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📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report

Sunday, March 22, 2026

7:00 AM CST


📊 Top-Line Summary

The spot market is navigating a complex transitional phase characterized by elevated tender rejections and surging operating costs, with the national average diesel price hitting $5.25/gallon. Despite a slight 2.0% overnight dip in total available loads to 149,151, the market average rate remains robust at $2.50/mile, indicating strong carrier discipline as operators refuse to haul cheap freight in a high-fuel environment. Geographically, the market is heavily fractured by severe weather events, including a dangerous 100+ degree heat wave in the Southwest and major river flooding in the Pacific Northwest, which are paralyzing key transcontinental corridors like I-10 and I-5. These compounding factors—fuel spikes, extreme weather, and tightening capacity—are creating significant rate volatility and lucrative arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can secure reliable equipment in high-risk zones.

Insight

Spot quotes now have a shorter shelf life

With diesel above $5.00 and rejections still running in the mid-teens, the posted-to-paid gap is widening fastest on freight exposed to Western weather. In practice, same-day pricing on those lanes is increasingly only good for a few hours; loads that miss morning coverage are far more likely to be repriced by afternoon as carriers re-evaluate fuel and route risk.

Daily market overview

⛽ Diesel Price Analysis

Price Trend Over Time

Diesel Price Trend Chart

AAA Historical Price Comparison

AAA Historical Price Comparison Chart

🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence

Current Major Weather Events:

Weather Affected Corridors:

I-10
Interstate10
Severe
States
Hazards
Dense Fog Advisory, Extreme Heat Warning
Alert Count
5
I-95
Interstate95
Moderate
States
Hazards
Dense Fog Advisory, Flood Advisory
Alert Count
3
I-75
Interstate75
Moderate
States
Hazards
Dense Fog Advisory
Alert Count
2
Weather Insight

Pacific Northwest flooding will outlast the dry break

Skies around the Seattle area look quieter through Monday, but river flooding typically lags the weather, and another round of rain and snow returning Tuesday should slow any corridor normalization. Expect cautious driver acceptance and intermittent detours on I-5 and I-90 into midweek, with the tightest pressure on inbound Seattle/Tacoma freight.

Weather Insight

Northern New England disruption looks front-loaded

The Maine and New Hampshire snow event should deliver its sharpest capacity hit from Sunday into Monday morning, then ease as conditions improve Tuesday. That points to a short-duration rate spike rather than a weeklong squeeze, giving brokers a real cost advantage if discretionary freight can slide 24 hours.

💰 Financial Market Indicators

📰 Impactful News Analysis

  1. Truckload Market Enters Prolonged Transitional Phase as Rejections Stay Elevated 🔗:
    With tender rejections hovering around 13-14% and spot rates rising alongside fuel prices, brokers must prepare for a sustained period of capacity tightness. The traditional spring loosening is being offset by carriers rejecting loads to chase better margins or avoid high-cost lanes. Brokers should focus on locking in reliable capacity on dedicated lanes and proactively adjusting customer pricing to reflect this new, higher baseline.
  2. Geopolitical Tensions Drive Diesel Surges, Hitting $5.40 in Key Western Markets 🔗:
    The blockage of the Strait of Hormuz is having a direct, localized impact on domestic fuel prices, with Arizona seeing diesel jump 48 cents in a single week to $5.40/gallon. Brokers moving freight through the Southwest must immediately factor these hyper-local fuel spikes into their quotes, as carriers will outright reject standard rates that fail to cover their surging operating costs.
  3. Rising Freight and Raw Material Costs Push Pharmaceutical Prices Higher 🔗:
    The intersection of rising oil prices and increased freight rates is driving up costs for critical medical supplies like plastic syringes. For brokers handling healthcare and pharmaceutical freight, this means shippers will be highly sensitive to transportation costs but will still require strict, expedited service. This presents an opportunity to sell premium, high-reliability capacity at a higher margin to shippers who cannot afford supply chain failures.

🔍 Competitive Intelligence

👥 Customer Sector Analysis

🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis

📍 Primary Region Focus: Southwest (AZ, CA, NV)

The Southwest is currently the most volatile and strategically important freight region in the country. A collision of extreme 100+ degree heat, massive localized diesel price spikes (up to $5.40/gallon in AZ), and early produce staging has created a severe capacity crunch. Reefer paid rates are surging to $2.95/mile nationally, but regional rates in the Southwest are commanding even higher premiums. Carriers are demanding hazard pay to operate in temperatures that threaten equipment breakdowns, while simultaneously requiring heavy fuel surcharges.

🛣️ Key Lane Watch

Phoenix, AZ → Los Angeles, CA: This short-haul transcontinental link is under immense pressure from the extreme heat wave and surging fuel costs. Reefer capacity is critically tight as carriers fear equipment failures in the 105-degree desert heat, while dry van operators are demanding premiums to cover the $5.40/gallon diesel costs in Arizona.

