π Daily Market Intelligence Report
Friday, May 15, 2026
7:00 AM CST
π Top-Line Summary
Spot volume continues to climb as we close out the week, reaching 219,548 available loads today (+1.5%), while the market grapples with a punishing $5.662/gallon diesel average driven by global geopolitical tensions. The reefer sector remains the most volatile and carrier-favorable, commanding a massive $0.31/mile premium over posted rates as southern produce harvests collide with high operating costs. Meanwhile, dry van volumes surged 11% overnight, indicating a late-week push by shippers to clear docks. Brokers must navigate severe localized capacity traps, particularly along the flooded I-10 and I-59 corridors in the Gulf South, by padding margins and securing compliant capacity early in the day.
Insight
Friday Coverage Now Shapes Monday Capacity
Louisiana and Mississippi look manageable through Saturday, but renewed thunderstorm chances from Sunday into Tuesday are likely to slow drainage in corridors already dealing with high water. Any Gulf Coast freight left uncovered this afternoon risks rolling straight into a tighter Monday market, which supports keeping detour mileage, fuel cushions, and premium assumptions in place through the weekend.
β½ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
π¦οΈ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe River Flooding (Gulf South (LA, MS)): Major flooding continues to disrupt the I-10, I-59, and US-90 corridors. This is trapping open-deck capacity, forcing extensive detours, and driving up rates for freight moving through the Gulf Coast region.
- Kaskaskia River Flooding (Midwest (IL)): Minor flooding along the Kaskaskia River may disrupt local agricultural and manufacturing freight routing, potentially tightening localized capacity as drivers avoid water-logged township roads.
- Mountain River Flooding (Pacific Northwest (WA)): High mountain snowmelt is causing the Stehekin River to flood, which could delay localized freight movements and timber transport in Chelan County through the weekend.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Floodwater Risk Outlasts the Dry Break in South Louisiana
Improving weather around south Louisiana today and Saturday should help dispatch visibility, but it will not quickly normalize routing. The bigger drag remains standing water on low-lying access roads and secondary connectors feeding the I-10 and US-90 network, and Sunday storms could refresh delays just as weekend reloads begin.
- Expect ETA slippage to come from pickup and staging access more than interstate linehaul.
- Local carriers with flood-zone familiarity will keep a pricing edge over board-sourced trucks.
Weather Insight
Southern Illinois Turns Into an Early-Week Flatbed Watch
Minor flooding along the Kaskaskia stays localized today, but the setup becomes less friendly by Monday as additional thunderstorms arrive after a breezy weekend. Even if major interstates remain open, softer township roads and slower plant access can tighten short-haul agricultural and manufacturing capacity across southern Illinois and firm flatbed pricing on Monday loadings.
π° Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Global crude oil prices have surged over 50% due to the ongoing conflict in Iran, heavily pressuring domestic distillate inventories and suggesting diesel prices will remain elevated in the near term.
- Carrier Financial Health: Carriers are facing a severe squeeze between stagnant base rates and skyrocketing operating costs (fuel, insurance, maintenance), leading to increased friction in rate negotiations and a higher risk of small fleet insolvencies.
- Economic Indicators: Inflationary pressures and high fuel costs are driving shippers to seek LTL and partial consolidation options, evidenced by the 14.7% overnight surge in partial load volumes.
π° Impactful News Analysis
-
Global Conflict Drives Severe Fuel Price Hikes π:
With global crude oil prices skyrocketing due to the Iran conflict, domestic diesel has cemented itself at $5.662/gallon. Brokers must proactively address fuel costs in customer quotes, as carriers simply cannot absorb these expenses and will reject freight that doesn't adequately compensate for fuel.
-
Carrier Frustration Mounts Over Stagnant Base Rates π:
Industry discussions highlight a growing disconnect between the rising cost of living/operating and stagnant base freight rates. Brokers should expect carriers to negotiate aggressively on spot loads, leveraging current volume surges to claw back margins lost to inflation.
