๐ Daily Market Intelligence Report
Friday, March 20, 2026
11:10 AM CST
๐ Top-Line Summary
Spot market volumes remain elevated at 183,929 available loads, though slightly cooling from yesterday's multi-year highs, keeping the market average rate firm at $2.47/mile. The defining market catalyst today is the crippling surge in diesel prices, now averaging $5.159/gallon nationally, with devastating localized spikes hitting $6.20 in Washington and $5.30 in New York due to geopolitical conflicts. This severe operating cost inflation is triggering emergency inland fuel surcharges from ocean carriers and forcing domestic fleets to park equipment or demand massive premiums. Concurrently, a severe 100+ degree heat wave in California and major river flooding in Washington are severely disrupting the West Coast freight network, pushing reefer demand up 7.4% overnight and creating extreme regional rate volatility.
Insight
Friday conditions raise the cost of waiting until Monday
The most actionable shift today is timing: elevated rejections, extreme fuel volatility, and West Coast weather disruptions are likely to push a larger share of Monday freight into the spot market over the weekend. Any freight that must load in California, Washington, or the Northeast early next week will price better if covered before end-of-day Friday, particularly on long-haul van and reefer moves where carriers are now quoting fuel risk almost day by day.
โฝ Diesel Price Analysis
AAA Historical Price Comparison
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Extreme Heat Wave (Southern California (CA, Los Angeles, Ventura, Santa Barbara counties)): Dangerously hot conditions (96-104ยฐF) are severely straining reefer units, increasing equipment breakdown risks, and driving massive rate premiums for temperature-controlled freight out of the Southwest.
- Major River Flooding (Northwestern Washington (WA, Skagit, Snohomish, King counties)): Severe flooding across multiple rivers is disrupting the I-5 and I-90 corridors, forcing costly detours, delaying transit times, and tightening outbound Seattle capacity.
- Lowland River Flooding (Southwestern Indiana (IN, Gibson, Knox, Pike counties)): White River flooding is disrupting regional routing in the Midwest, complicating driver positioning and extending transit times for local manufacturing freight.
Weather Affected Corridors
Weather Insight
Washington flood delays should outlast the rain
Northwestern Washington conditions improve after today, but the freight effect will not clear as quickly as the weather. Rain eases into a drier Saturday through Monday window, which should help linehaul execution, yet equipment dislocation, missed appointments, and route changes along the Seattle corridor are likely to keep outbound capacity tight into early next week before another round of rain and mountain snow risk returns Tuesday.
- Expect the heaviest service failures and detention risk today into tonight.
- Use Saturday-Monday as the best recovery window for reloading and clearing backlog.
๐ฐ Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Geopolitical conflicts and the Hormuz closure are driving crude oil spikes, ensuring diesel prices will remain elevated and volatile, forcing carriers to demand daily rate adjustments.
- Carrier Financial Health: Smaller fleets are facing an existential crisis as $5.159+ diesel drains cash reserves; bankruptcies are expected to accelerate, structurally removing capacity from the market.
- Economic Indicators: Inflationary pressures from surging energy and transportation costs are threatening consumer spending, though current industrial and agricultural demand remains robust.
๐ฐ Impactful News Analysis
-
Washington Diesel Spikes to $6.20, Forcing Carrier Exodus ๐:
With WA diesel hitting $6.20/gal, outbound PNW rates will require massive premiums. Brokers must immediately adjust pricing models for Seattle/Portland originations and prepare customers for emergency fuel surcharges as capacity flees the region.
-
Ocean Carriers Implement Emergency Inland Fuel Surcharges ๐:
Major ocean carriers implementing inland emergency fuel surcharges signals severe cost pressures on drayage and transloading. Brokers handling port freight must secure capacity early and pass these unavoidable costs to shippers.
-
Agricultural Shippers Squeezed by Fertilizer and Diesel Spikes ๐:
Agricultural shippers are facing squeezed margins just as planting season begins. Brokers should expect intense rate negotiations on rural lanes but must hold firm on rates to secure carriers facing $5.159 diesel.
