📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Saturday, June 06, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The domestic spot market is experiencing a typical weekend contraction today, with total available loads dropping 20.8% to 147,970. Despite this volume decline, the national average spot rate remains highly resilient, holding at $2.95/mile. High operating costs, anchored by a verified AAA national diesel average of $5.357/gallon, continue to establish a rigid floor for carrier rate negotiations and restrict empty deadhead miles. Equipment-specific dynamics show a significant shift today: temperature-controlled reefer capacity has loosened over the weekend, yielding an $0.11/mile broker advantage ($3.06 paid vs $3.17 posted) and opening a highly profitable arbitrage window. Conversely, dry van and flatbed capacity remain balanced, with minor carrier premiums of $0.01/mile and $0.02/mile respectively. Active river flooding in the Midwest and flash floods in Texas continue to disrupt key transit corridors, trapping open-deck capacity and forcing routing detours.
Insight
Weekend reefer softness is likely a 48-hour window
The reefer pullback is happening inside a full summer produce market, not ahead of a broader cooling trend. That makes today’s broker-favorable spread more useful for locking Monday pickups and Tuesday deliveries than for expecting multi-day rate erosion; once packing sheds and distribution schedules reset early next week, Southeast and Midwest produce corridors should regain pricing power quickly.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe Flash Flooding (Texas (TX, Bell, Falls, Crosby, Lubbock, Lynn counties)): Heavy rainfall of up to 7 inches has triggered life-threatening flash flooding, impacting major freight corridors including I-35 and I-27. This may disrupt regional transit and delay shipments moving through central and western Texas.
- River Flooding in the Lower Missouri River Basin (Midwest Region (KS, MO, NE, SD)): Moderate river flooding continues to impact low-lying agricultural areas and local roads, with potential water overtopping on State Route 48. This could force routing detours and delay flatbed and agricultural transport along the I-29 and I-35 corridors.
- Gulf Coast River Flooding (Gulf Coast (LA, OK, TX)): Minor flooding along the Calcasieu River near Lake Charles is expected to inundate River Road and local marshlands. This poses a risk of minor delays for regional freight moving along the I-10 and I-210 corridors.
- Pacific Northwest Freeze and Frost Conditions (Pacific Northwest (OR, CA, Siskiyou, Modoc, Klamath, Lake counties)): Sub-freezing temperatures as low as 22 degrees are expected to cause frost and freeze conditions. This could damage sensitive outdoor vegetation and crops, potentially disrupting early-season agricultural freight volumes in the region.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Lower Missouri disruptions are positioned to linger into the Monday freight reset
Flooding concerns in northwest Missouri are being reinforced by another round of rain and thunderstorms through Sunday, with heavier convection returning Monday. That keeps secondary roads and low-water approaches vulnerable even when interstate mainlines remain open, which is the kind of disruption that traps flatbed and agricultural equipment out of position rather than creating headline-grabbing closures.
- Pad Monday transit on freight touching the I-29 and I-35 corridors through Missouri, eastern Kansas, and southeast Nebraska.
- Verify county-road access before dispatching open-deck loads to farms, elevators, or project sites north of Kansas City.
Weather Insight
Central Texas improves Sunday, but today and Monday still carry service risk
Flash-flood issues around Bell and Falls counties should become more manageable after today’s scattered rain, giving carriers a cleaner repositioning window on Sunday. The catch is that Monday brings another round of thunderstorms into central Texas, so loads tendered late Sunday for Monday pickup along the I-35 spine still need extra dwell time and tighter check calls.
Weather Insight
Lake Charles remains a localized friction point on the Gulf
Heavy rain this afternoon near Lake Charles raises the odds of short-duration slowdowns on the I-10 and I-210 approaches, especially for refinery, chemical, and port-related freight moving on tight appointment windows. The broader lane risk is modest, but same-day turns and dray-style moves in the corridor are more exposed than long-haul through traffic.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Diesel futures remain highly volatile due to ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and instability around key oil transportation routes, suggesting fuel surcharges will remain elevated through the summer.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small fleets and owner-operators are facing severe financial pressure due to the combination of high diesel prices and rising insurance costs, accelerating market consolidation and carrier exits.
- Economic Indicators: Strong summer consumer demand and early maritime import surges are keeping retail inventory replenishment active, providing a steady baseline of volume for domestic freight markets.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
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Fuel Theft Risks Escalate as Diesel Prices Pressure Carrier Margins 🔗:
With diesel prices elevated, fuel has become a primary target for organized theft, increasing carrier operating risks. Brokers must communicate with carriers regarding secure parking and fuel card security, as theft-related delays can lead to missed delivery windows and cargo claims.
