Introduction
Raddy Velkov, Senior Vice President, Carrier Sales & Strategy
This inaugural BlueGrace Monthly Freight Market Update is designed to ground market conversations in data, not headlines. As we move through February 2026, freight demand remains structurally soft, with truckload tonnage flat to down and shipment volumes continuing to trail retail activity. At the same time, recent winter weather has reinforced how sensitive the freight network has become to disruption, making outcomes increasingly dependent on timing, execution, and network balance rather than broad demand strength.
Several signals stand out this month. Spot load activity remains elevated on a month-over-month and year-over-year basis, even as week-over-week trends eased in mid-January following post-holiday normalization. Winter storms across key freight corridors temporarily tightened effective capacity, exposing how quickly networks can tip during disruption. Load-to-truck ratios remain materially tighter than both month-over-month and year-over-year levels in weather-impacted and capacity-constrained lanes. This underscores the market’s fragility and its continued sensitivity to weather and operational friction in an environment with limited slack. Contract pricing continues to hold despite muted volume, while freight spend has not declined in line with shipments, indicating rising cost per move driven by execution friction, accessorial exposure, and recovery-related spot usage. Refrigerated markets remain particularly sensitive as seasonal demand and winter conditions continue to pull capacity from adjacent van lanes
These conditions should not be mistaken for a broad market recovery, but they also should not be dismissed as noise. Weather-driven tightness is not a contradiction to the broader demand picture. It is evidence of how little margin for error exists in today’s network. In a soft demand environment, even short-lived disruption can create outsized pricing and service impacts when capacity is unevenly positioned and operational slack is limited.
The first half of this report focuses on these core freight indicators, paired with my commentary on what they signal for carrier leverage, pricing behavior, and near-term risk. The second half brings together insights from BlueGrace subject matter experts across truckload, LTL, parcel, drayage, and cross-border freight, translating market conditions into mode-specific implications for the month ahead.
What follows is a detailed breakdown of the data shaping freight conditions today. Each section highlights where risk is building, where opportunity exists, and how execution decisions can materially influence cost and service outcomes in the weeks ahead. As we progress through the first quarter, inventory behavior and restocking timing remain the most credible catalysts to watch for a meaningful shift in freight demand. We invite you to use this perspective to guide planning and carrier conversations throughout February and beyond.