📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Thursday, July 16, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
On Thursday, July 16, 2026, the domestic spot market experienced a significant volume expansion, with total available loads climbing 4.0% day-over-day to 175,151, signaling robust mid-summer freight demand and tightening capacity. The market average rate settled at $2.99/mile, supported by a verified AAA national diesel average of $5.005/gallon, which continues to act as a hard floor for carrier operating costs. Peak summer produce harvests are driving intense competition in the temperature-controlled sector, while regional capacity faces operational headwinds from active river flooding along the Gulf Coast and Illinois River corridors, alongside extreme heat warnings in California and the Upper Midwest. For freight brokers, the widening rate spreads in the dry van and specialized sectors present high-margin arbitrage opportunities, while the tightening reefer and flatbed markets require proactive capacity sourcing and strategic carrier negotiations.
Insight
Slower truck turns are amplifying the volume spike
The 4.0% load increase is hitting a market where weather and heat are degrading truck utilization more than closing highways outright. That matters for Thursday afternoon and Friday freight: small detours, longer dock dwell and stricter reefer handling are enough to keep effective capacity tighter than the headline load count suggests, especially in reefer and open-deck freight.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- River Flooding along Calcasieu River (Louisiana (LA, Calcasieu Parish)): Minor flooding is occurring along the Calcasieu River near White Oak Park, affecting local roads including Goos Ferry Road. This may cause minor delays and detours for local freight operations, particularly for open-deck and flatbed carriers servicing local industrial sites.
- Extreme Heat Wave in Southwest California (California (CA, Los Angeles, Ventura, Santa Barbara, San Diego, Riverside, San Bernardino counties)): Dangerously hot conditions with temperatures up to 106 degrees are expected, posing a high risk of heat-related illnesses. This may lead to reduced driver productivity, increased equipment strain (particularly for reefers), and potential delays at loading docks as facilities implement heat safety protocols.
- Extreme Heat Wave in Upper Midwest (Minnesota (MN, Hennepin, Anoka, Ramsey, Washington, Carver, Scott, Dakota counties)): Dangerously hot conditions with heat index values up to 100 degrees are expected, increasing the risk of heat-related illnesses. This may impact driver safety and equipment performance, particularly for temperature-controlled shipments traversing the I-35 and I-94 corridors.
- River Flooding along Cedar River (Iowa (IA, Muscatine, Louisa counties)): Minor flooding is forecast along the Cedar River near Conesville, affecting yards, access roads along Iowa Highway 22, and local campgrounds. This may cause minor delays and detours for local freight operations, particularly along the I-80 corridor.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Lake Charles freight risk shifts higher after midday
Flooding near the Calcasieu River remains localized, but the sharper operational risk is late-day around the Lake Charles industrial footprint as patchy rain gives way to fog and mist. Morning pickups should clear more cleanly; after-1400 tenders face the bigger threat of missed same-day turns from local road access issues, slower yard moves and reduced visibility.
Weather Insight
Extreme heat will show up first in reefer service per formance
Triple-digit heat in Southern California and upper-90s conditions in Minnesota raise the odds of longer pre-cool cycles, higher reefer fuel burn and more aggressive pulp-temperature checks at shipping points. The most exposed windows are late-afternoon pickups on I-5, I-10, I-35 and I-94 corridors, where carriers already running cold units and arriving on time with confirmed set points will command the strongest rate premium.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Diesel futures remain volatile, reflecting ongoing geopolitical tensions and uncertainty in the global oil market. While the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz has provided some relief, high fuel costs are expected to persist, keeping upward pressure on carrier operating costs and spot rates.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small carrier margins remain under intense pressure due to high fuel costs and rising operational expenses. This is driving a steady rate of carrier exits and consolidation, which is gradually reducing active capacity and supporting a carrier-led recovery in the spot market.
