📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Wednesday, June 03, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The spot market is experiencing intense rate volatility and capacity constraints today, driven by a powerful combination of peak summer produce harvests and severe weather disruptions across key transcontinental corridors. Real-time transactional data shows total available loads holding strong at 196,027, with the national spot rate average firming at $3.02/mile. Active flash flooding in West Texas has severely disrupted the critical I-10 and I-20 corridors, trapping equipment and forcing extensive detours. Meanwhile, a record $1.78/gallon spread between retail and wholesale diesel is creating highly divergent carrier economics, offering significant margin-expansion opportunities for brokers who strategically align with larger, wholesale-buying fleets while navigating a newly expanded legal liability landscape.
Insight
Texas disruption is shaping up as a multi-day pricing event
The West Texas flooding is not likely to clear cleanly after today's cycle. Forecasts around Pecos and Crane keep intermittent rain in place today, with additional thunderstorm chances Thursday and a heavier round Friday, which raises the odds that equipment pushed off I-10 and I-20 remains out of position through the end of the week. That favors wider quote-validity windows, firmer same-day repricing language, and continued premiums on westbound Texas freight even if headline weather appears to ease briefly.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Southwest Flash Flooding (West Texas (TX, Crane, Pecos, Ector, Midland, Scurry counties)): Heavy rain and active flash flooding are impacting major transcontinental corridors I-10 and I-20. This is expected to cause significant route delays, forced detours, and localized capacity tightening as drivers avoid flooded low-lying areas.
- River Flooding in South and Gulf Coast (Texas, Georgia, Arkansas (TX, GA, AR, Nueces River, Tattnall, Jackson counties)): Minor river flooding is occurring, inundating low-lying agricultural areas and local roads. This could disrupt regional agricultural freight movements and restrict local access to loading facilities.
- Midwest River Flooding (Western Missouri (MO, Vernon, St. Clair counties)): Minor flooding on the Little Osage and Osage rivers affects low-lying areas and farmland near I-49. This may slow down regional flatbed and agricultural transport.
- Pacific Northwest River Flooding (Washington (WA, Chelan County, Stehekin River)): Minor river flooding is occurring and forecast to continue, inundating local properties and roads. This could delay local timber and agricultural transport in north-central Washington.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Midday-to-evening storms matter more than the morning map
In the Pecos-Crane corridor, rainfall is expected to redevelop through the afternoon with scattered thunderstorms late day, creating a stop-start operating pattern rather than a clean reopen. The practical impact is more missed appointment risk than full network shutdown, especially for loads trying to cross West Texas after lunch.
- Earliest pickup windows carry the best chance of preserving same-day linehaul miles.
- Late-afternoon westbound tenders need 4-6 hours of slack built into receiver timing.
- Detention exposure rises quickly once drivers burn hours in weather-driven reroutes.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Wholesale diesel rack prices are falling much faster than retail pump prices, creating a massive $1.78/gallon spread that boosts margins for large carriers on cost-plus programs while squeezing retail-dependent owner-operators.
- Carrier Financial Health: Smaller carriers face severe financial strain from high retail fuel costs and dropping safety enforcement, while larger asset-based fleets are capitalizing on wholesale fuel spreads to record strong operating ratios.
- Economic Indicators: Record LTL tonnage and surging transpacific container rates signal a robust domestic freight environment, with early peak season volumes colliding with structural driver capacity constraints.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
Supreme Court Rules 9-0: Freight Brokers Face State-Law Negligent Hiring Claims 🔗:
The unanimous decision in Montgomery v. Caribe Transport II, LLC establishes that FAAAA does not preempt state-law negligent hiring claims against brokers. This dramatically increases broker liability risks. Brokers must immediately implement rigorous, documented carrier vetting processes, verifying safety records, SMS scores, and insurance coverage before dispatching. Relying on basic contract terms is no longer a defense; active due diligence is required to mitigate catastrophic litigation risk.
-
Spot Rates Hit All-Time Record as Wholesale-Retail Fuel Spread Widens 🔗:
Linehaul spot rates are surging, driven by real capacity constraints rather than just fuel surcharges. Crucially, the spread between wholesale rack and retail diesel has blown out to a record $1.78/gallon. Large carriers buying at wholesale and surcharging at retail are capturing an extra ~11 cents/mile in margin. For brokers, this means asset-based carriers have strong cash flow, but smaller owner-operators buying at retail remain highly sensitive to fuel costs. Quoting must account for these divergent carrier economics.