-
New York Diesel Jumps $1.50 in a Month, Crushing Margins ๐:
NY diesel hitting $5.30/gal is compressing carrier margins rapidly in the Northeast. Brokers must proactively offer fuel advances and fair surcharges to maintain carrier loyalty and secure capacity in this high-cost market.
News Insight
Inland fuel surcharges will hit port freight unevenly
Emergency inland surcharges from ocean carriers are likely to widen the spread between short dray moves and longer transload-to-inland truck moves over the next several days. Freight with slow turns, off-dock storage exposure, or multiple handoffs will become disproportionately expensive under $5-plus diesel, while clean one-pick port evacuations and pre-planned transload freight should keep getting capacity first.
๐ Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Spot volumes at 183k+ loads indicate a highly active market, but the spread between posted and paid rates is widening as carriers refuse to move without adequate fuel compensation.
- Capacity Alerts: West Coast capacity is critically tight due to WA flooding and CA heat; the Northeast and PNW are seeing severe localized capacity drain due to extreme diesel price spikes.
- Technology Disruptions: Carriers are increasingly relying on automated fuel optimization and dynamic routing software to survive the diesel spike, penalizing shippers with inefficient facilities or excessive dwell times.
๐ฅ Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Urgent transloading demand is rising as ocean freight is diverted due to Middle East conflicts, creating spot opportunities from alternative ports.
- Manufacturing: Strong flatbed demand (79k+ loads) indicates robust industrial activity, though supply chain bottlenecks persist due to inland transport disruptions and fuel costs.
- Agriculture: Early produce staging in the Southwest and planting season preparations are driving specialized and reefer demand, complicated by soaring fertilizer and fuel costs.
- Automotive: Parts suppliers are struggling with unpredictable transit times due to regional flooding and carrier rejections, increasing demand for expedited partials.
๐บ๏ธ Regional & Lane Analysis
๐ Primary Region Focus: West Coast (CA/WA)
The West Coast is experiencing a perfect storm of disruptions: Washington diesel prices have spiked to an astronomical $6.20/gallon, severe river flooding is closing major routes along the I-5 corridor, and a 100+ degree heat wave in California is severely straining reefer capacity. This extreme volatility is driving massive rate premiums and creating lucrative arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can navigate the chaos.
๐ฃ๏ธ Key Lane Watch
Los Angeles, CA โ Phoenix, AZ: 100+ degree heat is pushing reefer units to their limits, while California diesel prices force carriers to demand heavy premiums for outbound loads. Capacity is critically scarce as carriers reject multi-stop loads to minimize fuel burn and equipment strain. Demand for temperature-controlled freight remains highly elevated.
Seattle, WA โ Los Angeles, CA: Severe river flooding in Washington is disrupting I-5 routing, while WA diesel hitting $6.20/gal is forcing carriers to demand unprecedented outbound rates. Capacity is fleeing the Pacific Northwest to avoid the fuel costs and flood delays, making equipment extremely difficult to source. Transit times are extended due to necessary detours.
Regional Insight
Southern California reefer pressure peaks through Sunday, then briefly resets
Los Angeles area heat remains punishing through Sunday, with upper-90s temperatures keeping reefer runtime, breakdown exposure, and fuel burn elevated on outbound loads to Phoenix and inland Arizona. Monday offers a narrow operating reset as temperatures drop sharply before reheating Tuesday, making late-Sunday and Monday pickups the cleanest window for shippers that can flex by 24 hours without risking spoilage or shelf-life issues.
๐จ Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Outbound Washington (due to $6.20/gal diesel)
- Outbound Southern California Reefer (due to 100+ degree heat)
- Outbound New York (due to $5.30/gal diesel)
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Reefer capacity is critically short in the Southwest; Flatbed capacity is tight nationally; Van capacity is draining from the PNW and Northeast due to fuel costs.
Opportunity Zones:
- Short-haul lanes in the Southeast where fuel exposure is minimized
- Inbound lanes to the PNW (carriers willing to take lower rates to access high-paying outbound freight)
๐ฏ Strategic Recommendations for Today
๐ผ For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Geopolitical conflicts have pushed national diesel to $5.159, with regional spikes over $6.00 in the PNW. We must implement emergency fuel surcharges to secure reliable capacity and keep your supply chain moving.
