π Daily Market Intelligence Report
Friday, June 19, 2026
7:00 AM CST
π Top-Line Summary
On Friday, June 19, 2026, the domestic spot market remains highly active with 168,187 available loads, while the national average rate holds steady at $2.98/mile. High operating costs persist as the national AAA diesel average is verified at $5.095/gallon, establishing a rigid cost floor that limits carrier deadhead and keeps capacity highly localized. Peak summer produce harvests in the Southeast, California, and Midwest are driving intense temperature-controlled demand, while severe flash flooding in Texas, Oklahoma, and the Midwest disrupts major transit corridors like I-20, I-44, and I-80. For freight brokers, these regional capacity imbalances, combined with a widening spread between posted and paid rates across flatbed, reefer, and dry van sectors, present high-margin arbitrage opportunities.
Insight
Weather-driven dislocation will likely outlast today's rain
Flood-related service failures in Texas, Oklahoma, and parts of the Midwest are unlikely to convert into cheaper weekend coverage. West Texas and Oklahoma turn drier into Saturday, but the first effect is late-arriving trucks getting pulled into premium reloads rather than flowing back into the open market. Along the Gulf Coast, repeated thunderstorms through Sunday keep I-10 transit times uneven, setting up firmer Monday spot quotes on freight that needs weekend recovery.
β½ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
π¦οΈ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Flash Flood Warning (Southwest States (TX, OK)): Heavy rainfall and localized flooding may disrupt transit along the I-20 and I-44 corridors, potentially delaying regional freight and tightening short-term capacity.
- River Flood Warning (Gulf Coast States (LA, MS, AL, FL, TX)): Minor flooding near major freight lanes like the I-10 corridor could cause localized routing delays and require carriers to take detours, impacting transit times.
- Midwest River Flooding (Midwest States (IL, IN, IA, MO)): Elevated river levels and lowland flooding near major Midwest corridors (I-80, I-74) pose ongoing risks of localized detours and could slow down open-deck and dry van movements.
- Northeast River Flooding (Vermont (VT, Orleans County)): Minor flooding on local roads like Maple Street and River Road may cause minor delays for regional delivery trucks in northern Vermont.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Texas and Oklahoma face a rolling disruption pattern
The Southwest event looks less like a one-day shutdown and more like a rolling 72-hour service problem. Friday flooding will disrupt linehaul and recovery on I-20 and I-44, Texas improves over the weekend, and Oklahoma turns unsettled again early next week, which limits confidence on reload timing even after today's water recedes.
- Expect the worst slippage on same-day pickups and relay schedules tied to western Texas and southern Oklahoma.
- Weekend reopening in Texas should free some equipment, but Monday-Tuesday storm chances in Oklahoma argue for extra buffer on northbound and eastbound commitments.
Weather Insight
Midwest flood risk re-intensifies Sunday
Illinois, Iowa, and Missouri get a workable loading window through Saturday before a Sunday rain event renews pressure near I-80, I-74, and river-adjacent secondary roads. The biggest exposure is in flatbed and heavy haul, where per mits, escorts, jobsite access, and county-road detours can lose more time than interstate dry van freight.
- Friday-Saturday is the cleanest window for open-deck pickups into central Illinois and eastern Iowa.
- Monday appointments should carry more transit cushion even where mainline interstate traffic stays open.
π° Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Diesel futures remain volatile but are trading in a slightly lower range, suggesting eventual relief for carriers, though immediate retail prices remain high.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small fleets and owner-operators continue to face severe cash flow pressure due to high operating costs and sticky diesel prices, driving ongoing market consolidation.
- Economic Indicators: Retail inventory replenishment and peak agricultural harvests are driving strong seasonal demand, offsetting broader macroeconomic headwinds.