-
FMCSA Enforcement Cases Plummet 84%, Shifting Vetting Burden to Brokers 🔗:
With federal enforcement cases dropping from 3,800 to just 617, the regulatory safety net has effectively thinned. This drop, combined with the Montgomery ruling, means brokers cannot rely on the FMCSA's active enforcement to weed out unsafe carriers. Brokers must take ownership of their network safety, utilizing advanced real-time monitoring tools to track carrier out-of-service rates and safety violations independently.
News Insight
Weather-day dispatches now carry outsized negligent-selection risk
The liability shift is most acute on disrupted corridors like West Texas, where plaintiffs will focus not only on the carrier's safety profile but on what was known at the time of tender. A broker that can show timestamped vetting, active insurance, current operating authority, and documented acknowledgement of route conditions is in a far stronger position than one relying on a stale onboarding file.
- Flood-affected loads need same-day carrier checks, not prior-week snapshots.
- Route changes, layovers, and weather acknowledgements belong in the load file before pickup.
- The highest legal exposure now sits where operational urgency overrides normal vetting discipline.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southwest US
The Southwest US, specifically Texas, represents the highest-opportunity region for brokers today due to the collision of peak agricultural volumes (the Texas watermelon harvest) and severe weather disruptions on major transcontinental corridors. Active flash flood warnings in West Texas (Midland, Pecos, Crane) have disrupted the critical I-10 and I-20 corridors, creating severe localized capacity bottlenecks. This combination of high demand and restricted supply has driven massive spot rate volatility, offering savvy brokers significant arbitrage and margin-expansion opportunities on westbound and cross-border lanes.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Houston, TX → Atlanta, GA: This high-volume corridor connects the Gulf Coast to the Southeast, currently experiencing heavy demand from chemical, industrial, and seasonal agricultural freight. Sourcing is complicated by minor river flooding along the Gulf Coast and high reefer demand in Georgia. Carriers are highly selective, favoring lanes that keep them clear of active weather zones.
Dallas, TX → El Paso, TX: This critical intrastate lane runs directly through the West Texas flash flood warning zones (Midland, Odessa, Pecos). Heavy rains are causing active flooding on I-20 and I-10, leading to significant transit delays and driver reluctance to accept westbound loads. Sourcing is highly volatile.
Regional Insight
Dallas to El Paso now trades on routed miles and driver hours
This lane can no longer be priced off a normal intrastate transit assumption. Flood avoidance around Midland-Odessa and Pecos is adding real hours-of-service risk, and loads that miss their westbound start by late afternoon are increasingly vulnerable to an extra break or next-day delivery. The trucks still taking this freight are the ones with centralized dispatch, live rerouting, and enough fuel flexibility to absorb detours without renegotiating every stop.
Regional Insight
Houston to Atlanta remains executable, but reefer reloads tighten at destination
Georgia's weather stays comparatively favorable through Saturday, which supports clean delivery execution into Atlanta even as Texas-origin conditions remain messy. The catch is that Southeast produce demand stays elevated, so reefers landing in Georgia are more likely to be pulled quickly into peaches, blueberries, and watermelon reloads than into discounted backhauls. That keeps eastbound Houston freight attractive, but it narrows the margin for last-minute carrier replacement on temperature-controlled freight.
📊 Analyzing the Posted-vs-Paid Spread: Where the Margin Lies Today
Today's real-time load board data reveals a highly lucrative environment for brokers who understand the spread between posted and paid rates. Across the three primary equipment types, paid rates are consistently outperforming posted rates, signaling that carriers hold the negotiating leverage but also highlighting where brokers can find mispriced freight. Dry van paid rates are averaging $2.79/mile against a posted average of $2.68/mile, representing an $0.11/mile carrier premium. This tight spread indicates that while capacity is stable (28,185 available loads, up 0.9% from yesterday), carriers are successfully resisting lowball offers due to the high retail diesel price of $5.411/gallon.
