guide.
Action: Proactively contact all clients with Midwest outbound freight or flatbed requirements to renegotiate rates and implement transparent fuel surcharges.
🚛 For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Aggressively source flatbed capacity and build relationships with reliable dry van carriers operating in the Midwest. Lock in capacity early in the morning.
Negotiation Leverage: Use desirable destination markets (Texas, Southeast) to negotiate rates down on outbound Midwest freight, emphasizing reload opportunities.
Strategic Insight
Use inbound positioning to solve tomorrow's Midwest problem
Relative looseness in parts of the Northeast creates a cleaner way to source Midwest capacity than fighting for same-day local trucks. Pre-sell roundtrip economics now: cheaper inbound freight into Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio today in exchange for premium Midwest outbound commitments tomorrow. That approach protects margin and gives carrier reps something more compelling than a one-way spot load.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Cover Midwest outbound freight 24 to 72 hours earlier and separate fuel from linehaul in every quote.
- Treat Chicago and Indianapolis pickup execution as the main risk point; Dallas and Atlanta remain sellable destinations only when front-end deadhead and detention are controlled.
- Avoid relying on light or high-profile equipment through Wyoming and Montana until the wind pattern eases.
- Build tomorrow's Midwest capacity by pulling trucks in from looser Northeast markets today.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a tighter execution market than the national average alone suggests.
- Total available loads are 187,516, up 15.1% from 162,973.
- National average rate is $2.51/mile, which is below yesterday’s $2.60/mile, but that is not a clean softening signal.
- The more important tell is that 60,389 loads have already moved, versus 15,469 at the same capture point yesterday. That says good trucks are getting committed early, and brokers waiting for “better later” are likely to buy replacement freight at a worse number.
Diesel at $5.345/gallon is the day’s main behavior driver.
- At this level, fuel is changing carrier selection behavior, not just adding cost.
- Carriers will favor:
- Shorter deadhead
- Cleaner facilities
- Faster turns
- Better reload geography
- Transparent fuel treatment
Open-deck is still where the board’s money and attention are concentrated.
- Flatbed + Heavy Haul + Specialized = 142,985 loads, or about 76.3% of all available loads.
- Those same categories account for 50,111 moved loads, or about 83.0% of today’s moved volume.
- Translation: if your desk is still spending most of its energy on generic van freight, you are under-allocated to the live market.
Most major modes are still clearing above posted, even with the average rate pullback.
- Van: $2.31 posted / $2.41 paid = +$0.10
- Reefer: $2.71 posted / $2.84 paid = +$0.13
- Flatbed: $2.82 posted / $2.88 paid = +$0.06
- Heavy Haul: $2.87 posted / $2.89 paid = +$0.02
- Specialized: $2.60 posted / $2.58 paid = -$0.02
- LTL (Less Than Truckload)/Partial: $1.61 posted / $1.61 paid = flat
- The lesson is nuanced: core truckload modes still require paid-over-posted buying discipline, while specialized and partial require spec discipline more than blind rate escalation.
The Midwest is today’s highest-risk, highest-opportunity trading zone.
- OTRI (Outbound Tender Rejection Index) is running 13-14% nationally, with the Midwest above 18%.
- Add flood-related turn-time drag across parts of WI, IL, IN, and MN, and same-day coverage becomes a margin trap fast.
📊 What the board is really saying
The market is broadening, but not evenly.
- Total loads are 187,516, nearly back to 189,310 one week ago, but the important difference is that today’s market is clearing at $2.51/mile versus $2.44/mile one week ago and $2.31/mile one month ago.
- That means the market is not just busy; it is more expensive to execute than it was recently.
The average-rate drop is mostly a mix story, not a relief story.
- When the headline average rate falls from $2.60 to $2.51 while load count surges and moved volume explodes, experienced brokers read that as:
- More freight posted than the market can cleanly digest
- Different mode mix hitting the board
- Early board prices lagging actual replacement cost on tight lanes
- In other words, do not use the national average as permission to get aggressive on price.