π° Impactful News Analysis
-
FMCSA's MOTUS Platform Modernizes Registration and Targets Fraud π:
The rollout of the FMCSA's new MOTUS platform (ALERT_2) represents a major structural shift aimed at eliminating 'chameleon' carriers and identity theft. While this is a positive step for industry security, the transition is causing short-term friction. Many small carriers and owner-operators are struggling with identity verification and system connectivity, leading to administrative delays and temporary capacity sidelining. Brokers must prepare for a more highly regulated, transparent, but potentially smaller carrier pool, making strong carrier relationships and proactive compliance monitoring more critical than ever.
-
Florida Semi-Truck Crash Lawsuit Intensifies Broker Liability Concerns π:
A high-profile lawsuit in Florida (ALERT_3), following recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings on negligent hiring, is putting a spotlight on freight broker responsibility and carrier safety. This case is reshaping how brokers vet carriers, as they face increased legal exposure if they hire carriers with poor safety records. Brokers must implement rigorous, multi-layered carrier vetting protocols and avoid relying solely on basic FMCSA 'active' status. This legal environment is shrinking the usable carrier pool, as brokers blacklist carriers with marginal safety ratings, which could increase insurance costs and create sourcing challenges.
-
TIA Pushes FMCSA to Blacklist High-Risk Owner-Operators π:
The Transportation Intermediaries Association (TIA) is actively urging the FMCSA to blacklist high-risk owner-operators (ALERT_6). This aggressive stance on carrier safety and fraud prevention underscores the growing pressure on brokers to maintain clean, compliant carrier networks. Brokers should proactively monitor their carrier databases for red flags, such as recent authority changes or safety violations, to mitigate risk and ensure compliance with evolving industry standards.
-
Logistics Market Undergoing a 'Structural Reset' Amid Volatility π:
The CSCMP's Annual State of Logistics Report (BREAKING_1) highlights that supply chain managers and brokers must view disruption and volatility as the norm rather than the exception. Tariff complexity, geopolitical uncertainty, and structural shifts are redefining freight flows. For brokers, this means that static pricing models are obsolete; success requires real-time market intelligence, flexible sourcing strategies, and the ability to quickly adapt to regional capacity imbalances.
News Insight
Compliance friction is becoming a same-day capacity issue
Registration modernization and tighter safety scrutiny are now affecting execution, not just back-office workflows. Carriers with unresolved identity, authority, or safety questions are taking longer to clear onboarding, which shrinks the usable spot pool even when posted truck counts appear healthy. On produce, port, and weekend recovery freight, the premium is increasingly attached to carriers that are already approved and recently active rather than to the lowest bid on the board.
πΊοΈ Regional & Lane Analysis
π Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast is currently the most strategically important region for freight brokers, driven by the collision of peak summer produce harvests and strong import volumes. Reefer capacity is exceptionally tight, commanding significant rate premiums, while dry van capacity is firming near major transit hubs like Atlanta and Savannah. High diesel prices ($5.095/gal) are keeping capacity highly localized, as carriers resist deadheading long distances without guaranteed high-paying outbound freight.
π£οΈ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA β Miami, FL: This high-volume corridor is experiencing strong seasonal demand as retail goods and consumer products move south into Florida, while reefers look to reposition back into Georgia and South Carolina for produce. Dry van capacity is relatively balanced but rates are firming due to high fuel costs. Reefer capacity is tight outbound from Atlanta but loosens significantly upon arrival in Miami, where outbound freight is limited.
Jacksonville, FL β Nashville, TN: This lane serves as a critical link between the Florida peninsula and the Midwest/Southeast transit hubs. Volume is robust, driven by imported goods moving out of Florida ports and regional agricultural shipments. Capacity is moderately tight as carriers prefer shorter, high-paying regional runs over long-haul transcontinental routes in the current high-fuel environment.