- Economic Indicators: Industrial production and retail sales remain resilient, supporting steady freight volumes across all sectors. However, rising inflation and high interest rates continue to pose risks to consumer spending and manufacturing activity, which could impact freight demand in the coming months.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
ACT Research: Class 8 Orders Buck Summer Seasonality, Surging 231% Year-Over-Year 🔗:
The massive surge in Class 8 truck orders suggests that carriers are making money and reinvesting in equipment, signaling a strong recovery in the trucking industry. However, the rapid shift in driver supply—driven by federal crackdowns on nondomiciled drivers, new carrier registration rules, and ELD loophole closures—is creating a driver supply squeeze. For brokers, this means that while equipment capacity may expand, driver capacity will remain tight, keeping upward pressure on spot rates. Brokers should advise shippers to secure capacity early and prepare for higher rates as the driver supply squeeze intensifies.
-
J.B. Hunt Reports Significant Market Disruption and Sharp Spot Rate Increases 🔗:
J.B. Hunt's Q2 2026 earnings report and conference commentary highlight a structurally reduced truckload capacity environment, driven by regulatory enforcement and Supreme Court decisions. Spot rates have risen sharply since late 2025, causing routing guides to fail and triggering widespread network rebids. For brokers, this indicates a highly volatile rate environment where contract rates are lagging behind spot market realities. Brokers should focus on spot market opportunities, as shippers seek reliable capacity outside of failing routing guides, and prepare for ongoing margin pressure in brokerage operations due to rising capacity costs.
-
FMCSA Leverages AI and Advanced Analytics to Target High-Risk Carriers 🔗:
The FMCSA's focus on using data, AI, and advanced analytics to identify high-risk carriers and combat fraud will tighten compliance standards and accelerate the removal of noncompliant capacity from the market. This will further shrink the usable carrier pool, particularly among small carriers and owner-operators. Brokers must ensure strict compliance with carrier vetting standards to avoid negligent hiring claims, which will require more robust vetting processes and potentially limit the number of accessible carriers for spot loads.
News Insight
Truck orders do not loosen near-term spot capacity
The surge in Class 8 orders is a forward signal, not a July or August pressure release. Build lead times, upfitting, financing and seated-driver availability mean the market still has to work through peak produce and project season with today's tighter usable fleet, so spot pricing should stay sensitive to any routing-guide fallout or weather-driven service misses.
News Insight
Compliance enforcement is increasing the value of pre-vetted backup carriers
As routing guides fail and FMCSA scrutiny removes more questionable capacity, the fastest cover is increasingly the safest cover. Brokerages with compliant secondary carriers already onboard will be better positioned to absorb spillover freight without last-minute onboarding delays or negligent-hiring exposure, particularly on high-dollar reefer and specialized loads.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast US remains the most strategically important region for freight brokers today, driven by a combination of peak summer produce harvests and regional capacity constraints. Outbound volumes from Georgia and Florida are exceptionally strong, with watermelons, peaches, and blueberries driving intense competition for temperature-controlled equipment. This high demand is colliding with capacity constraints caused by active river flooding along the Gulf Coast, which is forcing carriers to take lengthy detours and restricting truck availability. As a result, spot rates are firming rapidly, creating high-margin arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can secure reliable capacity.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA → Orlando, FL: This lane is experiencing high volume and tight capacity as retail and beverage shipments surge to support Florida's summer tourism season, while regional reefers are pulled into agricultural zones. The rate environment is highly favorable for carriers, with paid rates commanding a premium over posted rates. Capacity is physically constrained by flood-related delays along the Gulf Coast, which is limiting the flow of trucks back into Georgia. Brokers must act quickly to secure equipment and prepare for sticky rates.
Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC: This lane is seeing robust volume driven by import cargo moving from the Port of Savannah to distribution centers in Charlotte. Flatbed and dry van capacity is tight as carriers are diverted to support regional infrastructure projects and agricultural harvests. Rates are firming, with paid rates averaging a $0.15/mile premium over posted rates. Brokers must navigate tight capacity and potential delays at port terminals.