In the reefer sector, the spread is even wider. Paid rates are averaging $3.40/mile compared to a posted average of $3.12/mile—a massive $0.28/mile carrier premium. With 8,890 available loads (a 5.0% overnight increase), the peak summer produce season is in full swing, and shippers are willing to pay substantial premiums to secure temperature-controlled capacity. Flatbed rates show a similar dynamic, with paid rates averaging $3.69/mile against a posted $3.58/mile ($0.11/mile premium) on 84,146 available loads. Brokers must stop quoting shippers based on posted averages and instead price their spot opportunities using the higher paid averages to protect their margins and ensure high-quality carrier service.
🔧 The Vetting Crisis: Navigating the Montgomery Ruling in a Low-Enforcement Era
The freight brokerage industry is facing a perfect storm regarding carrier compliance and liability. The Supreme Court's landmark 9-0 decision in Montgomery v. Caribe Transport II, LLC has opened the floodgates for state-law negligent hiring claims, stripping brokers of the FAAAA preemption shield they historically relied upon. Under this new legal regime, if a broker dispatches a carrier with a poor safety record and that carrier is involved in a catastrophic accident, the broker can be held directly liable for negligent selection. This legal shift occurs at a time when the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) has drastically reduced its active enforcement.
Recent data reveals an 84% drop in closed FMCSA enforcement cases nationwide, plummeting from approximately 3,800 cases in 2024 to just 617 last year. In Indiana, a major freight transit state, cases dropped by 88%. This drop in federal oversight means that the government is no longer actively weeding out unsafe or 'chameleon' carriers. Consequently, the burden of safety enforcement has been entirely shifted onto the shoulders of freight brokers. Brokers can no longer assume that a carrier is safe simply because they possess active FMCSA authority. A comprehensive, multi-layered vetting protocol—verifying roadside inspection histories, out-of-service percentages, and safety ratings—is now an operational necessity to protect the brokerage from existential legal liabilities.
💰 Fuel Spread Arbitrage: Capitalizing on the Wholesale-Retail Diesel Divide
A hidden but highly profitable dynamic has emerged in the fuel market, offering a unique margin-expansion opportunity for freight brokers and large carriers alike. While the national retail diesel price sits at a high $5.411/gallon—acting as a rigid floor for small owner-operator rate negotiations—the wholesale rack price of diesel has cooled rapidly. This has blown out the spread between retail and wholesale diesel to a record $1.78/gallon. Large asset-based carriers purchasing fuel on wholesale cost-plus arrangements are billing out fuel surcharges based on high retail index prices while buying their fuel at deep wholesale discounts. This gap translates to an estimated 11-cent-per-mile margin improvement for these carriers.
For freight brokers, this spread creates a distinct segmentation opportunity. When sourcing capacity, brokers should recognize that large asset-based carriers are highly profitable right now and may have more flexibility on linehaul rates because their fuel margins are so strong. Conversely, small owner-operators purchasing fuel at the retail pump are feeling the full squeeze of the $5.411/gallon price and will fight aggressively for every penny on the linehaul. By steering high-volume, consistent freight toward larger contract carriers who benefit from the wholesale fuel spread, brokers can negotiate highly competitive contract rates while reserving volatile spot freight for carriers whose cost structures match the lane economics.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Keep pricing firm on westbound Texas through at least Friday; temporary weather lulls are unlikely to normalize capacity.
- Prioritize early-day pickups on Texas crossings and pad receiver appointments for afternoon deterioration.
- Use larger, wholesale-fueled fleets on detour-heavy Texas freight and reserve retail-dependent owner-operators for shorter, cleaner turns.
- On reefer freight into Georgia, secure the outbound plan before delivery because produce reload competition is absorbing capacity quickly.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a productivity-shock market, not a soft market. Total available loads are 196,027, down from 200,588, but the national average spot rate is still $3.02/mile because weather, produce, and fuel are reducing truck turns faster than demand is easing.
Posted rates are lagging real buy rates in nearly every truckload mode.
- Dry van: $2.68 posted / $2.79 paid = +$0.11
- Reefer (refrigerated): $3.12 posted / $3.40 paid = +$0.28
- Flatbed: $3.58 posted / $3.69 paid = +$0.11
- Heavy haul: $3.68 posted / $3.76 paid = +$0.08
- Specialized: $3.08 posted / $3.12 paid = +$0.04
- LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload/Partial): $1.69 posted / $1.66 paid = -$0.03
West Texas is the market’s pricing center today. Flooding along I-10 and I-20 is turning ordinary westbound freight into a routing, hours-of-service, and detention risk problem. That kind of disruption usually outlasts the weather headline.