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The Negligent Selection Dilemma: Balancing Broker Liability and Carrier Relations 🔗:
The legal landscape surrounding 'negligent selection' lawsuits is pushing some brokers to favor publicly traded mega-carriers to minimize liability. However, this strategy risks direct customer solicitation and limits access to specialized small-carrier capacity, highlighting the need for robust, independent carrier vetting protocols.
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Soaring Fuel Costs Squeeze Southern California Trucking Operations 🔗:
Rising diesel prices in major West Coast hubs like Los Angeles are severely impacting carrier profitability. Brokers quoting outbound Southern California freight must account for higher carrier rate demands and elevated fuel surcharges to secure reliable capacity.
News Insight
Fuel theft risk is now a weekend service issue
At current diesel prices, a drained tank or compromised fuel card can turn into a missed Monday pickup faster than a normal mechanical delay, particularly for small carriers running thin cash flow. Long-haul produce and weekend repositioning loads are the most exposed because drivers are more likely to park loaded equipment or fuel in unfamiliar locations before the workweek begins.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast is currently the epicenter of peak summer produce activity, creating intense localized demand for temperature-controlled equipment. However, today's weekend spot market contraction has temporarily softened reefer rates, opening a highly profitable arbitrage window for brokers. By leveraging the sudden $0.11/mile broker advantage on reefers, brokers can lock in lower carrier rates today for shipments moving early next week, capitalizing on the inevitable Monday capacity tightening.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA → Orlando, FL: This high-volume Southeast lane is experiencing steady weekend demand, but outbound Florida capacity remains extremely soft. Reefers and dry vans are readily available in the Atlanta hub, but carriers are hesitant to head south without securing premium rates to cover their empty return miles.
Columbia, SC → Chicago, IL: Columbia is a major origin for the peak South Carolina peach harvest, driving intense seasonal demand for temperature-controlled equipment. While weekday reefer capacity is exceptionally tight, the weekend lull has temporarily eased carrier leverage on this long-haul lane.
Regional Insight
Florida backhaul discipline will decide Atlanta southbound acceptance
Atlanta-to-Orlando looks easy on paper because trucks are available, but southbound acceptance still hinges on what the driver can do next. Capacity will stay compliant this weekend only if carriers can see a credible reload path out of central or north Florida; without that, tendered trucks are more likely to fall off late Sunday or demand a Monday rate reset.
- Package Orlando freight with a northbound reload from Orlando, Lakeland, or Jacksonville whenever possible.
- Expect the cheapest southbound quotes to be the most fragile if no return freight is attached.
📰 Breaking Down: The Negligent Selection Dilemma and the Mega-Carrier Trap
The ongoing legal shift surrounding broker liability, highlighted by recent rulings like Montgomery v. Caribe Transport II, is creating a profound strategic dilemma for freight brokerages. To mitigate the risk of catastrophic 'negligent selection' lawsuits, some industry participants are advocating for a policy of hiring only publicly traded mega-carriers. The logic is simple: proving negligence in hiring a massive, established fleet with a dedicated compliance department is an uphill battle for any plaintiff's counsel. However, this risk-aversion strategy presents a severe threat to the traditional brokerage business model.
First, relying solely on mega-carriers strips brokers of their primary value proposition: flexibility and access to the fragmented capacity of the small carrier market, which represents over 90% of domestic trucking. Second, mega-carriers possess the sales infrastructure to directly solicit a broker's customer base, meaning a broker who feeds them high-volume contract freight is actively training their future competitors.
To survive this environment, brokers must reject the mega-carrier cop-out and instead invest in automated, continuous carrier vetting technology. By establishing rigorous, documented safety and compliance checks at the time of dispatch, brokers can build a legally defensible selection process while maintaining their relationships with highly flexible, non-soliciting small fleets and owner-operators.
🚛 Reefer: The Weekend Arbitrage Window Opens Amid Peak Produce
Despite being in the absolute heart of the summer produce season, temperature-controlled spot market dynamics have experienced a dramatic weekend shift. Reefer available loads dropped 25.6% today to 6,511, a contraction that has temporarily stripped carriers of their pricing leverage. Nationally, average paid reefer rates have softened to $3.06/mile against a posted average of $3.17/mile, yielding a substantial $0.11/mile broker advantage. This is a classic weekend anomaly in a highly seasonal market.