Regional Insight
Reload economics are driving the Southeast's sharpest lane pressure
On Atlanta-Orlando, southbound pricing is being lifted by weak Florida reload economics and summer demand that keeps trucks in the peninsula longer, making committed roundtrip pricing more effective than one-way spot buys. On Savannah-Charlotte, the cleaner play is earlier port pickup windows: afternoon turns are more vulnerable to terminal dwell and to flatbeds being pulled into regional project freight.
📊 Mid-Week Volume Surge Drives Widening Rate Spreads
Today's real-time load board data reveals a significant mid-week volume surge, with total available loads climbing 4.0% day-over-day to 175,151. This robust volume expansion is driving a widening spread between posted and paid rates, particularly in the flatbed and specialized sectors. Flatbed paid rates averaged $3.55/mile today, representing a substantial $0.23/mile premium over posted rates of $3.32/mile. This spread indicates that capacity is exceptionally tight, allowing carriers to successfully negotiate higher rates at the point of dispatch.
In the specialized sector, the spread is even more dramatic, with paid rates averaging $3.66/mile compared to posted rates of $2.95/mile—a massive $0.71/mile carrier premium. This extreme spread suggests that specialized equipment is in high demand and short supply, likely driven by ongoing infrastructure and utility projects. For brokers, these wide spreads represent both a risk and an opportunity. While they squeeze margins on pre-booked contract freight, they offer high-margin arbitrage opportunities on spot loads if brokers can source capacity quickly.
Conversely, the dry van sector shows a more stable spread, with paid rates at $2.79/mile and posted rates at $2.61/mile, yielding a $0.18/mile carrier premium. This suggests that while van capacity is tight, it remains more manageable than the open-deck sectors. Brokers should focus their sourcing efforts on flatbed and specialized equipment, where the widest margin opportunities exist, while maintaining steady capacity pipelines for dry van freight.
🚛 Flatbed: Open-Deck Capacity Under Intense Pressure
The flatbed sector is currently experiencing the highest demand and tightest capacity in the spot market, with available loads rising 4.6% day-over-day to 71,457. This represents over 40% of all active loads on the board today, highlighting the massive scale of open-deck activity. The surge is driven by robust mid-summer construction, utility, and AI infrastructure projects, which are consuming vast amounts of flatbed and specialized capacity.
This high demand is colliding with physical capacity constraints. Regional flooding along the Gulf Coast and Midwest is disrupting major freight corridors like I-10 and I-80, forcing carriers to take lengthy detours and restricting truck availability in key industrial zones. Additionally, high diesel prices (holding at $5.005/gallon) are restricting carrier deadhead, making drivers highly selective about the loads they accept and demanding premium rates to cover empty miles.
As a result, flatbed paid rates have surged to $3.55/mile, a $0.23/mile premium over posted rates. This upward rate momentum is expected to persist through July as infrastructure spending remains red hot. Brokers must adopt aggressive sourcing strategies, including pre-booking flatbed equipment 48 hours in advance and offering premium rates on lanes affected by flooding or high deadhead, to ensure service reliability for key shippers.
🔧 Driver Supply Squeeze and Regulatory Pressures Reshape Capacity
The domestic trucking industry is currently navigating a multi-front driver supply squeeze that is structurally reducing active capacity and supporting a carrier-led recovery. According to recent industry analysis, federal enforcement actions—including the FMCSA's crackdown on nondomiciled drivers, stricter carrier registration rules, and the closure of CDL mills—are rapidly removing noncompliant drivers and carriers from the market. This regulatory pressure is compounded by an aging driver cohort and a broader immigration crackdown, which are further restricting the inflow of new drivers.
This supply squeeze is clearly reflected in carrier behavior on the load boards. With fewer trucks available, carriers are exercising greater pricing power and rejecting low-paying contract loads in favor of high-paying spot freight. This trend is particularly evident in J.B. Hunt's recent commentary, which noted widespread routing guide failures and sharp spot rate increases since late 2025. Carriers are also highly sensitive to operating costs, with the AAA diesel average of $5.005/gallon acting as a hard floor that prevents them from accepting rates below their operating thresholds.