Fuel is creating two carrier classes. With diesel at $5.411/gallon and a $1.78/gallon retail-versus-wholesale spread, bigger fleets with wholesale buying power can absorb detours and still protect margin. Retail-fuel-dependent owner-operators cannot.
Liability just moved onto the dispatch floor. With negligent hiring exposure rising and enforcement thinning, same-day carrier vetting on weather-affected loads is now part of the load-covering process, not a back-office afterthought.
📈 What the market tape is really saying
The load mix matters more than the headline total. Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized account for 145,907 of 196,027 available loads, or 74.4% of the board. That means industrial and open-deck freight are still controlling equipment positioning.
Execution is even more concentrated than availability. Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized moved 52,297 loads today, which is 81.6% of all 64,102 loads moved. That tells you the market’s energy is still flowing toward freight that is harder to route, harder to stage, and more sensitive to weather and site conditions.
A small decline in total loads does not equal easier coverage. Shippers will see 196,027 versus 200,588 and assume the market softened. That is the wrong read. Capacity narrowed geographically and operationally even if the national count dipped.
The most important spread on the board is reefer. A $0.28/mile gap between posted and paid says carriers are not selling temperature-controlled capacity off screen rates anymore. They are pricing commodity urgency, pre-cool requirements, cooling fuel burn, and reload opportunity.
LTL/Partial is your pressure-release valve. It is the only mode where paid is below posted, which means it is the cleanest place today to protect customer relationships when truckload pricing gets too expensive.
🚚 Mode-by-mode broker playbook
🚛 Dry Van
Market read: 28,185 loads, $2.68 posted, $2.79 paid.
- Van is not loose.
- It is simply less chaotic than reefer and open-deck.
- The +$0.11 spread says real trucks still need incentive beyond the board.
Best broker move: Use van for freight with clean appointments and strong backhaul logic.
- Carriers are still making decisions based on net revenue per day, not just linehaul.
- A cheap truck with bad reload odds is usually more expensive by the time service slips.
Where margin lives: Local and regional coverage.
- High diesel suppresses deadhead.
- A truck 40 miles away is worth materially more than a truck 120 miles away when the appointment is tight.
Where brokers get trapped: Quoting off posted averages and assuming replacement capacity will still be there this afternoon.
❄️ Reefer
Market read: 8,890 loads, $3.12 posted, $3.40 paid.
- This is the day’s clearest carrier-led market.
- Full summer produce is pulling equipment toward Georgia, Texas, California, South Carolina, New Jersey, and Midwest produce corridors.
Best broker move: Secure capacity before you secure comfort.
- If the shipment is time-sensitive, food-grade, or produce-adjacent, cover it early.
- Every delay increases the odds that your target truck finds a better produce sequence.
Critical details to lock before final buy rate:
- Commodity
- Temperature setpoint
- Pre-cool requirement
- Washout status
- Pallet count
- Seal process
- Appointment firmness
- Expected reload market
Where margin dies: Last-minute replacement.
- In produce season, an “available” reefer is often only available until a better produce reload appears.
🪵 Flatbed
Market read: 84,146 loads, $3.58 posted, $3.69 paid.
- Flatbed is still a high-activity, productivity-constrained market.
- The spread is only +$0.11, but the real cost driver is time loss, not just linehaul.
Best broker move: Quote the whole turn, not the loaded miles.
- Include:
- tarping
- securement time
- wet-yard delays
- crane/crew waiting
- detours around flood zones
- daylight loading limits
Best carrier type today: Dispatch-heavy fleets with routing support, especially on Texas-exposed freight.
Where brokers get hurt: Treating flatbed like van because the posted rate looks reasonable.
🏗️ Heavy Haul
Market read: 39,559 loads, $3.68 posted, $3.76 paid.
- This is still a route-feasibility market first.
- Flooding matters more here because every reroute can affect permits, bridge viability, escort timing, and travel windows.
Best broker move: Engineer the move before discussing final price.
- If route feasibility is not confirmed, your rate is theoretical.
Risk point: Permits and alternate routing in flooded regions.
- That creates invisible cost that often appears late, after the load is already committed.
⚙️ Specialized
Market read: 22,202 loads, $3.08 posted, $3.12 paid.
- Specialized is firm, not explosive.
- This is a relationship mode today, not a screen-shopping mode.
Best broker move: Use known carriers on precise freight.