During the week, time-sensitive shipments of peaches, blueberries, and watermelons force brokers to pay aggressive carrier premiums to secure capacity. However, as shipping facilities slow down on Saturday, carriers are left with limited options and are highly motivated to secure backhauls or repositioning runs to avoid sitting idle. This has created a brief but highly profitable arbitrage window for brokers.
Brokers should immediately target shippers with flexible delivery windows and book those loads today using the softer weekend spot rates. This capacity should be locked in before Monday morning, when the resumption of agricultural shipping schedules will inevitably cause reefer capacity to dry up and spot rates to spike back toward their weekday peaks.
📈 Analyzing the Weekend Spot Market Contraction and Rate Sticky Points
Today's real-time spot market data reveals a significant 20.8% drop in total available loads, falling to 147,970 from yesterday's mark of 186,907. While a weekend volume contraction is normal, the behavior of spot rates is highly unusual. The national average spot rate only ticked down slightly to $2.95/mile, showing remarkable 'stickiness' despite a massive drop in demand. This rate rigidity is directly tied to carrier operating costs.
With AAA national diesel prices holding at $5.357/gallon, carriers are facing an incredibly high cost of doing business. At this fuel price, the break-even point for owner-operators is elevated, meaning they simply cannot afford to accept rates below a certain threshold, regardless of how low demand drops. This has created a hard floor for spot rates, preventing the sharp weekend rate drops that are typical in lower-fuel environments.
For brokers, this means that while volume is lower, negotiating deep rate cuts on standard dry van or flatbed freight will be extremely difficult. Instead of trying to squeeze carrier rates, brokers should focus on operational efficiency—such as reducing detention times and optimizing routing—to protect their margins in a high-cost environment.
📅 Summer Harvest Surge: Navigating the June Peach and Blueberry Peaks
As we enter the second week of June, the domestic freight market is facing the peak of the Southeast peach and blueberry harvests. South Carolina and Georgia peaches, along with blueberries from Georgia and New Jersey, are moving in maximum volumes, placing a severe strain on regional temperature-controlled capacity. These highly perishable commodities require pre-cooled equipment and strict transit windows, meaning shippers are willing to pay significant premiums to secure reliable reefer trucks.
Over the next 7 to 14 days, this agricultural surge will continue to pull reefer capacity out of general freight networks and concentrate it in the Southeast. This will create localized capacity deficits for non-agricultural shippers, driving up dry van and reefer spot rates across the region. Brokers must prepare their customers for these seasonal shifts, advising them to adjust shipping schedules or secure contract capacity early to avoid being exposed to the volatile spot market as the harvest reaches its absolute peak.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Use today’s reefer softness to lock Monday and Tuesday Southeast produce moves before the weekday rate snapback.
- Build extra transit buffer into flatbed and ag freight touching northwest Missouri, eastern Kansas, and southeast Nebraska through Monday.
- Treat Atlanta-to-Florida pricing as a round-trip decision; the southbound truck is only cheap if the northbound reload is real.
- Do not chase deep van or flatbed cuts while diesel stays above $5.35 per gallon; protect margin through routing and service execution instead.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a weekend volume drop, not a real rate collapse.
- Total available loads are 147,970, down 20.8% from yesterday’s 186,907.
- National average spot rate is still $2.95/mile, which tells you the market is losing activity faster than it is losing pricing power.
Reefer is the clearest buy of the day.
- 6,511 reefer loads
- $3.17/mile posted
- $3.06/mile paid
- -$0.11/mile broker advantage
- That is a meaningful reversal inside peak produce season, which makes it a short-duration buying window, not a new soft trend.
Specialized is the biggest margin opportunity, but only for disciplined brokers.
- 18,028 specialized loads
- $3.19/mile posted
- $2.85/mile paid
- -$0.34/mile broker advantage
- This is strong broker leverage, but it will disappear fast if load details are sloppy.
Van and flatbed are not giving you much rate relief.
- Van: 22,980 loads, $2.58 posted / $2.59 paid
- Flatbed: 60,632 loads, $3.59 posted / $3.61 paid
- In both cases, diesel at $5.357/gallon is preventing carriers from taking bad freight just because it is Saturday.
Open-deck freight is still where execution risk lives.
- Heavy haul: 29,060 loads, $3.72 posted / $3.76 paid
- Flatbed + heavy haul + specialized = 107,720 loads, or about 72.8% of the board
- Flooding in Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, and Texas is reducing turns and trapping equipment more than the headline numbers suggest.