For brokers, these dynamics mean that traditional capacity sourcing methods are becoming less effective. Relying solely on posted rates or historical carrier lists will lead to missed loads and service failures. Brokers must adapt by strengthening relationships with compliant, high-quality carriers, utilizing digital freight matching tools to identify available capacity in real-time, and educating shippers on the necessity of paying premium rates to secure reliable trucks in a structurally tight market.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Price Thursday afternoon reefers and flatbeds as if part of Friday capacity is already spoken for.
- Favor morning pickups in southwest Louisiana and at Savannah port moves; late-day turns carry the highest service risk.
- Use roundtrip or reload-backed pricing on Atlanta-Florida freight instead of chasing one-way coverage.
- Lean on pre-vetted compliant carriers first; tighter enforcement is making emergency onboarding slower and more expensive.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is still an execution market, not a screen market. All six tracked equipment groups are clearing above posted rates, which means load board pricing is lagging real replacement cost.
Total available loads climbed to 175,151, up 4.0% from 168,376, while the market opportunity expanded to $302.5M. Even though the national average rate sits at $2.99/mile, slightly below $3.02/mile yesterday, that is not a sign of loosening. It is a mix-shift signal inside a market where carriers still have leverage on execution.
Industrial freight is still driving the market.
- Flatbed + heavy haul + specialized = 127,651 of 175,151 loads, or 72.9% of the board
- Those same three segments account for 15,736 of 20,207 moved loads, or 77.9% of execution activity
- Translation: the market’s center of gravity remains open-deck and project freight, so the national average should not be used as a buying anchor for vans.
Specialized is the largest mispricing pocket on the board.
- Posted: $2.95/mile
- Paid: $3.66/mile
- Spread: +$0.71/mile
- That is roughly 24% above screen pricing, which is where brokers get trapped if they quote from incomplete specs or stale assumptions.
Reefer is not the biggest spread market today, but it is still the biggest service-risk market.
- 8,701 loads
- Posted: $3.14/mile
- Paid: $3.26/mile
- Loads up 7.2% day over day
- Produce, heat, and flood detours are creating slower turns, more temp scrutiny, and higher recovery cost.
Diesel at $5.005/gallon is acting like a behavioral filter. Carriers are not just pricing linehaul. They are pricing:
- deadhead
- reload quality
- detour risk
- dwell time
- equipment stress
Thursday afternoon should be priced like part of Friday capacity is already sold. That matters most for:
- reefer
- flatbed
- specialized
- flood-adjacent Southeast and Gulf freight
🧠 What the market is really saying
The last 8 days are telling a very clear story: volume is rising faster than comfort.
- Total loads today: 175,151
- 1 week ago: 151,134
- 2 days ago: 139,796
- That is a 15.9% increase versus last week and a 25.3% increase versus two days ago.
The blended rate is disguising the real tightening.
- Today’s average rate: $2.99/mile
- Yesterday: $3.02/mile
- 1 week ago: $2.90/mile
- 1 month ago: $3.04/mile
- If you only look at the blend, you might say the market is stable. That would be the wrong conclusion.
- The better read is: more freight is showing up, in more segments, while paid rates remain above posted in every mode. That creates dispersion, not relief.
This is classic mid-summer brokerage psychology.
- Shippers still want to believe posted rates are actionable.
- Carriers know posted rates are often only opening bids.
- Brokers who anchor on board averages instead of replacement cost will either:
- miss the truck
- take a margin hit on the re-cover
- or damage customer trust with a late re-quote
The tightening is operational, not just numerical.
- Flooding in Louisiana, Texas, and Iowa
- Extreme heat in Southern California and the Upper Midwest
- Peak produce flows in California, Texas, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, and Michigan
- FMCSA (Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration) enforcement pressure
- High fuel cost
- Together these reduce truck productivity more than they reduce truck count
- That is why the market feels tighter than the headline load number alone suggests
💰 Where the best broker opportunities are today
1) Specialized arbitrage
- Why it matters: The +$0.71/mile paid-posted spread is the biggest on the board.