Market opportunity expanded materially.
- Truckstop market opportunity is $256.0M, up from $219.3M yesterday and $144.9M one month ago.
- That is a practical signal that there is more money in the market today, but only for desks that can:
- Cover early
- Price by lane
- Protect against accessorial leakage
- Avoid bad carriers under deadline pressure
Customer psychology is behind the tape.
- Most shippers still anchor to:
- yesterday’s routing guide,
- last week’s quote,
- or a national average.
- Carriers are anchoring to:
- $5.345 diesel,
- tighter turns,
- and better-paying alternatives.
- That gap is where broker conflict lives today. Your edge is translating macro pressure into lane-specific, documented math.
🚛 Mode-by-Mode Playbook for Today
🚚 Dry Van
- Current setup: 25,222 loads, $2.41 paid, +7.5% volume increase
- Interpretation: Van is selective, not universally tight.
- What matters most:
- Pickup execution
- Fuel treatment
- Destination reload quality
- Facility speed
- Best freight to sell and cover today:
- One-pick/one-drop
- Mid-length lanes
- Dallas-, Atlanta-, and Southeast-bound reload-friendly freight
- Avoid underpricing:
- Long-haul one-way outbound Midwest
- Flood-adjacent pickups
- Late-day same-day recoveries
❄️ Reefer
- Current setup: 8,529 loads, $2.84 paid, +3.4% volume increase
- Interpretation: Reefer remains a service-risk premium market.
- Why it stays expensive:
- Fuel intensity
- Early produce positioning
- Maintenance sensitivity
- Higher consequence of service failure
- Non-negotiables today:
- Pre-cool confirmation
- Setpoint verification
- Reefer fuel check
- Breakdown escalation contact
- Brokers win reefer today by preventing claims, not just shaving buy rate.
🪵 Flatbed
- Current setup: 81,419 loads, $2.88 paid, +15.9% volume increase
- Interpretation: This is still the cleanest large-volume revenue pool.
- Why it matters:
- Construction and industrial demand are absorbing equipment fast.
- Carriers have better alternatives than cheap commodity flatbed.
- Best tactic:
- Source trucks before final customer commitment on project-critical freight.
- What to watch:
- Securement assumptions
- Loading method
- Detention at plants
- Weather exposure for light/high-profile loads
🏗️ Heavy Haul
- Current setup: 41,241 loads, $2.89 paid, +20.2% volume increase
- Interpretation: Very strong demand, but margin is in structure, not raw linehaul.
- Do not quote this as one number without confirming:
- Permits
- Escort requirements
- Route restrictions
- Load dimensions and axle requirements
- The brokers who lose money here are usually right on linehaul and wrong on everything around it.
⚙️ Specialized
- Current setup: 20,325 loads, $2.58 paid, +14.9% volume increase
- Interpretation: The negative spread versus posted is important.
- This tells me the screen is already carrying premium assumptions, and the market is rewarding accurate quoting, not indiscriminate overbuying.
- Winning move today:
- Qualify harder before quoting
- Get:
- exact dimensions
- weight
- commodity
- securement needs
- loading/unloading method
- This is a precision market, not a panic market.
📦 LTL / Partial
- Current setup: 10,780 loads, $1.61 paid, +19.4% volume increase
- Interpretation: This is becoming a cost valve as full truckload gets tougher.
- Use it when:
- freight is dense-corridor,
- time windows are manageable,
- and shipment compatibility is real.
- Do not use it as a lazy fallback for freight that should have been quoted as truckload with proper timing.
🗺️ Regional Trading Map
🌊 Midwest: Highest urgency, highest replacement-cost risk
- The Midwest is where routing guides are most vulnerable today.
- OTRI above 18%
- Flood-driven turn inefficiency
- Industrial and flatbed pull
- Fuel-driven rejection of weak freight
- The main mistake brokers will make: treating this like a normal “tight lane” day instead of a pickup execution day.
