Expedited Transport Agency Logo

📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report

Friday, July 10, 2026

7:00 AM CST


📊 Top-Line Summary

On Friday, July 10, 2026, the domestic spot market is demonstrating high-volume stability with 150,315 available loads, down a marginal 0.5% from yesterday but maintaining a strong upward trajectory compared to last week's holiday-impacted levels. The market average rate has settled at $2.89/mile, supported by a verified AAA national diesel average of $4.852/gallon, which continues to act as a firm floor for carrier operating costs. Severe regional flooding in the Midwest is actively disrupting key freight corridors, including I-74 and I-474, trapping open-deck and dry van equipment and driving localized rate volatility. Meanwhile, extreme heat across the Southwest is slowing transit times along the I-10 and I-8 corridors. For freight brokers, the widening carrier premiums in the flatbed ($0.14/mile) and reefer ($0.06/mile) sectors present high-margin arbitrage opportunities, particularly for those who can leverage real-time routing adjustments to bypass weather bottlenecks.

Insight

Executable capacity is diverging from quoted capacity

National load counts still look steady, but the operational gap between a posted truck and a truck that can actually make the appointment is widening. In central Illinois, flood detours and late-day rain are eroding same-day turn efficiency, while in Arizona and Southern California the heat is pushing more loading, unloading, and linehaul activity into overnight hours. That makes late-afternoon tenders the most vulnerable to re-quotes, service failures, and same-day premium pricing.

Daily market overview

⛽ Diesel Price Analysis

Price Trend Over Time

Diesel Price Trend Chart

Diesel Historical Price Comparison

Diesel Historical Price Comparison Chart

🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence

U.S. freight weather impact map

Current Major Weather Events:

Weather Insight

Central Illinois has a narrowing Friday delivery window

Peoria-area conditions are likely to deteriorate after midday, with showers building into the afternoon on top of existing river flooding. The disruption is less about a new statewide weather event than about slower access to industrial sites, flooded bottomland approaches, and lost turn time on short-haul freight.

Weather Insight

Southwest heat will keep capacity selective through the weekend

Highs of roughly 111 to 115 degrees across Arizona and inland Southern California are turning the I-8 and I-10 corridors into schedule-sensitive freight. The biggest impact is not road closure risk; it is reduced midday productivity at live-load facilities, higher reefer fuel burn, and tighter carrier willingness to accept long dwell or late-afternoon appointments.

💰 Financial Market Indicators

📰 Impactful News Analysis

  1. FMCSA Launches Motus Registration System to Combat Carrier Impersonation and Fraud 🔗:
    The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) has introduced its new USDOT Registration System, Motus, designed to centralize registration activity, improve real-time validation, and strengthen fraud-resistant security. For brokers, this system represents a significant step forward in combating carrier impersonation, double-brokering, and supply chain fraud. Brokers should integrate Motus verification into their carrier vetting processes to ensure they are working with legitimate, authorized carriers. This will help mitigate the risk of cargo theft and fraudulent activity, protecting both broker margins and shipper relationships.
  2. Understanding FMCSA Safety Ratings: Conditional vs. Unsatisfactory Ratings 🔗:
    A compliance review by the FMCSA can result in a Conditional or Unsatisfactory safety rating. While carriers with a Conditional rating can continue operating, they have been found to have inadequate safety controls. Brokers must carefully evaluate carriers with Conditional ratings, as some shipper and insurance contracts exclude them outright. Brokers should review the carrier's inspection and crash record since the rating was issued to make informed booking decisions. This due diligence is critical for managing liability and ensuring compliance with shipper requirements.
  3. Global Supply Chain Disruption Creates Legal and Operational Risks 🔗:
    Ongoing disruptions in global supply chains, including maritime corridor bottlenecks and rising fuel costs, are intensifying pressure across key industries. This disruption is translating into contractual, regulatory, and compliance risks for organizations. For domestic brokers, these global disruptions can lead to volatility in import volumes and shifting demand patterns at major ports. Brokers should maintain close communication with shippers to anticipate volume surges and adjust capacity sourcing strategies accordingly.
News Insight

Motus improves fraud control, but setup friction is a near-term capacity drag

The new FMCSA registration environment should reduce impersonation risk, but the immediate market effect is likely to be slower onboarding for first-time, reactivated, or lightly used carriers. In weather-disrupted markets, the practical advantage sits with pre-vetted carriers already in the network, because the cost of waiting on registration validation can outweigh a small spot-rate savings.

🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis

📍 Primary Region Focus: Midwest US

The Midwest region is currently experiencing significant market volatility and capacity constraints, primarily driven by severe flooding along the Illinois River. This flooding has inundated local staging areas and disrupted major freight corridors, including I-74 and I-474. As a result, open-deck and dry van capacity is physically trapped or delayed, leading to localized rate spikes and tight capacity. Brokers operating in this region must navigate these bottlenecks by utilizing real-time routing adjustments and securing capacity early to protect margins.

🛣️ Key Lane Watch

Peoria, IL → Chicago, IL: This short-haul corridor is heavily impacted by the ongoing Illinois River flooding, which has disrupted local staging areas and forced carriers to take lengthy detours. Demand for dry van and flatbed equipment remains strong as local industrial and manufacturing facilities resume full operations after the holiday. The combination of tight capacity and strong demand is driving localized rate volatility.

Route map for Peoria, IL → Chicago, IL

Indianapolis, IN → St. Louis, MO: This key Midwest corridor is experiencing increased volume as shippers reroute freight around the flooded areas of Illinois. Dry van and flatbed demand is robust, driven by regional manufacturing and agricultural shipments. Capacity is stable but tightening as carriers are drawn to higher-paying lanes in the flood-impacted zones.

Route map for Indianapolis, IN → St. Louis, MO
Regional Insight

Peoria to Chicago is becoming a premium recovery lane

What is normally a manageable short-haul move is losing turn density fast. Flood detours, staging delays, and the risk of afternoon weather interruption mean one roundtrip can consume a full day, especially for flatbed and industrial van freight. Pricing pressure on this lane is increasingly tied to lost productivity per truck, not just added mileage.

Regional Insight

Indianapolis to St. Louis is positioned as a Midwest relief corridor

This lane stands to benefit from carriers looking for steadier freight outside the central Illinois disruption zone. If flooding in the Peoria market keeps pulling trucks east and north, Indianapolis-to-St. Louis should firm before the broader dry van market because it offers predictable transit, cleaner weekend execution, and reload optionality at both ends.

🔧 Carrier Capacity and Compliance Pressures

The domestic carrier landscape is facing intense operational and compliance pressures that are actively shaping capacity availability. The recent rollout of the FMCSA's Motus registration system represents a significant shift in carrier identity verification, aimed at reducing fraud and double-brokering. While this system will ultimately benefit the industry by weeding out bad actors, the transition period is likely to cause administrative delays and temporary capacity disruptions as carriers adapt to the new registration requirements. Additionally, carriers continue to operate under severe financial strain due to high operating costs, driven by the AAA national diesel average of $4.852/gallon. This financial pressure is restricting carrier flexibility, making them highly sensitive to deadhead miles and detention times. Carriers are increasingly prioritizing lanes that offer consistent, predictable freight and quick loading times to maximize their hours of service and fuel efficiency. Brokers must adapt to these carrier dynamics by implementing rigorous vetting processes that leverage the new Motus system while maintaining strong, collaborative relationships with compliant carriers. Offering quick-pay options and assisting carriers with efficient routing can help brokers secure reliable capacity in a tight, highly regulated market.