- What it means: Either the freight is under-described, the equipment is scarce, or both.
- Broker move:
- Quote only after confirming exact dimensions
- Confirm commodity, loading method, securement, permit status, and accessorial triggers
- Put a short fuse on quotes
- Best use case: Project freight, wind-energy components, utility freight, nonstandard open-deck cargo
2) Flatbed margin capture through better planning
- Loads: 71,457
- Posted: $3.32/mile
- Paid: $3.55/mile
- Spread: +$0.23/mile
- Why it matters: Flatbed is 40.8% of the entire board, so it is shaping the day’s mood.
- Broker move:
- Separate linehaul from tarp, detention, route deviation, layover, and jobsite delay
- Cover 48 hours ahead where possible
- Prefer carriers already near origin over “cheap” trucks with long empty repositioning
3) Heavy haul discipline
- Loads: 34,148
- Posted: $3.51/mile
- Paid: $3.72/mile
- Spread: +$0.21/mile
- Why it matters: This market will still pay, but only if the broker avoids scope errors.
- Broker move:
- Do not quote without dimensions, weight, axle plan, escort needs, and permit timing
- Price in longer routing for flood-sensitive corridors
4) Dry van early-coverage wins
- Loads: 25,353
- Posted: $2.61/mile
- Paid: $2.79/mile
- Spread: +$0.18/mile
- Why it matters: Van volume is down 1.5%, but that does not mean the market is soft. It means the easiest loads have already stabilized while replacement cost remains carrier-favorable.
- Broker move:
- Cover before the afternoon when flatbed/reefer fallout starts stealing flexible capacity
- Sell attractive reloads and realistic appointment windows
5) Reefer premium through service, not just rate
- Loads: 8,701
- Posted: $3.14/mile
- Paid: $3.26/mile
- Spread: +$0.12/mile
- Why it matters: The spread is not extreme, but the operational risk is.
- Broker move:
- Secure pre-cooled units
- Confirm setpoint, reefer fuel, continuous-run instructions, and temperature documentation
- Move pickups to morning or night windows in hot corridors
6) LTL (Less Than Truckload) / partial as a strategic relief valve
- Loads: 13,446
- Posted: $1.66/mile
- Paid: $1.73/mile
- Spread: +$0.07/mile
- Why it matters: This is the least dramatic spread, which makes it useful as a planned conversion tool.
- Broker move:
- Offer early for palletized freight
- Use it to avoid expensive truckload rescues on flexible shipments
- Position it as planned optimization, not a last-minute downgrade
🚚 Mode-by-mode broker playbook
Dry Van
- Market read: Slightly lower volume, but still carrier-favorable on execution
- What experienced brokers see:
- Van is often where people misread the day because it looks calmer than reefer or flatbed.
- In reality, van can tighten later in the day as carriers reposition toward stronger Friday freight or rescue higher-paying overflow.
- Best moves today:
- Cover Southeast and Midwest freight early
- Do not anchor on the $2.99/mile national average
- Sell wider delivery windows where flood detours add ETA variability
- Pair weak destinations with known reloads before quoting
Reefer
- Market read: Peak produce + heat + service sensitivity
- Key commodities in play:
- watermelon
- corn
- peaches
- blueberries
- peppers
- What experienced brokers see:
- Reefer gets expensive fastest when the truck is physically there but not operationally ready:
- pre-cool delay
- pulp-temp inspection
- fuel level issue
- missed ship window
- Heat raises reefer fuel burn and compresses driver patience.
- Best moves today:
- Use morning pickup windows
- Ask for loading readiness before dispatching
- Use inbound backhauls into California, Texas, Georgia, and Midwest produce zones as rate leverage
- Build backup coverage earlier than you normally would
Flatbed
- Market read: The backbone of the day
- What experienced brokers see:
- Open-deck markets are rarely hurt most by the interstate itself.
