π Daily Market Intelligence Report
Monday, May 11, 2026
7:00 AM CST
π Top-Line Summary
The spot market has opened the week with a robust 6.6% volume rebound to 151,120 available loads, but the real story lies in the explosive rate premiums carriers are commanding in specialized and temperature-controlled sectors. As the industry braces for the imminent CVSA International Roadcheck week, capacity is rapidly contracting. Reefer carriers are leveraging overlapping southern produce harvests and northern freeze events to extract a massive $0.29/mile premium over posted rates, while the specialized sector has violently flipped from a weekend broker advantage to a staggering $0.40/mile carrier premium. With the national diesel average remaining punishingly high at $5.636/gallon, brokers must navigate a highly fragmented market where standard van freight remains manageable, but any specialized or temperature-controlled requirements will require significant rate concessions to secure reliable routing.
Insight
Monday is likely the week's cheapest buy point for standard van
Dry van parity looks stable, but that window is narrow. The better buying environment is Monday morning, before Roadcheck-related capacity filtering, Tuesday wind across the Upper Midwest, and ongoing flood detours start cutting truck productivity. Brokers still holding flexible Midwest-origin van freight should secure coverage early rather than assume replacement capacity will stay this available into midweek.
β½ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
π¦οΈ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe River Flooding (Deep South (LA, MS, TX)): Ongoing minor to moderate river flooding is expected to continue disrupting regional freight networks, particularly along the I-10 corridor. This poses a significant risk of localized detours, delayed facility access, and trapped capacity for flatbed and heavy haul operations.
- Extended River Flooding (Midwest (IL, IN)): Persistent flooding along the White River and other regional waterways is likely to continue fracturing routing along the I-65 and I-70 corridors. This is expected to create difficult conditions for open-deck carriers and extend transit times for agricultural and industrial freight.
- Late-Season Freeze Warnings (Upper Midwest (MN, WI)): Sub-freezing temperatures dropping to 25-32 degrees are sustaining urgent Protect From Freeze (PFF) requirements for temperature-sensitive freight. This is actively tightening reefer capacity and driving rate premiums across the northern tier.
- Extreme Heat Warning (Southwest (AZ, CA)): Dangerously hot conditions with temperatures reaching 106 to 112 degrees may disrupt daytime transit schedules as carriers manage equipment stress and tire degradation. This could delay loading/unloading operations in major desert distribution hubs.
Weather Insight
Flood friction will outlast improving skies in Indiana and Illinois
Clear weather across southern Indiana and much of Illinois improves driving conditions, but it does not quickly restore freight flow where river flooding is already disrupting access. The limiting factor is still flooded approaches, restricted crossings, and slower routing around the I-65 and I-70 orbit, so open-deck and heavy-haul freight should be quoted with detour miles and softer delivery commitments through at least midweek.
Weather Insight
South Louisiana faces a same-day operating hit before conditions improve
Heavy thunderstorms and repeated afternoon rain near Lafayette and along the I-10 belt raise the risk of missed pickup windows, slower yard turns, and localized routing delays today. Tuesday's drier pattern should help, but equipment delayed in south Louisiana will still be one turn behind, which keeps specialized and flatbed capacity tighter than the forecast alone would imply.
π° Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Energy markets remain volatile with geopolitical pressures keeping diesel futures elevated, suggesting carriers will continue to prioritize fuel efficiency and reduced deadhead miles over total volume.
- Carrier Financial Health: The impending CVSA Roadcheck week combined with sustained high operating costs is expected to sideline marginal carriers this week, temporarily reducing active capacity and increasing market leverage for compliant fleets.
- Economic Indicators: Elevated supply chain costs, particularly in fuel and specialized packaging, are squeezing margins across the manufacturing and agricultural sectors, forcing shippers to be highly strategic with spot market utilization.
π° Impactful News Analysis
-
ELD Compliance Scrutiny Intensifies Ahead of Roadcheck π:
With FMCSA taking a closer look at self-certification of ELDs, brokers must be hyper-vigilant about carrier compliance this week. The risk of loads being delayed due to out-of-service orders is exceptionally high. Brokers should proactively communicate with carriers about their ELD status and build extra buffer time into delivery windows.
-
Fuel Surcharges Ripple Through Broader Supply Chain π:
As seen with regional transit authorities implementing temporary fuel surcharges of over 80%, the sustained $5.636/gallon diesel environment is institutionalizing higher baseline costs. Brokers must clearly communicate to shippers that current rate floors are structurally supported by fuel costs, not just temporary capacity imbalances.