- Thin spreads do not forgive vague load details.
Where brokers get hurt: Project freight with unclear loading methods, uncertain dimensions, or weak destination reloads.
📦 LTL/Partial
Market read: 13,045 loads, $1.69 posted, $1.66 paid.
- This is the one place where execution is cheaper than the screen.
- It is not “easy” capacity, but it is the best tactical lever on the desk today.
Best broker move: Convert flexible truckload freight aggressively.
- Best fit shipments:
- palletized
- dock-high
- non-urgent
- low claim risk
- limited appointment sensitivity
Strategic use: Protect truckload margin by reserving full-truck capacity for freight where failure is expensive.
🌧️ West Texas playbook: how to price and cover it today
The market is not just weather-affected; it is turn-affected.
- Flooding in Crane, Pecos, Ector, Midland, Borden, and Scurry area corridors means the real issue is stop-start productivity, not just whether the interstate is technically open.
Best timing move: Prioritize earliest pickup windows.
- Morning pickups offer the best shot at preserving same-day linehaul miles.
- Loads starting west late in the day are much more exposed to:
- hours-of-service compression
- missed appointments
- detention
- overnight resets
Quote strategy: Use short validity windows on Texas westbound freight.
- Same-day quotes should reflect routed miles, detour probability, and service-risk pricing, not a normal intrastate assumption.
Appointment strategy: Build receiver slack into the load before pickup.
- For late-day Texas crossings, 4-6 hours of timing cushion is prudent.
Carrier strategy: Use larger fleets on messy Texas freight.
- They are better positioned to handle:
- live rerouting
- multi-stop changes
- fuel flexibility
- dispatch support
- replacement driver or relay options
🛣️ Lane-specific decisions that matter today
🚛 Dallas, TX → El Paso, TX
🚚 Houston, TX → Atlanta, GA
Best read: This lane is still executable, but destination reefer competition matters.
- Delivery into Georgia is workable.
- The issue is that reefers landing there are likely to find produce reloads quickly.
Best broker posture:
- Secure destination reload logic before delivery
- Use carriers who want the Southeast, not carriers merely tolerating it
- Do not assume last-minute reefer replacement will be cheap
For dry van: Still a solid lane if appointments are clean and detention exposure is controlled.
⛽ Fuel economics: where the hidden edge is today
The diesel headline is only half the story. Retail diesel is $5.411/gallon, but the more important operating signal is the $1.78/gallon spread between retail and wholesale.
What that means in practice:
- Large fleets buying closer to wholesale can live with detours and still preserve day economics.
- Small retail-fuel buyers need stronger linehaul and tighter turns to stay whole.
- That creates a brokerage opportunity through carrier segmentation, not just negotiation.
Best freight for large fleets today:
- Texas detour-heavy freight
- Open-deck freight with route uncertainty
- Hard-appointment recovery loads
- Any lane where reload planning matters more than raw linehaul
Best freight for owner-operators today:
- Shorter clean turns
- Local van
- Regional flatbed with minimal reroute risk
- Predefined reload freight with low deadhead
Smart brokerage behavior: Do not try to buy all trucks the same way in a split-cost market.
- The fleet with fuel advantage is often the cheapest reliable option on a hard lane.
- The owner-operator is often the better fit on a clean short-haul where flexibility matters.
⚖️ Compliance and liability: today’s non-negotiables
Negligent-selection exposure is now highest on urgent, weather-affected tenders.
- Plaintiffs will care what was known at the time of dispatch, not what was in a stale onboarding file.
Minimum same-day file standard for flood-affected loads:
- Active operating authority
- Current insurance verification
- Current safety review
- Documented route/weather acknowledgement
- Rate confirmation reflecting reroute, detention, layover, and redelivery assumptions
- Timestamped communication showing same-day review
Best operational rule: The faster the load needs to move, the stricter the vetting should become.
- Urgency is where discipline usually breaks.
- That is now the highest-liability part of brokerage operations.
Carrier red flags that should slow or stop coverage:
- Insurance mismatch
- Authority anomalies
- Last-minute identity or payment changes
- Unwillingness to acknowledge route conditions
- Vague dispatch contact structure on weather-impacted lanes
Best broker defense: A complete, time-stamped load file.
- In today’s environment, documentation is not clerical.
- It is part of risk-adjusted margin protection.