Regional Insight
Southeast reefer tightness is being amplified by reload economics
Produce volume is only part of the squeeze. Georgia and South Carolina harvests are pulling reefers back toward inland packing sheds, which is why Florida delivery markets remain soft on the return leg but still expensive outbound from Atlanta and Jacksonville. The best margin play is to buy the roundtrip early: once a truck empties in Miami or central Florida, its next quote is usually anchored to how quickly it can get back into the Georgia-Carolinas harvest belt.
π° Breaking Down: Broker Liability and the Florida Semi-Truck Crash Lawsuit
The recent Florida semi-truck crash lawsuit (ALERT_3) represents a critical turning point for the freight brokerage industry, intensifying concerns over broker liability and carrier vetting. Following the U.S. Supreme Court's refusal to hear appeals on negligent hiring claims (such as Montgomery v. Caribe Transport II), the legal landscape has shifted dramatically. Brokers can no longer rely on basic FMCSA 'active' status as a shield against liability. If a broker hires a carrier with a poor safety record, conditional authority, or unresolved violations, and that carrier is involved in a serious accident, the broker can be held directly liable for negligent hiring.
This legal environment is forcing a massive operational shift. Brokers must implement rigorous, multi-layered carrier vetting protocols, utilizing advanced monitoring tools to track carrier safety ratings, SMS scores, and compliance history in real time. This strict vetting is shrinking the usable carrier pool, as brokers proactively blacklist carriers with marginal safety records. While this reduces risk, it also increases sourcing challenges and insurance costs, particularly in tight regional markets.
For ETA's brokerage operations, this is both a challenge and an opportunity. Brokers should use this as a key talking point with shippers, positioning ETA's rigorous vetting standards as a premium service that protects the shipper's brand and supply chain from legal exposure. By demonstrating a commitment to hiring only the safest, most compliant carriers, ETA can justify higher margins and secure preferred-broker status with risk-averse corporate shippers.
π Analyzing Today's Load Board: Rate Spreads and Volume Shifts
Today's real-time load board data reveals a highly active but stabilizing spot market, with total available loads standing at 168,187βa minor 0.1% increase overnight from 167,975, but a notable decline from 182,590 a week ago. This stabilization suggests that the early-June volume surge has leveled off, but capacity remains tight enough to maintain significant carrier leverage across key equipment types. The spread between posted and paid rates is the most critical metric for brokers today, as it highlights where carriers are successfully demanding premiums and where brokers have room to negotiate.
Flatbeds continue to dominate the load board with 70,748 available loads, representing over 42% of total market volume. Despite a 2.9% overnight decline in available flatbed loads, the rate spread remains wide, with an average posted rate of $3.48/mile and an average paid rate of $3.68/mileβa $0.20/mile carrier premium. This indicates that open-deck capacity remains highly constrained, driven by peak summer construction and regional flooding disruptions in the Midwest and South that have trapped equipment and forced lengthy detours.
Reefers show the most intense rate pressure, with available loads rising 4.0% overnight to 8,287. The reefer rate spread has expanded to $0.23/mile ($3.03 posted vs $3.26 paid), reflecting the urgent, time-sensitive nature of the peak summer produce harvest. Dry vans maintain a steady $0.17/mile spread ($2.52 posted vs $2.69 paid) on 24,147 available loads. These wide spreads represent clear arbitrage opportunities for brokers. By understanding these regional and equipment-specific dynamics, brokers can identify lanes where capacity is mispriced and negotiate more favorable rates with carriers who are looking to reposition.
π§ The Compliance Squeeze: MOTUS and the Fight Against Fraud
The rollout of the FMCSA's new MOTUS registration and identity management platform (ALERT_
- , combined with the Transportation Intermediaries Association's (TIA) push to blacklist high-risk owner-operators (ALERT_
- , is creating a 'compliance squeeze' that is reshaping carrier dynamics. MOTUS is designed to modernize compliance, target fraud, and eliminate 'chameleon' carriers by centralizing registrations and requiring strict identity verification. While this is a much-needed step to combat double-brokering and cargo theft, the transition is causing significant short-term friction in the carrier market.