-
Diesel Prices Squeeze Agricultural and Food Distribution Margins π:
The severe margin compression hitting food banks and agricultural shippers due to diesel costs highlights the extreme pressure in the food supply chain. With reefer rates currently commanding a $0.29/mile premium, brokers handling food and beverage freight must prepare shippers for sustained high routing costs and potential tender rejections.
-
Tax Season Prep Highlights Broker Operating Costs π:
As brokers navigate their own rising operational costs (software, load boards, communications), the focus must shift to high-margin freight. The current massive spreads in the specialized and reefer markets offer the best opportunities to offset rising administrative overhead.
News Insight
Roadcheck risk is highest on short-notice freight with no recovery time
The loads most likely to fail this week are same-day pickups and tightly timed next-day deliveries, where a single inspection stop can turn a routine move into an overnight miss. Time-critical freight should be routed toward fleets with verified ELD status and established operating history in the Midwest and Southeast, because service reliability is now a bigger differentiator than nominal truck count.
πΊοΈ Regional & Lane Analysis
π Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest is currently the epicenter of freight market volatility, driven by a perfect storm of weather disruptions, seasonal shifts, and impending regulatory friction. Ongoing severe river flooding across Illinois and Indiana continues to trap open-deck capacity and fracture major East-West routing corridors. Simultaneously, late-season freeze warnings in Minnesota and Wisconsin are sustaining intense Protect From Freeze (PFF) demand, pulling temperature-controlled equipment away from standard freight. As carriers prepare for CVSA Roadcheck week, capacity in this region is contracting sharply, allowing compliant drivers to command significant premiums on outbound loads.
π£οΈ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL β Atlanta, GA: This major North-South corridor is experiencing intense friction due to the ongoing flooding in the lower Midwest and Deep South. Reefer capacity is exceptionally tight as carriers demand premiums to move equipment out of the PFF zone and into the southern produce markets. Flatbed routing is heavily delayed due to I-65 corridor disruptions.
Minneapolis, MN β Dallas, TX: This lane is dominated by the stark contrast in weather conditions, moving from active freeze warnings in the north to severe flooding and heat in the south. The demand for temperature-controlled equipment is immense, as freight requires PFF at the origin and standard refrigeration at the destination.
Regional Insight
Chicago-Atlanta now needs detour pricing, not just higher linehaul
The lane's cost pressure is coming from longer cycle time as much as headline spot rates. Carriers are increasingly valuing loads that let them avoid the most flood-fractured portions of the I-65 path or recover via alternate north-south routings, and those extra miles are expensive with diesel above $5.60. Expect the best trucks to favor freight with flexible appointments, fast loading, and clear detention terms over loads that only offer a nominal rate bump.
Regional Insight
Minneapolis-Dallas reefer pressure is strongest in the first half of the week
Protect-from freeze urgency in Minnesota should begin easing after Tuesday as temperatures recover into the upper 60s, which makes the sharpest reefer premiums most likely to soften later in the week. That will not fully normalize the lane: southbound carriers are still pricing in weak reload visibility and flood-related disruption across Texas-Louisiana freight networks, so backhaul planning remains central to securing dependable coverage.
π Reefer: The Perfect Storm of PFF and Produce
The temperature-controlled sector is currently exhibiting the most extreme volatility in the spot market, driven by a rare convergence of seasonal events. Real-time data shows reefer carriers commanding a staggering $0.29/mile premium, with paid rates surging to $3.08/mile against posted rates of $2.79/mile. This massive spread is supported by a 15.9% overnight spike in available load volume. The root cause is a geographic tug-of-war for equipment: late-season freeze warnings across Minnesota and Wisconsin (Alert WXF491AC98) are sustaining urgent Protect From Freeze (PFF) requirements, effectively anchoring reefer capacity in the northern tier. Simultaneously, the accelerating southern produce season is desperately pulling for that same equipment. Carriers caught in the middle are leveraging this desperation, refusing to move without significant premiums that cover both their immediate operating costs and the punishing $5.636/gallon diesel expense required to reposition.
π§ Compliance Scrutiny and the Roadcheck Capacity Squeeze
As the industry enters the CVSA International Roadcheck week, carrier behavior is rapidly shifting from volume-chasing to risk-mitigation. The real-time load board data reflects this transition: while total available loads have rebounded 6.6% to over 151,000, the massive premiums in specialized ($0.40/mile spread) and heavy haul sectors indicate that compliant, specialized carriers are fully aware of their leverage. News regarding heightened FMCSA scrutiny on ELD self-certification (Alert_1) further complicates the landscape. Carriers with pristine safety records and fully compliant equipment are demanding top-tier rates, knowing that shippers cannot risk utilizing marginal capacity that may be placed out-of-service this week. Brokers must anticipate that a significant portion of the 'available' truck pool is effectively sidelined for the next 72 hours, making the remaining active capacity exceptionally expensive.
