freightkidd
494 posts

freightkidd
@freightkidd
freight tech afficianado. head of product at Alvys. CDL A driver. opinions my own.




@FreightAlley Yeah I'm a broker, somehow my x account (@Tstrang83) got hacked and I'm locked out so miss interacting with Freightx. Have some out of Waterloo to cover that i actually dropped some big rates on (what seemed like big rates lol) and crickets. St. Louis has been tough today too.



We're now several months into the ELP, non-domicile CDL, and trucking immigration policy shifts. I know that a lot of folks are talking about potential impacts and sizing the population of drivers that could be removed from the market. That being said, the impact thus far can best be described as nearly nonexistent. Rates are outpacing prior year by a few pennies. Some carriers have left the market, but not a bunch. There have been a few thousand OOS violations. Highway safety and crash data hasn't shown any marginal improvement. I genuinely wonder how long we need to wait to see significant impacts before starting to question whether the actual size of this problem was much smaller than some have claimed.

Broker gross margin update for October 2025 GM per Load: $208.25 (-$7.28 MoM) GM Percent: 11.58% (-57bps MoM) Length of Haul: 713 (+9 MoM) Sample size: 1.2m loads from 440 companies As an added note to this month's data, 12% is generally considered the minimum gross margin percentage for a brokerage to run profitability over the long term. The industry as a whole running at these average margin levels without a commensurate increase in volume is a perilous place to be for any significant length of time.





FreightX knows what’s going on









Carroll Fulmer cites its closure to ongoing litigation, but also cites broader economic pressures and the instability of the post-COVID years. This was a 71-year-old company with deep roots in the industry. You don’t endure for that long without competent leadership and operational resilience. To suggest this is solely about lawsuits oversimplifies a far more complex, and troubling, shift. We see it. We feel it. We ALL know what the shift is. Industry power players are no longer standing behind the very carriers they once championed. It’s heartbreaking. And it’s infuriating.