Many small fleets and owner-operators are struggling with the administrative hurdles of the MOTUS platform, including identity verification failures and DOT number connection issues. This is leading to delays in updating MCS-150 filings and managing operating authority, temporarily sidelining some capacity as carriers work through compliance issues. At the same time, the TIA's push to blacklist high-risk operators is raising the compliance threshold, making brokers much more cautious about who they onboard.
For brokers, this compliance squeeze means that carrier relations and proactive monitoring are more critical than ever. Brokers must be prepared for potential capacity disruptions as carriers navigate the MOTUS transition. However, this also provides an opportunity to strengthen relationships with highly compliant, professional carriers. By helping trusted carriers understand and navigate these new regulatory requirements, brokers can secure reliable capacity and insulate their operations from the fraud risks that continue to plague the spot market
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Buy Monday Southeast reefer coverage today; weekend reloads will keep carriers priced for return-to-origin speed.
- Use Saturday as the cleanest recovery window for Texas and Midwest freight before Oklahoma and central Midwest weather turns less reliable again.
- Package Florida headhaul and backhaul together to lower all-in cost on Atlanta and Jacksonville lanes.
- Treat pre-approved carriers as premium capacity; onboarding friction is now directly affecting same-day coverage.
π Executive Signal Summary
This is a broker-opportunity market only if you buy early and sell reality. The headline looks calm at 168,187 total available loads and a $2.98/mile national average, but the executable market is firmer than the average suggests.
Every tracked mode is still paying above posted. That is the most important signal on the board today:
- Van: $2.52 posted / $2.69 paid = +$0.17/mile
- Reefer: $3.03 posted / $3.26 paid = +$0.23/mile
- Flatbed: $3.48 posted / $3.68 paid = +$0.20/mile
- Heavy haul: $3.64 posted / $3.86 paid = +$0.22/mile
- Specialized: $3.09 posted / $3.17 paid = +$0.08/mile
- LTL (Less Than Truckload)/Partial: $1.63 posted / $1.72 paid = +$0.09/mile
Open-deck still controls truck positioning. Flatbed + heavy haul + specialized = 123,457 loads, which is 73.4% of all available freight. Those same segments account for 42,692 moved loads, or 82.9% of all freight moved so far. If you misread open-deck, you misread the day.
Diesel at $5.095/gallon remains a hard behavioral floor. Carriers are still pricing reload certainty, not just linehaul miles. The nearest usable truck is often cheaper than the cheapest truck on the board.
Weather is a turn-destruction problem, not just a delay problem. Texas, Oklahoma, the Gulf Coast, and parts of the Midwest are creating a rolling service disruption that will likely tighten Monday coverage more than it helps weekend buying.
Compliance is now same-day capacity. MOTUS friction, negligent-hiring exposure, and tighter safety screening are shrinking the usable truck pool faster than the posted truck count suggests.
π§ What the market is really saying
Top-line stability is masking lower productivity.
- Total loads are only +0.1% versus yesterday, but loads moved are 51,519, down from 52,668 yesterday.
- That matters because slower truck turns usually show up later as replacement-cost inflation, especially on same-day freight and Monday morning reloads.
The blended rate is flat, but the market is not loose.
- The national average is $2.98/mile, down from $3.03 yesterday and $3.02 a week ago.
- At the same time, paid rates remain above posted in every mode.
- That combination usually means mix shift and execution friction, not excess capacity.
Volume is softer than earlier in the month, but not easier to cover.
- Total loads are down from 182,590 a week ago and 208,609 a month ago.
- So yes, the market is carrying less freight than earlier checkpoints.
- But with diesel high, produce active, and weather hurting productivity, usable capacity is tighter than raw volume suggests.
Carrier psychology is highly local right now.
Carriers are asking:
- What is my reload?
- How much unpaid time is hiding in this load?
- Will weather wreck my next turn?