Action: Immediately audit all contracted lanes for fuel exposure, initiate surcharge negotiations, and warn West Coast clients of flood/heat delays.
๐ For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Focus on carriers with fuel-efficient fleets or those needing to reposition out of the PNW and Northeast markets.
Negotiation Leverage: Use quick-pay, fuel advances, and access to high-yield short-haul freight as leverage to secure capacity in high-fuel regions.
Strategic Insight
Price dwell and reload economics as aggressively as linehaul
In the current fuel environment, carriers are screening freight as much by unproductive time as by rate per mile. Fast-loading freight with a clear reload path into a premium market will cover more easily than nominally higher-paying loads with tight appointments, multi-stop complexity, or weak backhaul options.
- On West Coast freight, quote detention and layover explicitly rather than absorbing them in linehaul.
- Pair inbound Pacific Northwest trucks with premium outbound reloads before locking either side.
- Use fuel advances selectively for proven carriers on Washington and New York origin freight.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Cover early-week West Coast freight before the weekend; Monday spot exposure is likely to rise.
- Use the drier Saturday-Monday window in Washington to clear backlog, but keep pricing firm on outbound Seattle freight.
- Shift flexible Southern California reefer pickups into late Sunday or Monday to reduce heat-driven service risk.
- Prioritize freight with fast turns and reload potential; dwell is now a primary capacity filter.
๐ Executive Signal Summary
This is a firmer market than the headline load decline suggests.
- Total available loads are 183,929, down 3.9% from 191,302 yesterday.
- But loads moved today are 67,494, up sharply from 57,571 yesterday.
- That means the market is clearing better, not weakening. Weak freight is being filtered out, while executable freight is moving at replacement cost.
The most important hidden metric today is clearance quality.
- Todayโs move rate is roughly 36.7% of posted loads versus about 30.1% yesterday.
- That is a strong signal that brokers who price correctly are getting freight covered, while brokers still quoting yesterdayโs math are getting exposed.
Diesel at $5.159/gallon is acting like a capacity tax.
- This is no longer just a surcharge conversation.
- It is changing trip selection behavior, carrier willingness, backhaul decisions, and weekend positioning.
- Carriers are screening freight on turn time, deadhead, reload probability, and dwell almost as much as linehaul.
Open-deck remains the biggest revenue pool on the board.
- Flatbed + Heavy Haul + Specialized = 138,826 loads, or 75.5% of all available loads.
- Those same segments account for 57,067 moved loads, or 84.6% of moved volume.
- If your desk is not heavily tilted toward open-deck and project freight, you are under-allocating time.
Reefer is the sharpest service-risk market today.
- Reefer loads are 9,736, up 7.4% overnight.
- Paid reefer is $2.70/mile versus $2.65/mile posted.
- That spread is not huge on paper, but in a 96-104ยฐF Southern California heat pattern, the real premium is often hidden in carrier selectivity, stricter appointment discipline, and claim avoidance requirements.
Friday timing matters more than usual.
- Early-week West Coast freight is likely to get more expensive if left uncovered into Monday.
- The combination of rising tender rejections, fuel volatility, California heat, and Washington flooding raises the odds that weekend slippage becomes Monday spot pain.
๐ What the board is really saying
The average market is holding firm, not fading.
- National average rate is $2.47/mile.
- That is flat to two days ago, up from $2.37/mile one week ago, and up from $2.31/mile one month ago.
- The market is not just busy; it is structurally more expensive than both the weekly and monthly baselines.
Posted-to-paid spreads tell you where to defend and where to probe.
- Van: $2.23 posted / $2.32 paid = +$0.09/mile
- Reefer: $2.65 posted / $2.70 paid = +$0.05/mile
- Flatbed: $2.76 posted / $2.83 paid = +$0.07/mile
- Heavy Haul: $2.84 posted / $2.83 paid = -$0.01/mile
- Specialized: $2.60 posted / $2.59 paid = -$0.01/mile
- LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload / Partial): $1.61 posted / $1.66 paid = +$0.05/mile
What that means tactically:
- Defend van harder than many brokers will expect.