🧠 Shipper and carrier psychology: how to win the conversation
What shippers are likely thinking: “Load counts are slightly down, so rates should ease.”
- Correct response: Capacity is available, but executable capacity is tighter than the board suggests because flood reroutes and produce reloads are reducing truck productivity.
What carriers are thinking: “Will this load ruin my day?”
- Their silent checklist is:
- How far is the deadhead?
- Will I load on time?
- Is there weather risk?
- What happens if I miss the receiver?
- Can I reload well after delivery?
Best customer framing today:
- “We are not buying visibility on the board; we are buying execution in a disrupted network.”
Best carrier framing today:
- Lead with:
- exact pickup time
- exact delivery time
- commodity
- weight
- weather notes
- detention terms
- reload logic
- In a tight market, precision beats persuasion.
📋 Pricing posture for the next 24–72 hours
Dry van: Firm-to-firmer
- Expect pricing discipline, especially where reload certainty is weak.
Reefer: Still the strongest carrier market
- Produce season plus Georgia/Texas activity keeps replacement cost high.
Flatbed: Tight and operationally expensive
- Even if posted rates look stable, turn loss can reprice a load fast.
Heavy haul: Stable-to-firmer where route engineering gets harder
- Weather and permit friction remain the key swing factor.
LTL/Partial: Most useful relief option
- Best place to preserve customer goodwill when truckload pricing outruns budget.
Probability-weighted view:
- 55% — Texas premiums stay firm through Friday
- 30% — Morning weather lulls create false confidence, followed by afternoon repricing
- 15% — Conditions improve locally, but equipment remains out of position and pricing stays elevated anyway
🕒 Today’s highest-return operating cadence
Before 10 AM
- Cover reefer, open-deck, and Texas-exposed freight first
- Call core pre-vetted carriers before broad posting
- Reprice customer quotes off paid averages, not posted screens
10 AM to 2 PM
- Audit all West Texas loads for appointment slack
- Convert flexible freight into LTL/Partial where service allows
- Secure outbound plan for any reefer delivering into Georgia or other produce markets
After 2 PM
- Stop selling morning assumptions on westbound Texas freight
- Expect detention and service-risk conversations to rise
- Tighten check-call frequency on loads crossing I-10 and I-20 corridors
By end of day
- Lock tomorrow morning’s priority freight tonight
- Clean up all same-day carrier files for weather-affected tenders
- Review any open-deck load quoted on linehaul only and rework it for full-turn economics
✅ Best broker moves right now
- Price truckload off paid reality, not posted optimism.
- Use LTL/Partial as a tactical escape valve for flexible freight.
- Keep westbound Texas pricing firm and quote on short validity.
- Assign detour-heavy freight to larger wholesale-fueled fleets.
- Reserve owner-operators for shorter, cleaner, lower-deadhead turns.
- Treat reefer replacement as expensive from the start, not as a later surprise.
- Build same-day vetting and route acknowledgement into every weather-affected load file.
- Sell customers on execution certainty and replacement-cost risk, not just linehaul numbers.
🏁 Bottom line
- The market is firmer than the top-line load count suggests.
- Texas weather is reducing productivity enough to create a multi-day pricing event.
- Reefer remains the clearest premium mode.
- Open-deck freight is still steering truck positioning nationwide.
- Fuel economics favor bigger fleets on messy freight.
- LTL/Partial is the cleanest margin-protection tool on the board.
- The brokers who win today will cover earlier, document better, and match each load to the right carrier cost structure—not just the lowest visible rate.
💡 Tony's Tip
Please set up multi-factor authentication (MFA) on your ETA email account this week.
Visit
https://aka.ms/mfasetup to get started.
Text Tony at 205-876-3715 if you have any issues.
Also, please note, you should be using
https://freightmap.remote.etaagencyinc.com for google maps lookups so we dont get rate limited by Google.
You can check routes on the operations panel on the left via the red Check Route button.
📅 This Day in History
1326: The Treaty of Novgorod delineates borders between Russia and Norway in Finnmark.
2012: A plane carrying 153 people crashes in a residential neighborhood in Lagos, Nigeria, killing everyone on board plus six people on the ground.
2025: Reconstitution of the Academy of the Distrustful in the Sala Dalmases of the Historical Archive of the City of Barcelona in Barcelona.
💭 Quote of the Day
"Be a good animal, true to your instincts."
— D. H. Lawrence