News Insight
Fuel Volatility Has Become a Quote-Validity Issue
At $5.662 diesel, long-haul pricing is no longer a static linehaul discussion. Same-day quote validity and explicit fuel review language are becoming necessary on 800-mile-plus and temperature-controlled freight because carriers are treating fuel exposure as a bid-or-pass decision, especially when deadhead and weather detours are part of the trip.
πΊοΈ Regional & Lane Analysis
π Primary Region Focus: Gulf South & Southeast
The Gulf South and broader Southeast region is currently the most volatile and opportunity-rich market for brokers. A collision of severe river flooding in Louisiana and Mississippi is fracturing critical east-west routing (I-10, I-59), trapping capacity and forcing detours. Simultaneously, the region is experiencing a massive surge in temperature-controlled demand due to the accelerating produce season. This dual pressure of weather-induced capacity constraints and seasonal volume spikes is driving massive rate premiums, particularly in the reefer ($0.31/mile premium) and flatbed sectors.
π£οΈ Key Lane Watch
New Orleans, LA β Atlanta, GA: This lane is heavily disrupted by ongoing flooding in LA and MS, forcing carriers to take longer, less efficient routes to reach the I-65/I-85 corridors. Demand for outbound freight remains strong, but capacity is extremely tight as drivers avoid the water-logged origin market.
Houston, TX β Charlotte, NC: A critical long-haul lane that is currently absorbing diverted traffic from the flooded Gulf Coast. Produce and industrial volumes are strong, but the $5.662/gallon diesel price is making carriers hesitant to commit to the long mileage without heavy compensation.
Regional Insight
New Orleans to Atlanta: Price the Origin Friction
The biggest miss on this lane is not linehaul math but origin execution. Trucks can lose hours getting into and out of flood-affected pickup zones before settling into the eastbound run, so all-in pricing needs to cover access delays, extra fuel burn, and a higher probability of after-hours delivery into Atlanta.
- Use carrier-confirmed routing instead of default map transit assumptions.
- Friday tenders that miss the morning booking window are likely to cost noticeably more by midafternoon.
Regional Insight
Houston to Charlotte Rewards Reload Certainty
This lane is increasingly being priced on round-trip economics rather than one-way revenue. With fuel this high, carriers will pay close attention to reload prospects out of Charlotte and are more likely to commit when delivery timing leaves room for a productive next move; that dynamic keeps reefer capacity especially rate-sensitive as produce freight pulls trucks farther east.
- Monday-delivery freight is better covered before the weekend than chased on Sunday.
- Delivery flexibility can buy more rate relief here than pushing linehaul down a few cents.
π Reefer: The $0.31 Premium Squeeze
The temperature-controlled sector is currently the most volatile and lucrative space in the spot market. Today's real-time data shows a massive $0.31/mile spread between posted rates ($2.
- and paid rates ($3
- . This indicates that shippers and brokers are systematically underestimating the cost of capacity in their initial postings, forcing them to pay heavy premiums to actually move the freight. With available reefer loads ticking up to 10,413, the supply-demand imbalance is heavily skewed toward the carrier. This dynamic is being driven by the peak of southern produce season colliding with a punishing $5.662/gallon diesel average. Carriers operating reefers burn fuel not just for transit, but to keep the unit running, making them hyper-sensitive to fuel costs. Brokers must stop quoting based on posted averages immediately; any reefer freight quoted today must be priced against the $3.21/mile paid average to avoid taking losses on the spot board
π Geopolitics at the Pump: The $5.662 Reality
Today's news regarding global crude oil spikes tied to the Iran conflict provides crucial context for the punishing $5.662/gallon national diesel average. This is not a temporary, localized fuel spike; it is a macro-economic reality that is fundamentally altering carrier behavior. At these fuel levels, the cost of a single deadhead mile is devastating to a carrier's bottom line. Consequently, we are seeing a hyper-localization of capacity. Carriers are refusing to bounce long distances for loads, leading to localized capacity shortages even in markets where overall load-to-truck ratios appear balanced. The 11.0% overnight surge in dry van volumes (up to 31,051 loads) combined with a $0.06/mile carrier premium suggests that shippers are struggling to find trucks willing to take their freight at standard rates. Brokers must factor in higher fuel surcharges and expect carriers to demand compensation for any deadhead over 50 miles.