- Operational reality:
- The delivery market may still look attractive,
- but the real cost is increasingly on the pickup side:
- deadhead,
- detention,
- late appointment resets,
- and reduced truck reuse.
🏙️ Chicago, IL → Dallas, TX
- This lane is still sellable, but only if you win the pickup.
- What carriers will tolerate:
- strong Dallas reload story,
- flexible pickup window,
- clean commodity and access.
- What they will not tolerate:
- vague ship times,
- detention risk,
- or extra origin deadhead hidden inside a “market rate” conversation.
- Best move: tender by late morning, not late afternoon.
🏁 Indianapolis, IN → Atlanta, GA
- Good destination pull, expensive origin reality.
- Today through Wednesday morning is the cleaner buy window.
- If delivery is service-sensitive or tied to Friday commitments:
- book primary plus backup at the outset
- not after the first falloff.
🌬️ Wyoming / Montana wind corridors
- I-80 and I-90 exposure is a real service risk today and into Wednesday.
- High-profile equipment is the problem.
- Empty vans
- Reefers
- Light flatbeds
- If freight is service-critical:
- route south,
- delay to a safer window,
- or quote transit with weather contingency language.
🔄 Northeast into Midwest
- This is today’s best strategic sourcing idea.
- Parts of the Northeast remain relatively looser than the Midwest.
- Use that imbalance to pre-build tomorrow’s capacity:
- buy inbound freight into IL, IN, and OH today,
- in exchange for premium outbound commitments tomorrow.
- That is better than fighting over the same local truck everyone else calls at 2 PM.
💼 Customer Sales Posture That Wins Today
Lead with replacement-cost logic, not generic market talk.
- Use the facts:
- 187,516 loads
- $5.345 diesel
- 60,389 loads already moved
- Midwest rejections above 18%
- The message is: this freight can move, but it will not move at yesterday’s assumptions.
Separate linehaul from fuel in every sensitive quote.
- Flat add-ons create arguments.
- Mileage-based fuel surcharge language tied to current diesel averages creates approvals.
- This is especially true on:
- Midwest outbound
- reefer
- stop-heavy freight
- long-haul lanes
Shorten quote validity aggressively.
- Midwest outbound, reefer, and open-deck: keep quotes short.
- Same-day rescue freight: quote with explicit expiration.
- Long quote windows today are invitations to donate margin.
Sell flexibility as savings.
- If a customer resists the number, trade for:
- wider pickup windows
- drop trailer options
- night loading
- early delivery
- next-day pickup
- In a fuel-heavy market, flexibility buys more than haggling.
Target the right customers first.
- Highest-return calls today:
- Midwest manufacturing
- flatbed/project shippers
- reefer customers in produce-adjacent networks
- retail/import shippers with time sensitivity
- Lower-return effort today:
- cheap long-haul van spot freight
- under-specified specialized freight
- same-day quote shoppers with no flexibility
🤝 Carrier Desk Tactics for Today
Call your best Midwest-capable carriers first, not the cheapest names on the board.
- In this market, failed coverage is more expensive than a slightly higher first buy.
Pre-sell trip quality.
- When speaking to carriers, lead with:
- one pick / one drop
- appointment certainty
- commodity clarity
- reload path
- detention expectations
- Carriers under heavy fuel stress will trade a little rate for a lot more certainty.
Use paired-freight negotiation.
- The strongest pitch today is:
- inbound Northeast → Midwest now
- for premium Midwest outbound tomorrow
- That gives a carrier a business plan, not just a spot load.
Reconfirm more aggressively than usual.
- For every new tender on a tight lane, reconfirm:
- driver assignment
- truck/trailer
- pickup ETA
- dispatcher contact
- approved route if weather-sensitive
- Today’s risk is not only non-acceptance; it is late acceptance followed by falloff.
Tighten maintenance and compliance vetting.
- FMCSA scrutiny on maintenance means a rushed booking with a weak carrier can become:
- a service failure,
- a claim,
- or a negligent selection problem.