- They are hurt by:
- yard access
- mud/flood staging
- jobsite timing
- missed same-day turns
- Best moves today:
- Verify loading equipment and staging conditions
- Price tarp and securement separately
- Use carriers already near origin
- Protect afternoon pickups in Louisiana, Texas, Iowa, and Midwest river-adjacent freight
Heavy Haul
- Market read: Strong demand, but unforgiving execution
- What experienced brokers see:
- Heavy haul problems are usually engineering failures disguised as rate issues.
- Best moves today:
- Refuse incomplete shipment profiles
- Check permit timing before accepting tight appointments
- Price route changes before tender, not after a permit setback
Specialized
- Market read: Today’s biggest broker trap and opportunity
- What experienced brokers see:
- A large spread like +$0.71/mile usually means brokers are posting freight that sounds simpler than it is.
- Best moves today:
- Use specialist carriers first
- Shorten quote validity sharply
- Push back on vague commodity descriptions
- Get customer approval on accessorial structure upfront
LTL / Partial
- Market read: Useful, steady, and tactical
- What experienced brokers see:
- Partial wins when offered before the customer mentally commits to full truckload.
- Best moves today:
- Offer as a first-option alternative on flexible freight
- Use for cost control on short-to-medium haul palletized shipments
- Avoid using it only after a truckload miss
🌎 Regional and lane priorities for first calls
Southeast produce markets
- Why they matter:
- Georgia and Florida remain high-tension zones because produce demand and weak Florida reload economics are colliding.
- Broker moves:
- Use roundtrip or reload-backed pricing on Atlanta-to-Florida freight
- Do not chase one-way rate wins into the peninsula
- Sell committed roundtrip economics to carriers instead of single-load pricing
Atlanta, GA → Orlando, FL
- Best read:
- This is a reload problem as much as a linehaul problem.
- Action:
- Quote with northbound recovery in mind
- Secure a Florida outbound before over-negotiating the southbound leg
- Use carriers with known peninsula patterns
Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC
- Best read:
- This is a turn-time market, not just a mileage market.
- Action:
- Prioritize morning port pickup windows
- Verify terminal release and chassis/container readiness
- Expect afternoon dwell to destroy margin faster than small linehaul misses
South Texas / Hill Country / Gulf feeder markets
- Why they matter:
- Flood warnings in Kerr and Uvalde counties increase local-access and same-day-turn risk, even when the long-haul lane still looks normal on paper.
- Action:
- Call facilities directly
- Widen pickup windows
- Do not sell heroic same-day reload chains
- Protect reefer and specialized loads first
- Best read:
- Localized flooding plus late-day visibility issues create a truck-turn problem, especially after midday.
- Action:
- Favor morning pickups
- Add buffer for local road access and yard movement
- Do not assume a truck that can arrive can also turn quickly
Southern California I-5 / I-10 corridors
- Why they matter:
- Extreme heat will first show up in reefer performance, dwell, and fuel burn
- Action:
- Shift temp-sensitive pickups to cooler windows
- Confirm reefer condition before dispatch
- Tell customers that late-afternoon pickups now carry premium execution risk
Upper Midwest / central Illinois / eastern Iowa
- Best read:
- Heat and river flooding are degrading turn time, not necessarily shutting down freight.
- Action:
- Use conservative ETAs
- Avoid stacking tight follow-on commitments
- Add dwell and reload buffers on reefer and flatbed
🛡️ Risk controls that protect margin today
1) Shorten quote validity
- Reefer / specialized / heavy haul: use very short validity
- Van / flatbed: still shorten versus normal practice
- Reason: replacement cost is moving faster than posted screens
2) Separate friction from linehaul
- Price separately:
- detention
- layover
- tarp
- route deviation
- after-hours delivery
- temp-service requirements
- Reason: hidden friction is where profitable loads turn into negative-margin loads
3) Use pre-vetted carriers first
- FMCSA enforcement is making emergency onboarding slower and riskier
- Reason: the fastest truck is no longer the safest truck unless it is already compliant
4) Protect the first mile
- Call to confirm:
- dock readiness
- road access
- loading equipment
- commodity readiness
- Reason: many summer failures begin at the shipper, not on the highway
5) Build backup coverage earlier
- Best for:
- reefer
- specialized
- flood-adjacent flatbed
- South Texas
- Southeast produce
- Reason: recovery cost is lowest before the first service miss
6) Avoid blind optimism on transit
- Do not promise yesterday’s transit standard on today’s flood/heat-sensitive freight.