π° Specialized Freight: A Rare Broker Advantage
Amidst a market characterized by tight capacity and carrier premiums, the specialized freight sector stands out as a unique opportunity today. Despite a 5.1% increase in available specialized loads (reaching 27,
- , the rate data reveals a $0.02/mile broker advantage, with paid rates ($3
- actually coming in lower than posted rates ($3
- . This anomaly suggests that specialized carriers are currently out of position and aggressively bidding on freight to reposition their equipment for the weekend, or to escape regions with low outbound industrial demand. For brokers with specialized or step-deck freight, today presents a prime window to secure capacity below market averages. By targeting carriers looking to move out of the flooded Gulf South or reposition toward the Midwest construction hubs, brokers can capture wider margins in this specific equipment class while the rest of the market pays premiums
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Hold Gulf South detour and delay assumptions through at least Monday; a drier Friday does not mean access is restored.
- Book Southeast reefer and flatbed early in the day and treat late-afternoon coverage as premium freight.
- On 800-mile-plus loads, shorten quote validity and separate fuel risk from base linehaul.
- Use the temporary softness in specialized freight to offset thinner margins in reefer and flood-affected open-deck.
π Executive Signal Summary
This is a bigger market, but it is still a selective execution market: Total available loads are 219,548, up from 216,253, while loads moved are 80,194 versus 77,951. That means freight is not just being posted β it is being executed β but the loads getting covered are the ones priced and packaged correctly.
Reefer is still the clearest place to lose money fast: Paid is $3.21/mile versus $2.90/mile posted, a $0.31/mile gap. That is roughly 10.7% above posted. If you quote reefer off board-posted logic today, you are volunteering to buy service failures or negative margin.
Flatbed is the marketβs tone-setter because it combines size with friction: 95,035 flatbed loads and a $0.18/mile paid-over-posted premium tell you the open-deck market is not just busy β it is operationally inefficient because flooding and detours are slowing turns.
Dry van tightened more than the headline suggests: 31,051 van loads is a sharp late-week push, and while the spread is only $0.06/mile, the real issue is timing. Van is not wildly expensive; it is increasingly expensive to wait.
Specialized is the one clean margin offset on the board: Paid is $3.06/mile versus $3.08/mile posted. That small $0.02/mile broker edge matters today because it gives disciplined brokers a place to win margin without forcing risk into reefer or flood-affected open-deck.
Friday coverage decisions now directly shape Monday: With diesel at $5.662/gallon, ongoing LA/MS flood disruption, and Sunday-Tuesday storm risk in the Gulf South, anything left uncovered too long today is more likely to become a Monday premium load than a weekend bargain.