🚛 Reefer Capacity: Peak Summer Produce Demand

Temperature-controlled capacity is currently the most volatile and highly demanded equipment type in the spot market. The full summer produce season is at its peak, with high-volume shipments of watermelons, corn, peppers, and blueberries moving out of key agricultural regions, including California, Texas, Georgia, and the Midwest. This seasonal surge has driven reefer load availability to 7,586 loads, with paid rates averaging $3.11/mile, yielding a $0.06/mile carrier premium over posted rates. This rate inversion indicates that shippers are actively competing for pre-cooled equipment, allowing carriers to negotiate higher rates at the point of booking. Capacity is exceptionally tight in the Southeast and Midwest, where seasonal harvests coincide with active weather disruptions, such as the Illinois River flooding. Reefers returning to these high-demand zones are commanding significant premiums, while backhaul lanes into produce-producing regions offer opportunities for negotiated discounts. Brokers must act aggressively to secure reefer capacity, utilizing early-booking strategies and leveraging backhaul opportunities to protect margins. Ensuring that carriers have properly pre-cooled equipment and clear instructions for temperature-sensitive commodities is critical to avoiding cargo claims and ensuring on-time delivery.

📈 Spot Rate Velocity and Margin Opportunities

An analysis of today's load board data reveals notable shifts in rate velocity and margin opportunities across different equipment types. The flatbed sector continues to show the strongest carrier pricing power, with paid rates averaging $3.41/mile compared to posted rates of $3.27/mile, representing a $0.14/mile carrier premium. This spread is driven by robust post-holiday industrial demand and regional capacity constraints, particularly in the flood-impacted Midwest. Conversely, the dry van sector shows a slight broker advantage, with paid rates averaging $2.60/mile against posted rates of $2.63/mile. This $0.03/mile spread suggests that dry van capacity is relatively stable, allowing brokers to negotiate favorable rates with carriers looking to secure consistent freight. However, this advantage is highly regionalized, with rates remaining firm in areas affected by weather disruptions or high-volume port activity. Brokers should leverage these rate dynamics by focusing their sales efforts on high-margin flatbed and specialized opportunities, where shippers are willing to pay a premium for capacity. In the dry van sector, brokers should focus on volume and consistency, utilizing the slight rate advantage to secure stable margins on consistent lanes.

Strategic Takeaways

High-Signal Additions

🧭 Savvy Broker's Playbook

🔑 Executive Signal Summary


📊 What the market is actually saying


💰 Best broker opportunities today

1. Flatbed and heavy haul are the best gross-profit pools — if you quote them like truck-day freight, not just per-mile freight


2. Reefer is tight, but the spread is smaller than the urgency


3. Dry van is a volume play, not a hero play


4. LTL/Partial is your best service-preservation tool


🌦️ Regional playbook for today

Central Illinois flood zone


Midwest relief corridor


Southwest heat corridor


🧠 Negotiation strategy that wins today

With shippers


With carriers


⚠️ Risk controls that protect margin and reputation


📈 24–72 hour probability map


✅ Desk priorities for the next 8 hours

  1. Cover in this order

    • Reefer
    • Midwest flatbed
    • Heavy haul / specialized with route sensitivity
    • Flood-affected van
    • Everything flexible enough for LTL/Partial conversion
  2. Tighten quote discipline

    • Same-day validity on all Midwest freight
    • Midday re-price trigger on reefer and open-deck
    • All-in pricing on Peoria-area short hauls
  3. Route around avoidable friction

    • Morning-first in central Illinois
    • Overnight and dawn windows in AZ/SoCal
    • Use Indianapolis–St. Louis as relief capacity where it fits
  4. Prioritize better trucks, not just cheaper trucks

    • short deadhead
    • clean HOS (Hours of Service)
    • known reload path
    • pre-vetted compliance profile
    • realistic appointment fit
  5. Track execution, not just rate

    • Quote-to-cover time
    • same-day re-quote frequency
    • appointment miss rate
    • detention exposure by region
    • carrier falloff rate on late tenders

🏁 Bottom line

💡 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

1519: Zhu Chenhao declares the Ming dynasty's Zhengde Emperor a usurper, beginning the Prince of Ning rebellion, and leads his army north in an attempt to capture Nanjing.
1850: U.S. President Millard Fillmore is sworn in, a day after becoming president upon Zachary Taylor's death.
2011: Russian cruise ship Bulgaria sinks in the Volga River near Syukeyevo, Tatarstan, causing 122 deaths.

💭 Quote of the Day

"All our dreams can come true, if we have the courage to pursue them."

— Walt Disney