- Reason: a credible ETA is cheaper than a late apology
🗣️ How to position with shippers and carriers
With shippers
- Best message:
- “Posted rates are not today’s clearing rates. Every major equipment group is paying above screen price, and the most expensive loads are the ones that have to be re-covered late.”
- What works psychologically:
- Customers respond better to risk prevention language than to generic “market is tight” talk.
- Use these asks:
- wider pickup windows
- morning loading
- appointment flexibility
- mode conversion approval
- short quote acceptance windows
With carriers
- Best message:
- Sell the quality of the trip, not just the rate.
- What carriers want today:
- clean pickup
- realistic appointments
- accurate commodity details
- fast dispatch decisions
- credible reload options
- What wins trucks:
- A dispatcher will often take a slightly lower linehaul if the broker offers:
- honest dwell expectations
- good next-load probability
- fast document handling
- less operational drama
📈 24–72 hour probability map
55% likely outcome — sticky carrier-favorable market
- Reefer stays tight
- Flatbed remains firm
- Specialized remains badly underposted
- Van remains coverable but not cheap
- Friday-sensitive freight tightens by afternoon
30% likely outcome — sharper tightening
- Flooded feeder areas create missed turns
- More contract freight spills into spot as routing guides fail
- Reefer re-covers jump in California, Southeast, and Midwest ag lanes
- Flatbed and specialized replacement costs rise further after lunch
15% likely outcome — limited stabilization
- Van and LTL/partial absorb some overflow
- Port and flood delays improve enough to reduce panic buying
- But even in this outcome, premium equipment remains carrier-favorable
✅ Desk priorities for today
Re-price specialized freight immediately
- Screen pricing is too far below executable pricing to trust.
Cover reefer, flatbed, and heavy haul before noon where possible
- Afternoon replacement cost is likely worse than morning cost.
Use roundtrip pricing on Florida headhauls
- One-way buys into the peninsula will cost more than they look.
Call flood- and heat-exposed origins directly
- Do not rely on generic lane assumptions.
Push morning pickup windows
- Especially in Savannah port freight, Southwest Louisiana, California reefer, and produce zones.
Offer LTL/partial proactively
- Use it before truckload turns into a rescue event.
Sell appointment flexibility as a savings tool
- This is easier to close than a pure rate increase.
Lean on compliant repeat carriers first
- In today’s market, the safest cover is often the fastest cover.
Track intraday signals that matter
- quote-to-cover time
- re-quote count
- falloff rate
- first-mile delay frequency
- loads covered before noon
- loads sold with a defined reload
🏁 Bottom line
- The board got bigger, but the market did not get easier.
- The average rate softened slightly, but execution did not.
- Specialized is the day’s biggest pricing trap.
- Reefer is the day’s biggest service trap.
- Flatbed remains the market’s center of gravity.
- Diesel at $5.005/gallon keeps reload economics in control.
- Brokers who win today will quote shorter, cover earlier, verify harder, and sell operational certainty instead of false cheapness.
💡 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
1858: The last apparition of the Blessed Virgin Mary to Bernadette Soubirous in Lourdes, France.
1969: The Apollo 11 lunar landing mission is launched from Cape Kennedy in Florida, USA.
2013: Syrian civil war: The Battle of Ras al-Ayn resumes between the People's Protection Units (YPG) and Islamist forces, beginning the Rojava–Islamist conflict.
💭 Quote of the Day
"To travel is to be alive, but to get somewhere is to be dead."
— Alan Watts