π What the data is really saying
The market is materially stronger than a week ago:
- Total loads were 173,090 one week ago
- Today they are 219,548
- That is an increase of 46,458 loads, or about 26.8%
- Average rate is $2.94/mile today versus $2.77/mile one week ago
Market opportunity is expanding faster than many shipper budgets:
- Market opportunity is $370.0M today
- Yesterday it was $354.4M
- That is a gain of $15.6M overnight
The average rate is hiding the real pressure points:
- National average is $2.94/mile
- But execution premiums exist in van, reefer, flatbed, heavy haul, and LTL (Less Than Truckload)/partial
- Only specialized shows a broker-favorable spread
Open-deck freight is still driving carrier psychology across the whole market:
- Flatbed + heavy haul + specialized = 163,753 visible loads
- That is about 74.6% of all visible volume
- Those same categories account for 65,373 of 80,194 loads moved, or about 81.5% of executed volume
- Translation: industrial and project freight is still setting the emotional tone for negotiations, even on van freight
π§ Todayβs broker read: how carriers and shippers are behaving
Carriers are buying daily profit, not just rate per mile
- At $5.662 diesel, a carrier is thinking in terms of:
- Deadhead
- Turn time
- Reload certainty
- Detour exposure
- Facility delay risk
- That is why a load with an average linehaul can still be hard to cover if the execution quality is poor
Shippers are likely to make two bad assumptions
- Assumption 1: Posted rates are actionable
- Assumption 2: Better weather today means routing is normal
- Both will cost them money unless you reset expectations early
Brokers will lose margin in one of three ways today
- Underquoting reefer
- Ignoring flood-origin access and detention risk on flatbed/open-deck
- Waiting too long to cover van freight that looks ordinary on paper
π Mode-by-mode playbook
π Dry Van
π§ Reefer
πͺ΅ Flatbed
What matters:
- 95,035 loads
- $3.39/mile posted
- $3.57/mile paid
- $0.18/mile spread
What it means:
- This is the largest and one of the firmest markets
- The issue is not only demand β it is damaged equipment turns
- Flooding across LA/MS is turning normal turns into multi-hour execution problems
Broker move:
- Price detours and site-access friction up front
- Confirm whether the plant, yard, or jobsite is actually truck-accessible
- Quote detention, tarp, and re-route exposure separately
- Avoid assuming software transit times are real in flood-affected freight
Big mistake to avoid:
- Treating this like a normal spring flatbed market
- It is not
- It is a spring demand market layered on top of weather-driven inefficiency
ποΈ Heavy Haul
What matters:
- 41,283 loads
- $3.48/mile posted
- $3.61/mile paid
- $0.13/mile spread
What it means:
- Volume cooled, but pricing did not break
- That tells you specialized capacity is still disciplined
- Carriers are protecting yield because project freight still competes for a finite pool of compliant, permitted operators
Broker move:
- Negotiate linehaul lightly
- Protect permit, escort, route-survey, and timing pass-throughs hard
- Do not dispatch until trailer fit, dimensions, route restrictions, and permit timing are confirmed
βοΈ Specialized
What matters:
- 27,435 loads
- $3.08/mile posted
- $3.06/mile paid
- -$0.02/mile spread
What it means:
- This is the rare broker-favorable pocket
- Likely cause: equipment repositioning and carriers trying to improve weekend placement
- This is not a βcheap market,β but it is a precision market you can still win
Broker move:
- Lean into exact trailer/spec matching
- Call carriers who need directional freight out of softer or disrupted areas
- Use specialized wins to offset tighter reefer and flatbed margins
- Move quickly when fit is right β the edge is small and temporary
π¦ LTL / Partial
What matters:
- 14,331 loads
- $1.79/mile posted
- $1.85/mile paid
- $0.06/mile spread
What it means:
- Shippers are clearly using partial and consolidation to escape full truckload sticker shock
- But this is not a soft alternative anymore
- A rising paid premium tells you shared-space capacity is tightening too
Broker move:
- Offer LTL/partial as an account-retention tool
- Present two options:
- Economy partial
- Priority truckload
- Use it when full truckload quotes create resistance
- Do not oversell transit certainty unless you truly control the consolidation plan
π§οΈ Regional trap map for the next 24β72 hours
π Gulf South: where brokers will either protect margin or donate it
π£οΈ New Orleans, LA β Atlanta, GA
Broker read:
- This lane is being priced incorrectly by anyone focused only on map miles
- The real cost is origin friction
- Lost hours at pickup can create after-hours delivery exposure into Atlanta
Best approach:
- Use carrier-confirmed routing
- Build in accessorial language for delay and re-route
- Do not wait until late afternoon to cover Friday tenders
π£οΈ Houston, TX β Charlotte, NC
Broker read:
- This lane is being priced on round-trip economics
- At $5.662 diesel, carriers care as much about what happens after Charlotte as the move itself
Best approach:
- Sell reload certainty
- Offer delivery flexibility if shipper can tolerate it
- Pre-cover Monday deliveries before the weekend instead of chasing them Sunday
π½ Southern Illinois
Broker read:
- Flooding near the Kaskaskia is localized today, but it is a legitimate early-week flatbed watch
- Even if interstates stay workable, township roads and plant access can still slow equipment turns
Best approach:
- Watch Monday agricultural and manufacturing flatbed freight closely
- Quote short-haul open-deck with more caution than the map suggests
π° Pricing posture that wins today
π€ With carriers
π§Ύ With shippers
π‘οΈ Risk controls for today
1) Reconfirm flood-zone access, not just facility status
- Ask:
- Can a truck physically get in?