- A +$0.09/mile van spread says long-haul van freight is no longer a casual buy.
- Fuel is pushing marginal carriers off weak lanes.
- Pre-cover reefer instead of trusting the board.
- Reefer posted numbers still understate heat risk, runtime, breakdown exposure, and late-day appointment pain.
- Open-deck is still worth your best attention.
- Flatbed remains both large and healthy on spread.
- Heavy haul and specialized are still the best negotiation pocketsโbut only when the load is clean.
- A slight negative spread does not mean those markets are soft.
- It means well-defined freight can be bought efficiently, while messy freight can still explode after tender.
๐ฏ Where brokers can win the day
1) Open-deck first, not last
- Flatbed has 79,632 available loads at $2.83 paid.
- Heavy haul has 38,416 available loads at $2.83 paid.
- Specialized has 20,778 available loads at $2.59 paid.
- This is where the largest executable revenue pool sits.
- Best move: assign strongest reps to jobsite-ready, permit-ready, dimension-complete freight before spending energy on low-yield transactional van.
2) Reefer on the West Coast is a service-quality trade, not just a rate trade
- Southern California heat at 96-104ยฐF raises:
- reefer fuel burn
- unit failure risk
- pre-cool sensitivity
- late pickup risk
- claim severity
- Best move: prioritize overnight, early-morning, or late-Sunday/Monday pickups where shippers can flex.
- Worst buy today: same-day afternoon reefer in Southern California with strict temperature tolerance and uncertain dwell.
3) Van is selective, not soft
- 24,540 van loads with $2.32 paid tells me van capacity is still there, but it is becoming trip-quality sensitive.
- Best move: lean into:
- short-haul
- reload-dense corridors
- one pick / one drop
- fast-turn facilities
- Avoid underpricing:
- transcontinental van
- weak backhaul regions
- multi-stop consumer freight
- loads with soft appointment discipline
4) LTL/Partial is a margin valve when full truckload math breaks
- 10,827 LTL/Partial loads at $1.66 paid remains useful where customers need fuel relief.
- Best move: consolidate freight on:
- West Coast overflow
- Midwest manufacturing corridors
- expedited parts freight where a full truck would be wasteful
- Do not force it on weak one-off geographies with fragile service expectations.
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather-to-rate conversion
๐ฅ Southern California heat should be priced as operating stress
- The weather is not just an advisory.
- It directly changes:
- carrier acceptance
- reefer runtime
- maintenance exposure
- detention tolerance
- margin risk if a unit struggles in traffic or on long dwell
- Broker action: quote late-day Southern California reefer more aggressively than morning freight and tighten service assumptions in writing.
๐ Washington flooding should be priced as turn-time drag
- The biggest cost is not just miles.
- It is:
- missed appointments
- detours
- yard congestion
- equipment dislocation
- reload timing damage
- Broker action: add appointment slack and explicit detention/layover language on Seattle-area freight rather than trying to bury it in linehaul.
๐ง๏ธ Southwest Indiana flooding is a facility-access problem more than a blanket Midwest surcharge
- Broker action: verify:
- shipper access roads
- receiver access roads
- actual loading status
- alternate approach routes
- The smart broker today uses facility verification, not lazy region-wide padding.
๐บ๏ธ Regional playbook for the next 24โ72 hours
๐ฒ Pacific Northwest: buy inbound, sell outbound carefully
- The best tactical angle remains inbound lanes into the PNW where carriers may still accept lower rates to reach stronger outbound freight.
- But once a truck is in the Seattle orbit, outbound should be sold with:
- fuel risk
- flood drag
- reload uncertainty
- appointment softness priced in
- Broker move: pair inbound PNW trucks with pre-sold outbound reloads before locking either side.
๐ด Southern California: reefer discipline beats rate haggling
- Late-Sunday and Monday look like the cleaner operating window if the customer can flex.
