๐ Daily Market Intelligence Report
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
7:00 AM CST
๐ Top-Line Summary
The spot market has erupted today with a massive 22.4% volume surge to 184,923 available loads, colliding directly with severe capacity constraints driven by CVSA Roadcheck week and punishing fuel costs. The most critical development is in the temperature-controlled sector, where overlapping southern produce harvests and late-season Northeast freeze events have handed carriers immense leverage, resulting in a staggering $0.32/mile premium over posted rates. With the national diesel average sitting at a painful $5.644/gallon, carriers are aggressively shrinking deadhead radiuses and rejecting cheap freight. Brokers must be prepared to pay significant premiums to secure reliable capacity, particularly for specialized, flatbed, and reefer freight moving through flood-impacted corridors in the South and Midwest.
โฝ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe River Flooding (Louisiana and Mississippi (LA, MS)): Minor to moderate flooding is occurring along the Vermilion and Calcasieu rivers, threatening the I-10 and I-59 corridors. This is expected to cause significant routing delays, trap open-deck capacity, and drive up rates for freight moving through the Deep South.
- Late-Season Freeze Warning (New York and Pennsylvania (NY, PA)): Sub-freezing temperatures in the upper 20s are impacting the I-90 and I-84 corridors. This is sustaining urgent Protect From Freeze (PFF) requirements, severely tightening reefer capacity in the Northeast and driving massive rate premiums.
- Midwest River Flooding (Indiana and Illinois (IN, IL)): Flooding along the White River continues to impact low bottomlands and state roads. This ongoing event is fracturing regional routing and trapping flatbed capacity in the Midwest agricultural and industrial sectors.
- Extreme Heat Warning (Arizona (AZ, Maricopa County)): Dangerously hot conditions with temperatures up to 108 degrees in the Phoenix metro area. This poses a risk of equipment breakdowns, tire blowouts, and increased strain on reefer units moving through the Southwest.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Dry Weather Will Not End Gulf Flood Friction Quickly
Louisiana and Mississippi turn mostly dry through midweek, but river flooding typically outlasts the rain event by several days. That means low-lying access roads, local detours, and uneven transit times around the I-10 and I-59 network can per sist even as conditions look benign on the surface, keeping flatbed and specialized capacity cautious rather than inviting it back immediately.
Weather Insight
Northeast Freeze Pressure Looks Front-Loaded
The reefer squeeze tied to the New York and Pennsylvania freeze is most acute on freight tendering today and tonight, when Protect From Freeze demand still competes directly with produce for the same trailer pool. Broader state forecasts warm by Wednesday before rain arrives Thursday, so the sharpest PFF premium likely peaks in the next 24 hours rather than stretching evenly across the week.
๐ฐ Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Global energy market volatility continues to drive diesel prices upward, with geopolitical tensions ensuring fuel costs will remain a primary inflationary pressure on freight rates in the near term.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small to mid-sized carriers are facing immense cash flow pressure from $5.644/gallon diesel and the operational disruptions of CVSA Roadcheck week, increasing the risk of sudden capacity exits.
- Economic Indicators: Agricultural and construction sectors are showing robust seasonal demand, but high transportation costs and supply chain frictions are threatening to compress margins for shippers.
๐ฐ Impactful News Analysis
-
FMCSA Revokes ELDs: Compliance Risks Threaten Capacity ๐:
The FMCSA's continued revocation of non-compliant ELDs poses a direct threat to capacity, especially during Roadcheck week. Brokers must rigorously vet carriers to ensure they are using approved devices, as drivers caught with revoked ELDs will be placed out of service, leading to immediate load failures and costly recovery efforts.
-
Sky-High Diesel Prices Squeeze Agricultural Shippers ๐:
With diesel at $5.644/gallon, farmers and agricultural shippers are facing severe margin compression. Brokers handling produce and agricultural freight should expect intense pushback on rates from shippers, while carriers will absolutely refuse to move without adequate fuel compensation. This dynamic will require careful negotiation to maintain margins.
-
Freight Forwarders Implement Massive 32% Fuel Surcharges ๐:
The announcement of 32% fuel surcharges by major forwarders sets a precedent for the broader market. Brokers should proactively discuss fuel realities with their customers and ensure that spot quotes accurately reflect the current $5.644/gallon environment to avoid eating the cost of carrier fuel demands.