- Am I getting pulled into a better premium lane after delivery?
Shipper psychology is the likely trap today.
Many customers will hear βstable national averageβ and expect unchanged pricing. That is the wrong read in:
- Reefer
- Flatbed
- Heavy haul
- Regional van near ports, retail hubs, and weather-exposed corridors
π Best mode-by-mode broker plays today
π¦ Dry Van: No longer the safe cheap option
What the numbers say:
- 24,147 loads
- $2.52 posted / $2.69 paid
- +$0.17/mile carrier premium
What it means:
- Van capacity is not broken nationally, but it is tight enough in the right lanes to punish lazy quoting.
- That spread is wide enough to tell you that posted rates are not clearing reliably in many outbound markets.
What to do today:
- Pre-cover Southeast and port-adjacent outbound van freight before lunch
- Shorten quote validity windows
- Use carriers already in position instead of shopping for a theoretical cheaper truck
- Build Monday recovery pricing into Gulf and Texas freight quoted today
Where margin is won:
- Not by squeezing linehaul pennies
- By reducing:
- dwell
- missed appointments
- bad reload geography
- same-day replacement cost
π§ Reefer: The strongest premium market with the clearest urgency
What the numbers say:
- 8,287 loads
- $3.03 posted / $3.26 paid
- +$0.23/mile carrier premium
What it means:
- Reefer is still the clearest premium-first mode on the board.
- Peak summer produce in California, Georgia, South Carolina, Texas, New Jersey, Michigan, Missouri, and Illinois is keeping the pressure on.
- The key is that this is not just a produce story; it is also a reload geometry story.
What to do today:
- Buy Monday Southeast reefer coverage today
- Package Florida deliveries with return-to-origin or return-to-produce-belt reload visibility
- Require commodity, temperature, pre-cool status, shipper load time, and receiver appointment flexibility before posting
- Favor carriers with recent activity in produce regions over unfamiliar low bidders
Why the spread matters:
- A +$0.23/mile gap is about $115 on a 500-mile load before detention, lumper issues, or claims risk.
- If you sell reefer off posted-rate hope, you are likely selling a margin hole.
Best tactical angle:
- Roundtrip buying beats one-way buying
- The truck that delivers in Florida is already thinking about how fast it can get back to Georgia or the Carolinas
πͺ΅ Flatbed: Still the center of gravity
What the numbers say:
- 70,748 loads
- $3.48 posted / $3.68 paid
- +$0.20/mile carrier premium
What it means:
- Flatbed remains the biggest volume mode and the biggest source of hidden execution loss.
- Flooding in Texas and the Midwest is not just causing reroutes; it is trapping equipment, slowing jobsites, and disrupting first-mile access.
What to do today:
- Quote routed miles, not ideal miles
- Verify tarp requirements, securement, loading equipment, and site accessibility before posting
- Use Friday and Saturday as the cleaner pickup window into central Illinois and eastern Iowa
- Protect Monday appointments with extra transit buffer
Margin truth:
- On a 500-mile move, the spread is roughly $100
- But the bigger risk is underpricing:
- detours
- jobsite delay
- county-road access problems
- weather-related layover
What the numbers say:
- 33,097 loads
- $3.64 posted / $3.86 paid
- +$0.22/mile carrier premium
What it means:
- Heavy haul is nearly as tight as reefer on spread, but with much less forgiveness.
- Flood warnings in Illinois, Indiana, and Texas raise the risk around:
- permits
- escorts
- routing
- delivery-site access
What to do today:
- Do not quote from dimensions alone
- Validate axle count, permit lead time, route, escorts, and site conditions
- Use pre-approved carriers first
- Add schedule cushion before promising firm appointment compliance
Practical rule:
- If the customer is still asking for a fast quote before giving full scope, you are being asked to absorb their uncertainty
βοΈ Specialized: The most relationship-driven mode on the board today
What the numbers say:
- 19,612 loads
- $3.09 posted / $3.17 paid
- +$0.08/mile carrier premium
What it means:
- This is the least explosive spread among premium modes, which makes specialized one of the more tradable segments if you have the right carrier base already approved.