- Broker move: actively call shippers today and ask for:
- 24-hour pickup flexibility
- night loading options
- reduced dwell commitments
- strict setpoint and seal confirmation
- A broker who gets flexibility will beat a broker who just argues cents per mile.
๐ฝ Northeast: fuel-sensitive long-haul is vulnerable to repricing
- The Northeast is not necessarily a collapse market; it is a carrier-selectivity market.
- Broker move: defend any long-haul Northeast origin with:
- shorter quote validity
- separate fuel line items
- same-day carrier confirmation
- If you hold stale quotes here, you are likely underwriting the move yourself.
๐๏ธ Midwest/South open-deck corridors: keep feeding the machine
- Construction, industrial, and project freight still favor qualified open-deck carriers.
- Broker move: prioritize freight with:
- complete dimensions
- securement details
- loading method
- unload method
- tarp requirements
- In open-deck, clarity lowers your buy rate more than negotiating skill does.
๐ง The behavioral edge most brokers will miss
Shippers will read 183,929 loads as โthere should be plenty of trucks.โ
- That is the wrong takeaway.
- The more important signal is that 67,494 loads already moved today.
- That means real freight is clearing, and the market is sorting good freight from bad freight faster.
Carriers are operating on survival logic, not average-rate logic.
- At $5.159/gallon diesel, they care about:
- deadhead
- reload certainty
- dwell
- cash strain
- route friction
- weather exposure
- Your advantage: translate those concerns into customer language before a tender fails.
The best brokers today will sell certainty, not optimism.
- Customers do not need a rosy quote.
- They need:
- a truck that actually shows
- realistic appointment windows
- documented fuel treatment
- clear expectations on delays and dwell
๐ฌ Customer-facing posture that wins
With cost-sensitive shippers
- Message: โThis is a replacement-cost market driven by fuel and execution risk, not a discount market created by load-board size.โ
- Ask for: approval to separate:
- base linehaul
- fuel surcharge
- detention / layover
- weekend or weather contingencies
- Why it works: customers resist one big number less when the cost stack is transparent.
With West Coast shippers
- Message: โCovering now is cheaper than buying uncertainty on Monday.โ
- Action: push immediate decisions on:
- early-week California outbound
- Washington outbound
- port-adjacent freight
- reefer loads with shelf-life exposure
With manufacturing and industrial accounts
- Message: โSpec clarity is your cheapest form of rate reduction.โ
- Action: require before quoting:
- dimensions
- weight
- securement
- crane/forklift details
- appointment flexibility
- The tighter the spec package, the more leverage you keep on heavy haul and specialized.
With food and produce accounts
- Message: โThe cheapest reefer is the most expensive claim if the unit or process fails in heat.โ
- Action: insist on:
- setpoint confirmation
- pre-cool confirmation
- reefer fuel check
- breakdown escalation contact
- seal protocol
๐ค Carrier desk tactics for today
1) Lead with trip quality
- Sell:
- facility speed
- one pick / one drop
- reload path
- realistic appointments
- short deadhead
- In this environment, a clean trip often wins faster than a slightly higher rate with messy execution.
2) Use fuel advances selectively on proven carriers
- Especially for:
- Washington origin freight
- New York and Northeast origin freight
- long-haul reefer
- This is not charity.
- It is a capacity lock-in tool when carrier cash strain is rising.
3) Build two-leg economics before you post
- Do not think in one load at a time on stressed regions.
- Best move: book or sketch the reload first on:
- PNW inbound/outbound pairs
- West Coast to inland corridors
- Northeast outbound long-haul
4) Re-rank your carrier call list
- Start with:
- reefer carriers with strong maintenance discipline
- open-deck carriers with documented securement performance
- regional van fleets on dense loops
- partial carriers with actual consolidation density
- Do not waste prime hours trying to rescue weak freight with weak carriers.
5) Price dwell as aggressively as miles
- In a $5.159 diesel market, unproductive time is poison.