- Do not let capacity stress lower your vetting standard.
⚠️ Margin Traps to Avoid
Trap 1: Pricing off the national average
- $2.51/mile is context, not executable truth.
- Today’s executable truth is lane-, mode-, and origin-specific.
Trap 2: Treating same-day Midwest coverage like ordinary spot freight
- After late morning, much of that freight becomes rescue pricing, not planned pricing.
Trap 3: Using a flat fuel surcharge
- Fuel is too big a cost component at $5.345/gallon.
- Use indexed, mileage-sensitive fuel logic.
Trap 4: Ignoring first-mile access
- Flood markets fail at:
- county roads,
- yard entrances,
- dock congestion,
- and appointment resets.
- Most bad loads today will fail at pickup, not delivery.
Trap 5: Letting urgency override carrier quality
- This is exactly when fraud, maintenance, and identity issues become expensive.
📈 Probability-Weighted Outlook: Next 24–72 Hours
🟢 Base case — 55%
- Market stays firm to tighter, led by Midwest outbound, flatbed, heavy haul, and reefer.
- Diesel remains the behavioral pressure point.
- Best response: cover early, separate fuel, keep quote windows short.
🟠 Stress case — 30%
- Replacement costs rise further by tomorrow afternoon, especially if:
- Midwest flooding keeps slowing turns,
- wind disruptions persist on northern transcon lanes,
- and end-of-month demand tightens appointments.
- Best response: protect premium customer freight now and assign backup coverage on strict service loads.
🔵 Relief case — 15%
- Some dry van and engineered partial freight clears better on dense lanes, especially when sourced from looser Northeast pockets.
- Best response: use relief surgically, not as a market-wide assumption.
🎯 Highest-Value Action Stack for Today
Reprice every uncovered Midwest outbound, reefer, and flatbed load immediately.
- If it is still open, it is probably underpriced, underqualified, or both.
Cover Chicago-origin and Indianapolis-origin freight before midday whenever possible.
- Those lanes are likely to get more expensive later, not cheaper.
Build tomorrow’s Midwest capacity from Northeast repositioning today.
- This is the cleanest way to avoid late-day local truck bidding wars.
Quote fuel separately on every meaningful lane.
- Especially on:
- 900+ mile van
- reefer
- open-deck
- stop-heavy shipments
Route around Wyoming/Montana wind exposure for service-sensitive freight.
- Or quote with transit contingency and get customer signoff upfront.
Tighten carrier vetting before dispatch, not after tender acceptance.
- Maintenance and identity risk are elevated cost multipliers today.
Offer engineered partial solutions to cost-sensitive customers blocked out of FTL (Full Truckload).
- Only on dense corridors with true compatibility.
Track the right intraday metrics.
- Coverage secured by 11 AM
- Paid-over-posted spread by mode
- Falloff rate after initial acceptance
- Detention exposure on Midwest pickups
- Backup carrier utilization on service-critical freight
🧭 Bottom Line
- 187,516 loads, $2.51/mile average, and $5.345/gallon diesel describe a market where execution matters more than the headline average.
- The real story is not “rates are down from yesterday.”
- The real story is:
- load count surged
- moved volume exploded
- Midwest rejections are elevated
- fuel is forcing carrier discipline
- and weather is slowing truck turns where the market is already tight
- The brokers who win today will:
- price by lane, not by national average
- book earlier
- separate fuel from linehaul
- pre-build Midwest capacity
- and refuse to solve urgency with bad carriers
📅 This Day in History
1854: President José Gregorio Monagas abolishes slavery in Venezuela.
1976: In Argentina, the armed forces overthrow the constitutional government of President Isabel Perón and start a seven-year dictatorial period self-styled the National Reorganization Process.
2023: An EF4 tornado strikes the towns of Rolling Fork and Silver City, Mississippi, causing mass destruction.
💭 Quote of the Day
"The fact of the matter is that there will be nothing learned from any challenge in which we don't try our hardest."
— Josh Waitzkin