- That smaller spread does not mean cheap freight. It means capacity is being priced more rationally among known players.
What to do today:
- Lean on existing carrier relationships
- Quote only after full scope confirmation
- Use specialized as a margin-defense mode, not a speed-to-post mode
π¦ LTL/Partial: A real opportunity, but use it strategically
What the numbers say:
- 12,296 loads
- $1.63 posted / $1.72 paid
- +$0.09/mile carrier premium
- +12.8% volume jump overnight
What it means:
- Shippers are actively shifting freight into partials to avoid full truckload pain.
- This is less about cheap transportation and more about budget control and shipment flexibility.
What to do today:
- Offer partial consolidation to customers with flexible appointments
- Use LTL/partial as a pressure-release valve for truckload procurement
- Target dense metro pairs and repeat customer freight where consolidation is operationally realistic
Broker edge:
- The broker who can convert a marginal truckload into a clean partial solution can protect customer relationships and preserve truckload margin elsewhere
πΊοΈ Highest-value regional moves for the next 24β72 hours
π΄ Southeast: Still the cleanest urgency market
Why it matters:
- Produce plus import flow is keeping both reefer and regional van firm.
- OTRI (Outbound Tender Rejection Index) rising in the Southeast means contract freight is still leaking into spot.
Best broker posture:
- Buy capacity before the market gets to Monday pricing
- Sell certainty, not cheapness
- Position inbound loads into Georgia and the Carolinas to secure better outbound reefer options
π΄ Atlanta, GA β Miami, FL: Treat it as a two-load cycle
What is happening:
- Southbound demand is strong enough to keep pricing firm.
- The real negotiation lever is the truckβs next move after Florida delivery.
Best broker posture:
- Package the southbound with a northbound or produce-belt reposition
- Do not buy this lane one-way unless your customer margin is already protected
- Use weekend scheduling to lock the full cycle, not just the outbound
π Jacksonville, FL β Nashville, TN: Reload visibility is the deal
What is happening:
- Good lane, but carriers still favor shorter premium regional turns when fuel is this high.
- Coverage improves materially when the truck can see a second move into Atlanta, the Carolinas, or the lower Midwest.
Best broker posture:
- Sell the second move while negotiating the first
- Use this lane to anchor mini-networks, not single transactions
π§οΈ Texas and Oklahoma: Weekend recovery, then renewed uncertainty
What is happening:
- Severe flash flooding this morning is disrupting I-20 and I-44 patterns.
- Texas should improve first, but that does not mean open capacity returns to the board.
- The first recovered trucks often get absorbed into premium reloads.
Best broker posture:
- Expect same-day pickup failures and relay disruption
- Use Saturday as the better recovery window
- Quote Monday and Tuesday northbound/eastbound freight with extra buffer due to Oklahoma uncertainty
π Midwest open-deck corridors: Friday-Saturday are better than Monday
What is happening:
- Central Illinois and eastern Iowa get a better loading window before Sunday rain renews flood pressure near I-80 and I-74.
- Flatbed and heavy haul will feel this harder than van because site access, permits, and escorts amplify delay.
Best broker posture:
- Advance open-deck pickups where possible
- Add appointment cushion to Monday deliveries
- Double-check county-road and plant access before dispatch
π©οΈ Gulf Coast I-10 corridor: Quote it like a service exception
What is happening:
- Repeated thunderstorms through Sunday keep transit inconsistent along I-10.
- This is less about total shutdown and more about unreliable turn times.