π Specialized Sector Rate Explosion
The most dramatic overnight shift in the spot market occurred within the specialized freight sector. Just 24 hours ago, specialized freight showed a massive broker advantage due to aggressive weekend repositioning. Today, the real-time data reveals a violent correction: paid rates have skyrocketed to $3.48/mile against posted rates of $3.08/mile. This $0.40/mile carrier premium, coupled with a 5.4% increase in load volume, suggests that the weekend repositioning was highly strategic, allowing specialized carriers to stage their equipment near high-value industrial hubs. With Midwest and Southern river flooding (Alerts WXA841822B and WX37234042) continuing to trap competing open-deck capacity, these specialized carriers now hold a near-monopoly on complex, heavy industrial routing. Brokers quoting specialized freight today must completely discard last week's rate models and price in this severe Monday morning capacity scarcity.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Cover flexible Midwest van freight early today; optionality is likely to shrink by Tuesday and Wednesday even if volumes stay healthy.
- Quote open-deck freight through the I-10, I-65, and I-70 disruption zones with detour miles and added transit time, not normal turn assumptions.
- Treat reefer pricing as two separate pressures: early-week PFF urgency in the north and per sistent southbound reload risk into flooded Gulf networks.
- Use compliant, verifiable fleets first on short-notice and temperature-sensitive freight during Roadcheck week.
π Executive Signal Summary
This is a rising-yield market, not a universally tight market.
- Total available loads sit at 151,120, up 6.6% from 141,765.
- The market average rate is $2.90/mile, up from $2.77/mile yesterday.
- Market opportunity has climbed to $239.6M from $222.3M.
- The important read: pricing power is improving faster than volume alone would suggest.
Dry van is the only real βbuy-it-earlyβ segment on the board.
- Van loads are 23,435.
- Posted is $2.52/mile and paid is $2.51/mile.
- That -$0.01/mile spread is small, but it matters: you still have a narrow broker-friendly window before Roadcheck behavior and weather friction show up deeper in the week.
Anything requiring specialized handling is now decisively carrier-led.
- Reefer: $2.79 posted vs $3.08 paid = +$0.29/mile
- Specialized: $3.08 posted vs $3.48 paid = +$0.40/mile
- Flatbed: $3.35 posted vs $3.43 paid = +$0.08/mile
- Heavy haul: $3.39 posted vs $3.47 paid = +$0.08/mile
- LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload/Partial): $1.81 posted vs $1.89 paid = +$0.08/mile
The board looks bigger than the usable truck pool really is.
- CVSA (Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance) Roadcheck behavior, ELD (Electronic Logging Device) scrutiny, flood detours, and diesel at $5.636/gallon are all reducing practical capacity.
- In markets like this, the wrong truck is effectively no truck at all.
The best brokers today will win on execution discipline, not rate aggression.
- Standard van: buy early.
- Reefer and specialized: price honestly and secure real carriers first.
- Open-deck: quote detour miles, slower turns, and wait exposure up front.
π§ What The Market Is Really Saying
Carriers are selling compliance, proximity, and reload certainty.
- Diesel at $5.636/gallon means trucks cannot afford wide deadhead or speculative positioning.
- The carrier decision tree is simple this week:
- Can I haul it compliantly?
- Can I get in and out fast?
- Does destination help my next move?
- If your load fails one of those tests, rate alone may not save it.
The rate structure is stronger than the raw volume structure.
- One week ago: 138,898 total loads and $2.76/mile average
- One month ago: 155,883 total loads and $2.66/mile average
- Today: 151,120 total loads and $2.90/mile average
- That tells you yield has improved materially even without a breakout in headline volume. This is a quality-capacity market, not just a quantity-capacity market.
Weekend repositioning has already been monetized by carriers.
- The clearest example is specialized, which has gone from a weekend broker opportunity to a Monday morning scarcity market.
- That pattern usually means experienced carriers moved first, waited for urgency, and are now charging for being in the right place.
- Brokers who quote specialized freight off old assumptions today are likely to get trapped in recoverage.
Open-deck still controls the emotional tone of the market.
- Flatbed + heavy haul + specialized = 111,206 loads, roughly 73.6% of visible volume.
- Even brokers who live in van freight are negotiating against a carrier community whose mood is being shaped by:
- flood-related turn loss
- industrial urgency
- inspection-week caution
- That matters because carrier confidence in one equipment class often hardens pricing behavior in others.