Route map for Phoenix, AZ → Los Angeles, CA

Houston, TX → Phoenix, AZ: This I-10 corridor lane is facing significant friction as carriers moving west must transition from relatively stable Texas fuel prices into the hyper-inflated Arizona/California fuel markets. Flatbed and van volumes remain steady, but capacity is hesitating to commit without guaranteed backhauls.

Route map for Houston, TX → Phoenix, AZ
Regional Insight

Phoenix-Los Angeles will price by transit timing, not just miles

On the desert leg, rate separation is increasingly being driven by when the truck moves. Carriers loading after sunset and crossing Arizona overnight can reduce reefer fuel burn and lower breakdown risk, while daytime dispatches will keep drawing the steepest hazard premium.

Regional Insight

Houston-Phoenix buy rates will hinge on fuel strategy

The sharpest westbound pricing will come from carriers that can maximize fuel purchases in Texas or New Mexico before entering Arizona's higher-cost market. Loads awarded late in the day, or without a visible return leg from Phoenix, Tucson, or Southern California, are more exposed to repricing because the carrier loses both fuel efficiency and backhaul certainty.

🚨 Actionable Alerts

Rate Spike Warnings:

Capacity Shortage Alerts:

Opportunity Zones:

🎯 Strategic Recommendations for Today

💼 For Customer Sales:

Narrative: The market is experiencing a severe capacity crunch driven by $5.25 diesel and extreme weather in the West. We are prioritizing service and reliability over bottom-dollar pricing to ensure your freight doesn't get abandoned by carriers chasing fuel surcharges.

Action: Proactively approach customers with freight moving through the Southwest or Pacific Northwest to renegotiate rates or implement temporary fuel/hazard surcharges before routing guides fail.

🚛 For Carrier Reps:

Sourcing Focus: Focus entirely on securing well-maintained reefer capacity in the Southwest and reliable flatbed operators in the Midwest/South. Prioritize carriers with strong fuel networks.

Negotiation Leverage: Use the promise of high-paying outbound backhauls from tight markets (like Phoenix or Seattle) to negotiate better rates on the inbound legs.

Strategic Takeaways

High-Signal Additions

🧭 Savvy Broker's Playbook

🔑 Executive Signal Summary


📊 What the board is really saying


💰 Best margin pools for today


🌦️ Weather-to-rate conversion: how to price the next 24–72 hours


🗺️ Regional playbook for today

🌵 Southwest: highest urgency, shortest quote life

🌲 Pacific Northwest: buy inbound carefully, sell outbound firmly

🌴 Southeast and Texas Triangle: tactical buy-side relief


🧠 Behavioral edge most brokers will miss today


📞 Customer sales posture that wins today


🚛 Carrier desk tactics for maximizing today


🛡️ Risk controls that matter more than usual


📈 Probability-weighted 24–72 hour outlook


✅ Highest-value actions before mid-day

  1. Reprice every uncovered Southwest and Pacific Northwest load immediately.
  2. Convert Arizona and Southern California reefer appointments to night-cycle execution wherever possible.
  3. Push customer approvals for temporary FSC (Fuel Surcharge) and weather/hazard premiums before routing guides fail.
  4. Pre-build reloads on westbound freight, especially Houston → Phoenix and inbound Seattle moves.
  5. Shift your best carrier reps toward flatbed, reefer, and heavy-haul coverage—not generalized van posting.
  6. Delay non-urgent Northern New England freight into Tuesday to avoid paying front-loaded storm premiums.
  7. Use LTL/partial only where density is strong and service risk is acceptable.
  8. Reconfirm carrier identity and equipment closer to pickup than usual on all premium or weather-exposed freight.

🧭 Bottom line

That is a market where capacity is selective, not loose.

The best brokers today will not win by posting harder. They will win by: - quoting faster on Western freight - separating fuel and weather from base linehaul - designing appointments around operational reality - selling reliability instead of “market average” - using reload visibility as a buy-side weapon

Reefer is the sharpest pay-up market. Flatbed is still the most scalable profit pool. Heavy haul demands precision. Specialized punishes lazy quoting. Van is firmer than customers think.

Today is a discipline market. The brokers who move first, qualify deeper, and protect margin structure will outperform.

📅 This Day in History

1943: World War II: The entire village of Khatyn (in present-day Republic of Belarus) is burnt alive by Schutzmannschaft Battalion 118.
2004: Ahmed Yassin, co-founder and leader of the Palestinian Sunni Islamist group Hamas, two bodyguards, and nine civilian bystanders are killed in the Gaza Strip when hit by Israeli Air Force Hellfire missiles.
2019: The Special Counsel investigation on the 2016 United States presidential election concludes when Robert Mueller submits his report to the United States Attorney General.

💭 Quote of the Day

"We have more possibilities available in each moment than we realize."

— Thich Nhat Hanh