News Insight
ELD Risk Is Now a Pricing Variable
During Roadcheck week, uncertain ELD status turns a low-priced truck into a high-cost recovery risk. On produce, retail, and other appointment-sensitive freight, one out-of-service stop can wipe out the margin advantage of booking a cheaper carrier, which is why fleets that can verify compliant devices before dispatch are gaining rate power faster than the broader market averages imply.
๐บ๏ธ Regional & Lane Analysis
๐ Primary Region Focus: Southeast
The Southeast region is currently the most volatile and profitable theater for freight brokers. The collision of accelerating produce harvests in Florida and Georgia with severe, capacity-trapping floods in Louisiana and Mississippi has created a massive imbalance between supply and demand. Reefer capacity is exceptionally tight, commanding a $0.32/mile premium nationally, with much of that pressure originating here. Furthermore, the high diesel prices are discouraging out-of-network carriers from deadheading into the region, forcing brokers to rely on localized capacity pools that know their leverage.
๐ฃ๏ธ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA โ Miami, FL: This lane is experiencing intense pressure as southbound freight competes for limited capacity. Carriers are demanding high rates to enter the Florida peninsula due to the high cost of diesel and the fear of cheap outbound freight, though outbound produce is currently providing some relief.
New Orleans, LA โ Houston, TX: The I-10 corridor connecting these two major hubs is severely disrupted by ongoing flooding in Louisiana. Flatbed and heavy haul demand remains high due to industrial and energy sector needs, but routing is complex and slow.
Regional Insight
AtlantaโMiami Is Being Priced Off the Reload, Not the Headhaul
Southbound rates into Florida are being set by carrier confidence in a northbound reload more than by inbound demand alone. Trucks that already have a produce or grocery plan out of the peninsula are still moving, but uncovered one-way tenders are vulnerable to late-day repricing as carriers add fuel, dwell, and compliance risk to the quote.
Regional Insight
New OrleansโHouston Coverage Will Erode as the Day Progresses
On the flood-disrupted I-10 corridor, morning truck counts can overstate true same-day capacity because drivers are still evaluating detours, daylight transit, and receiver cutoffs. Once delays start stacking, open-deck and heavy-haul coverage tends to dry up quickly in the afternoon, making early tenders and wider appointment windows more valuable than squeezing for a lower linehaul rate.
๐ Breaking Down the 22.4% Volume Surge and the Reefer Rate Explosion
Today's real-time market data reveals a massive 22.4% overnight surge in total available loads, jumping from 151,120 to 184,923. This volume spike is colliding violently with a contracting capacity pool, driven by the onset of CVSA Roadcheck week and punishing fuel costs. The most glaring anomaly in the data is the temperature-controlled sector. Reefer load volumes spiked 22.6% to 10,082, but the true story is the rate spread: carriers are currently commanding an average paid rate of $3.22/mile against posted rates of $2.90/mile. This staggering $0.32/mile carrier premium indicates a severe supply shock. Brokers are being forced to abandon their initial pricing strategies and pay whatever is necessary to secure compliant, reliable reefer equipment as southern produce harvests and northern PFF requirements peak simultaneously.
๐ The $5.644 Diesel Reality: Surcharges and Margin Compression
The macroeconomic environment is currently dominated by the cost of energy. With the national diesel average sitting at $5.644/gallon, the friction in the spot market is palpable. Today's news regarding freight forwarders implementing massive 32% fuel surcharges for Pacific island routes is a leading indicator of the pricing pressure building domestically. Carriers cannot absorb these fuel costs, leading to a hyper-localization of capacity. Drivers are aggressively shrinking their deadhead radiuses, refusing to drive empty to pick up freight unless the rate compensates for the fuel burn. This macroeconomic reality is setting absolute rate floors across all equipment types, meaning brokers who quote based on historical averages rather than current fuel realities will find themselves upside down on loads.
๐ง Compliance Squeeze: ELD Revocations Meet Roadcheck Week
Carrier capacity is facing a dual threat this week. The imminent CVSA Roadcheck enforcement blitz traditionally sidelines 5-8% of marginal capacity as drivers take vacation to avoid inspection scrutiny. However, this is being compounded by the FMCSA's ongoing revocation of non-compliant ELDs, as highlighted in today's industry news. Carriers operating with revoked devices face immediate out-of-service orders if caught. This dynamic is creating a 'flight to quality' in the spot market. Compliant carriers know their value and are leveraging it to extract the premiums seen in today's load board data (such as the $0.11/mile premium in flatbed and $0.32/mile in reefer). Brokers must elevate their carrier vetting processes immediately; dispatching a carrier with a revoked ELD this week carries an exceptionally high risk of load failure and cargo delay.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Treat reloadability as part of the rate on Florida and Southeast reefer freight; one-way pricing is increasingly unreliable.