Best broker posture:
- Protect ETAs (estimated times of arrival)
- Build disruption language into customer updates
- Prioritize freight that truly must move over freight that can slide a day
π΅ Pricing and negotiation posture that wins today
With shippers:
- Use paid-rate reality, not posted-rate theory
- Separate linehaul from disruption cost
- Shorten quote validity
- Frame vetted carrier selection as risk protection, not just procurement
With carriers:
- Lead with reload visibility
- Sell clean turns: honest appointments, known access, realistic dwell
- Use your already-approved carriers as premium capacity
- Stop negotiating as if lower diesel futures already changed todayβs pump price
With your own team:
- Push earlier buy decisions
- Escalate weather-exposed freight before it becomes service recovery freight
- Require scope completeness on flatbed, heavy haul, and reefer before posting
π‘οΈ Risk controls that matter most today
Carrier selection risk:
- Verify authority
- Verify insurance
- Verify identity
- Verify safety profile
- Document who accepted the load and what equipment is actually assigned
Reefer risk:
- Confirm commodity
- Confirm temperature
- Confirm pre-cool
- Confirm pickup timing
- Confirm receiver tolerance if weather forces a reroute
Open-deck risk:
- Confirm tarp and securement needs
- Confirm load method and unload method
- Confirm jobsite or plant access
- Confirm whether county-road detours affect legal routing
Margin risk:
- Do not give away detention
- Do not promise βnormal transitβ through unstable corridors
- Do not assume posted rate equals executable buy rate
π Probability map for the next 24β72 hours
Base case β 55%
- Van stays tradable but firm
- Reefer remains premium through the weekend
- Flatbed and heavy haul stay carrier-led
- Texas improves faster than Oklahoma
- Monday pricing opens firmer in Southeast and Gulf recovery lanes
Stress case β 30%
- Flood-related delays linger longer
- More missed appointments create replacement freight
- Reefer and open-deck paid rates widen further from posted
- Usable carrier pool tightens because onboarding and compliance slow same-day execution
Opportunity case β 15%
- Saturday becomes a clean recovery day
- You capture margin by pairing Florida outbounds with return freight
- You win service-sensitive freight by using pre-vetted carriers faster than competitors
β
Todayβs priority stack
Stop using posted rates as your working buy number
- Paid rates exceed posted in every tracked mode.
Buy Southeast reefer and regional van capacity early
- Monday coverage will likely price firmer than it looks this morning.
Use Saturday as a recovery window
- Especially for Texas and Midwest freight before weather risk re-intensifies.
Turn Florida into roundtrip freight
- Margin protection is in the reload, not the southbound alone.
Scope all open-deck freight before posting
- Routing, access, permits, tarp, securement, and unload method first.
Sell LTL/partial as a strategic alternative
- Especially to customers trying to escape high truckload replacement cost.
Treat pre-approved carriers as premium inventory
- Compliance speed is now a sourcing advantage.
Protect ETAs across flood-exposed corridors
- The missed-appointment cost will outrun the rate discussion if you ignore it.
π Bottom line
The board is stable. The market is not easy.
Todayβs winners will not be the brokers who chase the lowest posted truck. They will be the brokers who:
- buy earlier
- price with reload logic
- use vetted carriers faster
- package one-way freight into cycles
- protect transit promises before weather and compliance friction turn into replacement freight
The best money today is in Southeast reefer, disciplined open-deck quoting, Florida roundtrip structuring, and proactive recovery planning for Texas/Midwest weather disruption.
π‘ 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.
π
This Day in History
1785: The Boston King's Chapel adopts James Freeman's revised prayer book, without the Nicene Creed, establishing it as the first Unitarian congregation in the United States.
1943: The Philadelphia Eagles and Pittsburgh Steelers of the NFL merge for one season due to player shortages caused by World War II.
1990: The current international law defending indigenous peoples, Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention, 1989, is ratified for the first time by Norway.
π Quote of the Day
"The ability to hold two competing thoughts in one's mind and still be able to function is the mark of a superior mind."
β F. Scott Fitzgerald