π― Best Buy-Side Opportunities Today
π Dry Van: The Only Clean Early-Week Buy Window
Why itβs the best tactical buy today
- 23,435 loads
- Posted $2.52/mile
- Paid $2.51/mile
- Broker edge: -$0.01/mile
What that tiny spread actually means
- This is not a loose market.
- It is a briefly balanced market.
- The practical advantage is that you can still secure executable coverage without paying above board, provided:
- the load is local to truck supply
- the shipper is fast
- the appointments are real
- the destination has acceptable reload logic
Best van freight to move first
- Flexible Midwest-origin loads
- One-pick / one-drop freight
- Retail, packaging, consumer goods, and clean industrial freight
- Loads that do not depend on late-day recovery capacity
Where brokers will make money
- Cover now, before midday.
- Use hyper-local carrier sourcing, not national fishing.
- Sell carriers on:
- confirmed appointments
- quick turn
- easy unload
- strong delivery market
Where brokers will get hurt
- Waiting for van to get cheaper midweek.
- Assuming all visible trucks remain active through inspection pressure.
- Using distant trucks just because the linehaul looks lower.
β οΈ Where You Should Pay Up Or Tighten Your Quote
π§ Reefer: The Biggest Underquote Risk On The Board
ποΈ Specialized: The Most Violent Repricing On The Board
π» Flatbed: Not A Cheap Market, A Slow-Turn Market
Current position
- 64,585 loads
- Posted $3.35/mile
- Paid $3.43/mile
- Carrier premium: +$0.08/mile
What matters more than the spread
- Flood disruption along I-10, I-65, and I-70-linked freight paths
- Reduced trailer velocity
- Yard access issues
- Higher risk of detention and missed appointments
How to quote correctly
- Detour miles
- extra transit time
- tarp if required
- wait exposure
- soft delivery commitments where access is questionable
Best flatbed freight today
- Short haul
- clean access
- no tarp
- reload-friendly destination
- ready commodity
Freight to avoid underpricing
- Anything touching:
- southern Louisiana
- Indiana/Illinois flood-affected corridors
- construction yards with uncertain unloading
- late-day pickups into tight next-day deliveries
π Heavy Haul: Stable Rate Floor, No Margin For Planning Errors
Current position
- 29,722 loads
- Posted $3.39/mile
- Paid $3.47/mile
- Carrier premium: +$0.08/mile
Interpretation
- This is an execution-first market.
- Linehaul is only one part of the price; permits, route viability, escort coordination, and time loss are driving the real cost.
Broker playbook
- Negotiate lightly on linehaul.
- Protect the edges hard.
- Confirm:
- actual dimensions
- permit-ready route
- state restrictions
- escort timing
- weather/flood reroute impact
π¦ LTL/Partial: Still Useful, But No Longer Cheap
Current position
- 8,254 loads
- Posted $1.81/mile
- Paid $1.89/mile
- Carrier premium: +$0.08/mile
Why this tightened
- Shippers are trying to avoid premium full-truck specialized and reefer costs by breaking freight down.
- That behavior is pulling demand into the consolidation market.
How to use it correctly
- It is still a good account-defense tool, but not a giveaway margin tool like yesterdayβs environment.
- Offer customers:
- economy partial
- priority partial
- Protect:
- stop-off
- handling
- reclass/rework risk
- appointment coordination
π Regional And Lane Implications
π Midwest: Still The Decision Center Of The Week
π£οΈ Chicago, IL β Atlanta, GA
Current reality
- This is a cycle-time lane problem, not just a linehaul problem.
- The carrier is evaluating:
- route avoidance
- flood exposure
- delivery flexibility
- southbound reload prospects
Best broker strategy
- Quote with:
- detour pricing
- wider transit expectations
- clear detention terms
- Favor carriers with:
- established Southeast operating patterns
- verified compliance
- fast communication
What wins coverage
- Flexible appointments
- clear load/unload times
- destination reload story
- less appointment rigidity than competitors
π£οΈ Minneapolis, MN β Dallas, TX
Current reality
- This is one of the clearest examples of stacked reefer pricing pressure:
- freeze/PFF exposure at origin
- southern demand pull
- reload uncertainty into flood-touched Gulf-linked networks
Best broker strategy
- For Mon/Tue shipping, assume premium pricing.
- For Wed/Thu shipping, there may be a modest softening if northern temperatures recover, but the lane will still require disciplined carrier selection.
What to tell customers
- The likely savings later in the week are incremental, not transformational.
- Waiting only makes sense if the freight is truly flexible.
π£οΈ Negotiation Posture That Wins Today
π€ With Carriers
π§Ύ With Shippers
Do not let posted rates frame the whole conversation.