- Keep extra transit cushion on Gulf Coast and lower Midwest moves even under clear skies, because river flooding is lagging the weather.
- The worst Northeast PFF premium is likely concentrated in the next 24 hours, creating a small deferral opportunity on non-urgent loads.
- First-use carrier awards need ELD verification up front this week; recovery risk is too expensive to price in after dispatch.
๐ Executive Signal Summary
This is a bifurcated market, not a blanket panic market: 184,923 total available loads are up 22.4% from 151,120, but the national average rate is $2.88/mile, slightly below $2.90/mile yesterday. The read is important: volume exploded, but pricing power is concentrated in certain modes rather than everywhere at once.
Reefer is the biggest underquote trap on the board: 10,082 reefer loads, $2.90/mile posted, $3.22/mile paid, for a +$0.32/mile spread. That is the clearest sign that posted pricing is lagging executable reality.
Open-deck freight is still setting the emotional tone of the market: Flatbed + Heavy Haul + Specialized = 138,172 loads, which is roughly 74.7% of visible volume. Even brokers moving van freight are negotiating against a carrier base whose confidence is being shaped by industrial, construction, and weather-friction freight.
Dry van is still moveable, but it is no longer a buy-later market: 26,348 van loads, $2.61/mile posted, $2.63/mile paid. That +$0.02/mile spread is small, but it says waiting for cheap coverage is now a weaker strategy than it was yesterday.
LTL (Less Than Truckload) / Partial is your best account-defense tool today: 10,321 loads, $1.83/mile posted, $1.81/mile paid. It is the only segment with a small broker-side edge, and that matters when customers start resisting reefer and open-deck premiums.
Fuel and compliance are reducing practical capacity faster than visible capacity: Diesel is $5.644/gallon, and CVSA (Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance) Roadcheck plus ELD (Electronic Logging Device) scrutiny are making carriers more selective, more local, and less forgiving.
๐ง What the Market Is Really Saying
The board is bigger than the usable truck pool: When diesel is $5.644/gallon, a truck 100 miles away is not the same truck as one sitting near the shipper. Add Roadcheck week, flood detours, and ELD risk, and the cheapest visible option often becomes the highest recovery cost.
Todayโs surge is real activity, not just noise: 70,609 loads moved today and market opportunity sits at $293.2M. That tells me this is not a fake board expansion. Freight is moving, and carriers know it.
Carriers are pricing three things more than linehaul today:
- Compliance certainty: clean DOT (Department of Transportation) profile, approved ELD, less inspection risk
- Proximity: minimal deadhead because fuel is too expensive to gamble
- Reloadability: especially into Florida, the Southeast, and flood-touched corridors
Shippers are about to make two common mistakes:
- Anchoring on posted rates when the paid market is already above them
- Treating all equipment the same when reefer and open-deck are behaving very differently from LTL/Partial
The average rate softening from $2.90/mile to $2.88/mile is actually useful information: It means do not overreact across the board. This is not a day to blindly raise every quote. It is a day to separate modes, lanes, urgency, and service risk.
๐ฏ Where the Money Is Today
๐ Dry Van: Cover Early, But Stay Selective
- What the numbers say: 26,348 loads, $2.61/mile posted, $2.63/mile paid
- What it means: Van is firm, not chaotic. You can still cover profitably if the load is simple, local, and fast-turning.
- Best van freight today:
- One-pick / one-drop
- Short to medium haul
- Clean dock operations
- Origins close to carrier density
- Avoid underpricing:
- Loads requiring long deadhead
- Late-day pickups with tight next-day appointments
- Freight moving through flood-affected routing zones
๐ง Reefer: Buy Service First, Margin Second
- What the numbers say: 10,082 loads, $2.90/mile posted, $3.22/mile paid
- What it means: A +$0.32/mile premium is not negotiation slippage. It is market truth.