- Explicitly quote:
- detention
- layover
- missed appointment exposure
- extra stop friction
- If you hide that cost inside linehaul, your margin gets hit first.
๐ก๏ธ Risk controls that matter more than usual
๐จ Fraud risk rises when rates rise
- On premium freight, verify:
- authority
- insurance
- dispatch identity
- phone/email consistency
- last-minute contact changes
- High-rate reefer and open-deck freight will attract bad actors.
๐ก๏ธ Reefer claims prevention
- Require confirmation of:
- setpoint
- pre-cool
- reefer fuel level
- seal
- breakdown protocol
- temperature exception contact
- Most reefer losses come from small operational misses, not dramatic breakdowns.
๐๏ธ Heavy haul and specialized execution discipline
- Confirm:
- exact dimensions
- true weight
- axle requirements
- permit timing
- escort needs
- feasible route
- A bad assumption here can destroy both margin and credibility.
๐ Quote governance
- Reprice any uncovered load that is:
- older than 24 hours
- long-haul
- reefer
- West Coast
- Northeast origin
- weather-touched
- That is a coverage control, not just a margin defense.
๐ Probability-weighted 24โ72 hour outlook
๐ข Base case โ 55%
- Market stays firm at current levels with lane-by-lane premium spikes.
- Van remains selective, reefer stays stressed, and open-deck keeps absorbing broker time.
- Winning posture: cover early, shorten quote validity, and sell reload certainty.
๐ Stress case โ 30%
- Fuel volatility and weather drag create a Monday repricing wave.
- More contract slippage hits spot as carriers reject under-fueled tenders.
- Winning posture: pre-cover early-week West Coast and Northeast freight before the weekend, and tighten all service assumptions.
๐ต Relief case โ 15%
- Some specialized, heavy haul, and short-haul van lanes stay negotiable.
- The market does not collapse, but disciplined brokers find pockets to buy below visible ask.
- Winning posture: press only on clean specs and reload-friendly geometry.
โ
Highest-value actions before close
Reprice every uncovered long-haul, reefer, West Coast, and Northeast load older than 24 hours.
- Stale quotes are now service failures waiting to happen.
Push broker time toward open-deck immediately.
- 138,826 open-deck loads is too large a revenue pool to treat as secondary.
Cover early-week California and Washington freight today if it matters.
- Monday exposure is likely to be worse than Friday commitment.
Pre-book reefer before finalizing customer numbers.
- $2.70 paid versus $2.65 posted understates actual heat-risk execution cost.
Sell dwell, layover, and missed-appointment risk separately.
- That protects both margin and customer trust.
Use LTL/Partial tactically where full truckload fuel math is ugly.
- Especially for overflow, expedited parts, and dense regional shipments.
Call facilities in weather-affected zones before quoting โfirm.โ
- Road access and yard conditions matter more than map miles today.
Package reloads before posting premium-origin freight.
- Especially on PNW, West Coast, and Northeast origin moves.
๐งญ Bottom line
- The board is smaller, but the market is healthier for disciplined brokers.
- 183,929 loads, 67,494 moved, $2.47/mile average, and $5.159/gallon diesel point to a market where execution quality beats optimism.
- Open-deck is the volume game.
- Reefer is the service-risk game.
- Van is firming through trip selectivity.
- Heavy haul and specialized still reward spec clarity more than rate pushing.
The brokers who win the next 24โ72 hours will do four things better than the field:
- Reprice faster
- Explain fuel and dwell economics more clearly
- Pre-build reload paths
- Cover must-have West Coast freight before the weekend
๐
This Day in History
1952: The US Senate ratifies the Security Treaty between the United States and Japan.
1988: Eritrean War of Independence: Having defeated the Nadew Command, the Eritrean People's Liberation Front enters the town of Afabet, victoriously concluding the Battle of Afabet.
2015: Syrian civil war: The Siege of Kobanรฎ is broken by the People's Protection Units (YPG) and Free Syrian Army (FSA), marking a turning point in the RojavaโIslamist conflict.
๐ญ Quote of the Day
"Real loss is only possible when you love something more than you love yourself."
โ Robin Williams