- The right message is:
- βThe visible board is not the same as executable capacity this week.β
Use tiered quoting
- Flexible option
- wider appointment tolerance
- lower service commitment
- best for van and some partials
- Priority option
- faster carrier acceptance
- stronger compliance profile
- best for reefer, specialized, and weather-sensitive freight
Teach the customer the real cost drivers
- fuel
- detours
- inspection-week risk
- equipment specificity
- facility delay exposure
Where margin protection gets easier
- When you separate:
- linehaul
- detour exposure
- time-risk exposure
- special handling/accessorials
π‘οΈ Risk Controls For The Next 24β72 Hours
1) Tighten compliance vetting
- Verify:
- authority
- insurance
- ELD compliance
- driver identity
- truck/trailer match
- actual operating carrier
- This week, bad vetting is more expensive than a higher linehaul.
2) Reconfirm facility access in flood-affected areas
- Do not trust a generic βweβre open.β
- Confirm:
- yard accessibility
- dock approach
- forklift/crane availability
- hours actually being worked
3) Build Hours of Service (HOS) buffer into short-notice freight
- Inspection stops and detours can turn a legal run into a service failure.
- Favor carriers with time to absorb disruption, not just carriers willing to say yes.
4) Shorten quote validity
- Especially on:
- reefer
- specialized
- flatbed
- flood-affected lanes
- The cost of defending stale math is usually higher than the cost of requoting honestly.
5) Lock accessorial language before release
- Spell out:
- detention
- layover
- reefer fuel if applicable
- tarp
- stop-off
- reroute
- redelivery
- permit/escort pass-through where applicable
π Probability-Weighted 24β72 Hour Outlook
Base case β 60%
- Van firms modestly from current parity
- Reefer remains decisively elevated
- Specialized stays expensive
- Flatbed and heavy haul continue as cycle-time markets
- Best brokers outperform by covering early and avoiding recoverage
Risk case β 25%
- More carriers sideline for inspection exposure
- Flood-related turn loss lasts longer than dispatchers expect
- Van loses its current small broker edge
- Reefer and specialized widen further on urgent freight
Opportunity case β 15%
- Northern freeze risk eases after Tuesday
- Some reefer lanes soften slightly in the back half of the week
- Select Midwest-origin van freight stays coverable at disciplined numbers
- Brokers with strong local carrier benches capture share while others scramble
β
Highest-Value Desk Priorities Today
Cover flexible dry van freight early
- Especially Midwest-origin freight that can still be bought near parity.
- Do not assume the same buying conditions will hold into midweek.
Requote every specialized load from scratch
- Todayβs specialized market is a different market.
- Use current executable reality, not weekend assumptions.
Treat reefer as a service purchase, not a rate purchase
- Build quotes off real carrier conversations, not posted averages.
Price detour miles into open-deck freight immediately
- Especially freight touching I-10, I-65, and I-70-linked disruption zones.
Use your most compliant fleets first on urgent and temperature-sensitive freight
- Reliability has more value than nominal truck count this week.
Offer shippers flexible vs priority options
- This helps preserve margin while giving customers a decision framework they can accept.
Push local carrier density over cheap distant trucks
- With diesel at $5.636/gallon, the cheapest truck on paper is often the most expensive truck in execution.
Protect your afternoon
- The brokers who lose money today will mostly do it after lunch:
- stale quotes
- rushed vetting
- underpriced recovery
- assuming visible capacity is usable capacity
π§Ύ Bottom Line
- The market is stronger than the headline load count makes it look.
- Dry van is the only meaningful buy-side opening today, and it is narrow.
- Reefer and specialized are the clearest premium markets and the biggest underquote traps.
- Flatbed and heavy haul are not wildly expensive on spread alone, but they are operationally expensive because turns are slowing.
- LTL/Partial is still strategically useful, but it has tightened enough that sloppy pricing will leak margin.
- This is a day to win with speed, vetting, local capacity, and honest quotingβnot with optimism.
π
This Day in History
1258: Louis IX of France and James I of Aragon sign the Treaty of Corbeil, renouncing claims of feudal overlordship in one another's territories and separating the House of Barcelona from the politics of France.
1713: Great Northern War: After losing the Battle of Helsinki to the Russians, the Swedish and Finnish troops burn the entire city, so that it would not remain intact in the hands of the Russians.
2009: Space Shuttle Atlantis is launched on the final mission to service the Hubble Space Telescope.
π Quote of the Day
"He who can no longer pause to wonder and stand rapt in awe, is as good as dead; his eyes are closed."
β Albert Einstein