- Why reefer is so hot:
- Southern produce pull
- Late-season PFF (Protect From Freeze) demand in the Northeast
- Roadcheck filtering
- Fuel making repositioning expensive
- Best reefer strategy today:
- Quote off real carrier conversations, not board averages
- Separate urgent from deferrable freight
- Push non-urgent Northeast freeze-sensitive freight by 24 hours if product allows, because the freeze premium looks front-loaded
- Biggest mistake: Treating a reefer lane like a van lane with a setpoint added on top
๐๏ธ Flatbed: Not Just Expensive โ Operationally Fragile
- What the numbers say: 79,918 loads, $3.35/mile posted, $3.46/mile paid
- What it means: The +$0.11/mile spread matters, but the bigger issue is slower trailer turns from flood detours and inconsistent access.
- Quote flatbed with:
- Detour miles
- Extra transit time
- Tarp charges if applicable
- Detention risk
- Best flatbed freight today:
- Short haul
- No tarp
- Clear yard access
- Flexible unload windows
๐ Heavy Haul: Stable Linehaul, High Execution Risk
- What the numbers say: 37,016 loads, $3.37/mile posted, $3.41/mile paid
- What it means: The spread is only +$0.04/mile, so this is not a runaway pricing market. It is an error-intolerant planning market.
- Broker posture:
- Negotiate lightly on linehaul
- Protect route, permit, escort, and delay exposure hard
- Best use of time: Validate the move before discussing price
โ๏ธ Specialized: Do Not Overpay Lazily
- What the numbers say: 21,238 loads, $2.99/mile posted, $3.02/mile paid
- What it means: Specialized is still carrier-led, but only by +$0.03/mile. That is a major change from the kind of disorderly repricing that traps brokers.
- Best insight: Todayโs specialized market is strong, but not universally broken. Good brokers can outperform here by matching exact equipment and specs, while weak brokers will either overquote everyone or miscover the load.
- Action:
- Reconfirm dimensions, weight, securement, and loading method
- Do not release a specialized load on incomplete specs
๐ฆ LTL / Partial: Use It to Defend Margin and Save the Sale
- What the numbers say: 10,321 loads, $1.83/mile posted, $1.81/mile paid
- What it means: This is the only real broker-friendly segment today.
- Best use cases:
- Customers balking at reefer full truckload
- Small industrial shipments that do not justify premium flatbed
- Margin rescue on soft-deadline freight
- Tactic:
- Offer economy partial and priority partial
- Protect stop-off, handling, appointment, and rework language
๐ Regional and Lane Decisions That Matter Today
๐ด Southeast: Most Profitable Region, Most Dangerous to Underquote
- What is happening: Produce demand, Florida reload economics, Gulf flooding, and high diesel are all hitting at once.
- Broker takeaway: Capacity is local and selective. If your carrier does not already like the Southeast, your rate probably will not convince them.
๐ฃ๏ธ Atlanta, GA โ Miami, FL: Price the Reload, Not Just the Headhaul
- Real market behavior: Carriers are deciding on this lane based on how they get out of Florida, not how they get into it.
- Best tactic:
- Book carriers who already have northbound produce or grocery relationships
- Shorten quote validity
- Expect afternoon repricing on one-way freight
๐ฃ๏ธ New Orleans, LA โ Houston, TX: Tender Early or Pay for the Afternoon
- Real market behavior: Morning coverage can look better than same-day reality because carriers are still evaluating detours, daylight, and receiver windows.
- Best tactic:
- Tender early
- Build wider appointment windows
- Use carriers who know Gulf Coast routing, not one-off spot trucks
โ๏ธ New York / Pennsylvania Reefer Freight: Small Deferral Window Exists
- Real market behavior: The Northeast freeze premium looks most intense today and tonight.
- Best tactic:
- Move urgent freight now
- Delay flexible PFF-sensitive freight into tomorrow if product and customer allow
- Why this matters: This is one of the few places where time can buy you savings in the next 24 hours.
๐ต Arizona / Phoenix Area: Heat Is a Hidden Claims Risk
- Real market behavior: Extreme heat raises the risk of tire failures, reefer strain, and roadside breakdowns.