OTRI (Outbound Tender Rejection Index) staying elevated matters.
- Routing guides are still failing in tighter pockets.
- That means replacement-cost risk on Monday is higher than Saturday’s board softness makes it look.
📈 What the market is actually telling you
The market is sending a two-layer signal today:
That is why the board is not uniformly soft.
Reefer softened because carriers want positioning freight now.
- Not because produce disappeared.
- Not because cold-chain demand broke.
- It softened because Saturday shipping cadence weakened while trucks still need to line up Monday revenue.
Specialized softened because repositioning behavior is exaggerated on weekends.
- This often creates the best raw spread on the board.
- It also creates the most fake margin if dimensions, securement, or site access are vague.
Van did not crack.
- A $0.01/mile carrier premium is basically a balanced market.
- Brokers looking for deep cuts in dry van are likely to waste time instead of winning freight.
Flatbed and heavy haul are still being priced on productivity, not just mileage.
- Flooded local roads, permit friction, slower jobsite access, and detours all reduce usable truck time.
- When productivity drops, rate pressure survives even during a weekend lull.
The veteran read here is simple:
- Do not confuse fewer loads with cheaper executable freight.
- Do not assume Saturday buy rates will still exist Monday morning.
- Buy the temporary weakness where it is real: reefer and specialized.
- Protect service where the market is still structurally tight: flatbed and heavy haul.
🚛 Mode-by-mode broker playbook
❄️ Reefer
- Market read: 6,511 loads, $3.17 posted, $3.06 paid, -$0.11 broker advantage.
- What it means: This is a weekend arbitrage window inside a strong seasonal market.
- Best moves today:
- Cover Monday and Tuesday produce freight now, especially freight tied to Georgia, South Carolina, Texas, New Jersey, and Midwest food lanes.
- Sell today’s buy as insurance against Monday replacement cost, not as a discount to pass through.
- Prioritize loads with tight commodity details:
- temperature
- pre-cool status
- washout
- pallet count
- seal requirement
- appointment firmness
- Best use case: Columbia, SC → Chicago, IL type freight is exactly where this window matters.
- Big trap: Believing today’s softer reefer pricing means next week is getting easier. It is not.
🚚 Dry Van
- Market read: 22,980 loads, $2.58 posted, $2.59 paid, +$0.01 carrier premium.
- What it means: Van is balanced, maybe slightly easier on dense lanes, but not cheap.
- Best moves today:
- Use dense-lane coverage to secure early-week freight before Monday noise hits.
- Protect margin through clean execution, not aggressive carrier compression.
- Target carriers already positioned near pickup, because fuel punishes out-of-route miles.
- Best use case: Routine replenishment, import support, and short-to-medium-haul freight on major corridors.
- Big trap: Treating all van freight as easy just because weekend activity is down.
🪵 Flatbed
- Market read: 60,632 loads, $3.59 posted, $3.61 paid, +$0.02 carrier premium.
- What it means: Flatbed is balanced on screen, tighter in execution.
- Best moves today:
- Quote turn time, not just loaded miles.
- Add transit padding on Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, and Texas touches.
- Call core flatbed carriers first before broad posting on flood-exposed freight.
- Big trap: Underpricing loads into farms, yards, or project sites that rely on secondary roads.
🏗️ Heavy Haul
- Market read: 29,060 loads, $3.72 posted, $3.76 paid, +$0.04 carrier premium.
- What it means: Heavy haul is still route-feasibility freight first, rate freight second.
- Best moves today:
- Confirm route logic before final pricing.
- Document permit assumptions and reroute responsibility.
- Use proven carriers only on weather-sensitive oversize freight.
- Big trap: Pricing from the map without confirming permit-friendly detours.
⚙️ Specialized
- Market read: 18,028 loads, $3.19 posted, $2.85 paid, -$0.34 broker advantage.
- What it means: This is the best raw spread on the board.
- Best moves today:
- Target weekend repositioning carriers.
- Tighten every scope item before award:
- dimensions
- loading method
- securement
- escorts if needed
- site access
- tarping expectations
- Use this mode to capture margin on niche freight before Monday tightens behavior.
- Big trap: Taking a cheap rate from a carrier who is discounting because they do not fully understand the load.
📦 LTL / Partial
- Market read: 10,759 loads, $1.65 posted, $1.64 paid, -$0.01 broker advantage.
- What it means: Not a giant pricing edge, but still a useful margin-defense valve.
- Best moves today:
- Convert flexible palletized freight out of truckload where appointment windows allow.