- Are secondary roads usable?
- Are staging areas dry enough for loading?
- Is the shipper loading on schedule?
2) Vet first-use carriers harder
- Verify:
- Authority
- Insurance
- Driver identity
- Truck/trailer match
- ELD (Electronic Logging Device) compliance
- Actual operating carrier
- In tight markets, cheap capacity often sits closest to service failure
3) Build more time cushion into appointments
- Flood access
- Produce delays
- Fuel stops
- Detours
- All of these can turn a legal transit plan into a late arrival
4) Protect accessorials separately
- Detention
- Tarp
- Lumper
- Reefer fuel
- Layover
- Reroute
- Permit/escort
- Do not bury these inside a fragile linehaul assumption
5) Recheck all Monday-sensitive freight before end of day
- Anything in the Gulf South or Southeast that is still uncovered this afternoon deserves a fresh pricing look before close
π
24β72 hour outlook
Base case β 60%
- Van stays timing-sensitive
- Reefer stays carrier-led
- Flatbed remains firm because flood friction continues to slow turns
- Monday coverage is tighter than many shippers expect
Risk case β 25%
- Additional Gulf storms refresh disruption
- Diesel stays elevated or rises further
- Brokers chasing cheap weekend coverage see a spike in fall-offs, late pickups, and Monday repricing
Opportunity case β 15%
- Specialized softness holds through the weekend
- Some inland van lanes stabilize
- Brokers with reload visibility and local carrier benches outperform competitors who blanket-overquote everything
β
Highest-value actions for today
1) Cover priority reefer first
- Quote from $3.21/mile paid reality, not $2.90/mile posted fiction
2) Reprice Gulf South freight before noon
- Add detour, access delay, and Monday carry risk
3) Lock in Monday deliveries now where possible
- Especially Houston eastbound, Gulf South outbound, and Southeast reefer
4) Use specialized aggressively but selectively
- It is the best place today to capture margin without buying operational chaos
5) Offer partial solutions before truckload sticker shock kills the order
- Save the account first
- Maximize margin second
6) Tighten quote-validity windows on long-haul and temp-controlled freight
- Fuel volatility is too high for lazy static quoting
7) Push reload economics in every carrier conversation
- In this fuel environment, the next load often closes the current load
π§Ύ Bottom line
Today is not about finding the cheapest truck. It is about matching the right truck to the right execution profile before the market gets more expensive later in the day.
- Reefer is still the biggest underquote trap
- Van is a timing market
- Flatbed strength is being reinforced by damaged turns, not just demand
- Heavy haul remains disciplined
- Specialized is your best margin relief valve
- LTL/partial is strategic, not soft
- Flood-related access and fuel costs need to be priced explicitly
- Friday decisions are now part of Monday strategy
π
This Day in History
1536: Anne Boleyn, Queen of England, stands trial in London on charges of treason, adultery and incest; she is condemned to death by a specially-selected jury.
1618: Johannes Kepler confirms his previously rejected discovery of the third law of planetary motion (he first discovered it on March 8 but soon rejected the idea after some initial calculations were made).
1934: A self coup by prime minister KΔrlis Ulmanis succeeds in Latvia, suspending its constitution and dissolving its Saeima.
π Quote of the Day
"Only one thing is ever guaranteed, that is that you will definitely not achieve the goal if you don't take the shot."
β Wayne Gretzky