- Best tactic:
- Favor morning pickups and transits when possible
- Use fleets with strong maintenance discipline
- On temp-controlled freight, confirm reefer unit condition before dispatch
๐ฃ๏ธ Negotiation Posture That Wins Today
๐ค With Carriers
- Lead with execution facts, not just rate:
- Commodity
- Equipment
- Weight
- Appointment times
- Load/unload speed
- Access conditions
- Reload story
- Best message in todayโs market: โThis is a clean, compliant, fast-turn load close to you.โ
- When to push hard on rate:
- LTL / Partial
- Clean dry van
- Short-haul freight with strong reload geography
- When not to push:
- Reefer
- Flood-affected flatbed
- First-use carriers during Roadcheck
- Florida-bound one-way freight
๐งพ With Shippers
- Do not let posted rates define the conversation: The clean line is: โVisible board rates are not the same as executable truck costs this week.โ
- Use two-option quoting:
- Flexible option: lower price, wider timing tolerance
- Priority option: faster acceptance, stronger compliance profile, tighter service execution
- Break out cost drivers clearly:
- Linehaul
- Fuel
- Detour exposure
- Temperature protection
- Tarp / securement / handling
- Customer psychology note: Shippers will tolerate a premium faster when they feel they are buying certainty, not just paying more for the same thing
๐ก๏ธ Risk Controls for the Next 24โ72 Hours
1) Tighten first-use carrier vetting immediately:
- Verify authority
- Verify insurance
- Verify ELD status
- Verify driver identity
- Verify truck and trailer match
- Verify actual operating carrier
- On urgent freight, a cheap non-compliant truck is a recovery event waiting to happen
2) Reconfirm access in flood-affected areas:
- Ask whether the facility is fully accessible, not just โopenโ
- Confirm yard approach, dock access, unloading equipment, and actual receiving hours
- River flooding often outlasts the weather headline
3) Add transit cushion to appointment freight:
- Detours plus inspection delays can turn a legal run into a service miss
- Favor carriers with time buffer, not just willingness
4) Shorten quote validity:
- Reefer / Flatbed / Heavy Haul / Specialized: keep quotes very short-lived
- In todayโs market, stale math is how brokers donate margin
5) Lock accessorial language before dispatch:
- Detention
- Layover
- Tarp
- Reefer fuel
- Stop-off
- Redelivery
- Reroute
- Permit / escort pass-through if applicable
6) Protect your afternoon:
- The money-losing loads today will be the ones that were:
- Quoted too early
- Left open too long
- Covered with weak vetting
- Sold off posted rates instead of paid reality
๐ 24โ72 Hour Outlook
โ
Highest-Value Desk Priorities Today
Cover all urgent reefer first
- By priority, not by quote order
- Do not wait for reefer to come back to posted
Requote flood-exposed flatbed and heavy haul from scratch
- Especially anything touching Louisiana, Mississippi, Indiana, or Illinois
Use LTL / Partial aggressively to save customer relationships
- If a shipper resists full-truck premium, offer a structured alternative immediately
Move dry van before lunch when possible
- Van is still executable, but the window is better early than late
Require ELD verification on every first-use carrier
- This week, compliance is part of the rate
Price Florida freight off reload logic
- If the carrier has no outbound plan, your first price is probably not your final price
Use nearby trucks over cheap distant trucks
- At $5.644/gallon diesel, deadhead is now a real pricing weapon
Track these success metrics today
- Coverage speed: priority freight covered before midday
- Quote freshness: reefer and open-deck quotes not left hanging
- Compliance control: first-use carrier vetting completed before release
- Margin discipline: no weather- or temp-sensitive load moved without accessorial protection
๐งพ Bottom Line
- Total market opportunity is expanding fast, but it is not expanding evenly.
- Reefer is the clearest premium market and the biggest place to get hurt.
- Flatbed is strong because turns are slow, not just because rates are high.
- Specialized is firm, but precise brokers can still create edge by matching specs instead of panicking.
- Dry van is still workable if you move early and source locally.
- LTL / Partial is your best tactical release valve for margin preservation.
- Today is a day to win on discipline: tighter quote validity, better carrier vetting, local capacity sourcing, and honest customer framing.
๐
This Day in History
1497: Pope Alexander VI excommunicates Girolamo Savonarola.
1743: Maria Theresa of Austria is crowned Queen of Bohemia after defeating her rival, Charles VII, Holy Roman Emperor.
1865: American Civil War: The Battle of Palmito Ranch: The first day of the last major land action to take place during the Civil War, resulting in a Confederate victory.
๐ญ Quote of the Day
"The only way to do great work is to love what you do."
โ Steve Jobs