- Use LTL (Less Than Truckload) / partial options for customers hit by reefer or open-deck sticker shock.
- Big trap: Forgetting accessorial detail and letting a cheap consolidation move turn expensive at delivery.
🌦️ Weather and lane decisions for the next 24–72 hours
Lower Missouri Basin risk is a productivity problem.
- Flooding in Missouri and nearby corridors is not just about interstate closure headlines.
- The real issue is county roads, site approaches, and slower repositioning.
- Best broker action:
- add buffer on I-29 and I-35 freight
- verify site access before dispatch
- warn customers that Monday transit assumptions may be optimistic
Central Texas is still a live service risk.
- Flash flooding around Bell and Falls counties and warnings around Crosby, Lubbock, and Lynn counties create same-day disruption and Monday uncertainty.
- Best broker action:
- tighten check calls
- avoid promising first-shift Monday pickup precision without backup time
- require route acknowledgment on loads touching I-35, I-27, I-20, or I-40
Lake Charles is a localized friction market.
- The risk near I-10 and I-210 is highest on refinery, chemical, port, and same-day turn freight.
- Best broker action:
- build extra dwell into appointment-sensitive moves
- avoid quoting dray-style urgency as if it were normal through freight
Pacific Northwest frost is a near-term produce watch, not a national lane event.
- Best broker action:
- confirm loading status on sensitive agricultural freight from southern Oregon / northern California zones
- do not oversell Monday produce volume until shippers confirm crop impact
💬 What to say in negotiations today
To shippers asking why rates are not falling harder:
- “The board got smaller, but fuel and weather kept executable truck capacity expensive. The market is cheaper in select reefer and specialized pockets, not across the board.”
To carriers on reefer freight:
- “This is a clean Monday setup with known temp, firm appointments, and a credible reload path.”
- Carriers are more likely to accept a fair rate today when they believe the broker is helping them avoid Monday uncertainty.
To carriers on Florida freight:
- “Southbound is only worth it if we can show you the northbound recovery.”
- That is the right conversation on Atlanta, GA → Orlando, FL.
- The cheapest southbound quote is often the first one to fall off if the reload is not real.
To customers on flatbed and heavy haul:
- “The highway may be open, but truck productivity is lower because detours, local access, and scheduling risk are all worse.”
- That explanation lands better than a vague weather excuse.
⚖️ Risk controls that matter today
📋 24-hour broker action plan
Before late morning
- Cover priority Monday/Tuesday reefer first.
- Reach out to produce-adjacent shippers who can move now.
- Lock carrier commitments while reefer still shows a broker-side spread.
Midday
- Audit every flatbed and heavy haul load touching flood regions.
- Add transit padding and route notes before customers ask for updates.
- Reprice any open-deck freight that was quoted like a normal-turn load.
Afternoon
- Use specialized as a margin-capture bucket, but only on fully scoped freight.
- Sell LTL/partial alternatives to flexible customers who do not need a full truck.
- Pair Florida freight with reload discussions before tendering a truck.
By end of day
- Have Monday’s critical freight already covered.
- Send proactive service-risk updates on Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, Texas, and Lake Charles exposures.
- Clean up carrier files on every weather- or liability-sensitive load.
🎯 Best broker moves right now
- Buy reefer while the weekend spread exists.
- Use specialized for margin, but only with exact scope.
- Do not chase deep van or flatbed cuts.
- Treat open-deck as a productivity market, not a mileage market.
- Sell Florida reload-first.
- Protect Monday now, because Saturday softness is misleading.
🏁 Bottom line
Today is a classic professional-broker day.
The easy read is “loads are down.”
The correct read is “select pockets got temporarily cheaper, but the market is still expensive to execute badly.”
The brokers who win this board today will:
- lock reefer before Monday
- harvest specialized margin without scope mistakes
- avoid wasting time squeezing balanced van and flatbed freight
- price weather-exposed open-deck on turn time and risk
- sell certainty while everyone else is still quoting screens
💡 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
1832: The June Rebellion in Paris is put down by the National Guard.
1966: March Against Fear: African-American civil rights activist James Meredith is wounded in an ambush by white sniper James Aubrey Norvell. Meredith and Norvell are photographed by Jack R. Thornell, whose photo will receive the 1967 Pulitzer Prize in Photography, the last one to be awarded in the category.
2023: Russo-Ukrainian war: The Kakhovka Dam is destroyed.
💭 Quote of the Day
"Confidence is the greatest friend."
— Lao Tzu