π Daily Market Intelligence Report
Saturday, April 25, 2026
7:00 AM CST
π Top-Line Summary
The national spot freight market is experiencing a sharp weekend contraction, with total available volumes dropping 18.6% overnight to 136,494 loads, though the overall market average rate remains highly resilient at $2.72/mile. This volume pullback is felt across all equipment types, most notably in the open-deck sector which shed 20% of its available loads, while temperature-controlled freight continues to command a premium with paid rates exceeding posted rates. Severe and persistent river flooding across the Midwest continues to fracture major transcontinental routing along I-80, I-90, and I-94, trapping capacity and forcing extensive detours. Meanwhile, sustained diesel prices at $5.465/gallon and rising contract rates are pushing routing guide failures into the spot market, creating distinct margin opportunities for brokers who can navigate the regional imbalances.
Insight
Weekend softness masks a likely midweek spot rebound
The weekend load-board pullback looks more like deferred freight than a true demand reset. With flood-disrupted Midwest freight still backing up and another round of thunderstorms due Monday in Iowa and Illinois, the cleaner read is a soft Saturday-Sunday followed by a sharper spot release starting late Monday and building into Wednesday as missed pickups, resequenced appointments, and routing-guide fallout hit the market at once.
β½ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
π¦οΈ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe Midwest River Flooding (Midwest (IA, IL, IN, MI, MN, MO)): Extensive flooding is occurring along the Mississippi River and tributaries, forcing closures and detours along critical freight corridors including I-80, I-90, I-94, and I-74. This is severely extending transit times, reducing equipment turnaround, and trapping capacity in the region.
- Sub-Freezing Temperatures (Pacific Northwest & Mountain West (OR, WA, ID)): Sub-freezing temperatures as low as 28 degrees are driving urgent protect-from-freeze (PFF) demand for temperature-controlled equipment, pulling reefer capacity away from produce markets and driving rate premiums.
- Guadalupe River Flooding (South Texas (TX, Calhoun, Victoria, Refugio counties)): Minor lowland flooding is forecast along the Guadalupe River, potentially impacting Highway 35 and local industrial routing near the Invista Plant, which may cause localized delays for chemical and manufacturing freight.
- Cayuga Lake Flooding (Upstate New York (NY, Tompkins County)): High lake levels are flooding shoreline areas, which may cause localized routing issues and minor delays for regional Northeast freight moving through the Ithaca corridor.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Midwest flooding risk extends into Monday, not just the weekend
Sunshine today will help terminal operations, but it will not meaningfully normalize river corridors before the next weather turn. Heavy thunderstorms are forecast Monday in eastern Iowa and northern Illinois, with rain and strong winds also across Wisconsin, which raises the odds of renewed ramp restrictions, slower local drayage, and more conservative dispatching on freight touching I-80, I-88, I-90, and I-94 approaches.
- Treat Sunday as the best repositioning window before conditions deteriorate again.
- Build extra lead time on east-west freight crossing northern Illinois and the Quad Cities through Tuesday.
Weather Insight
Pacific Northwest freeze demand is not a one-night event
Protect-from freeze demand should stay elevated through at least Tuesday across parts of Oregon and Idaho, where overnight lows remain near or below freezing and Idaho still carries snow risk early next week. That keeps reefers and insulated capacity tied up on non-produce freight such as beverages, liquids, and temperature-sensitive industrials, which limits how quickly equipment can rotate back into mainstream produce lanes.
π° Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Geopolitical tensions, particularly the ongoing U.S.-Iran conflict, are driving extreme volatility in energy markets and freight futures, suggesting fuel costs will remain a persistent inflationary pressure on carrier operating margins.
- Carrier Financial Health: Carriers are regaining pricing leverage in contract negotiations as routing guides fail, allowing them to reprice networks and push back against shippers who previously enjoyed favorable rates.
- Economic Indicators: Inland waterway freight rates are jumping 10% due to diesel hikes, which will likely push some bulk and agricultural freight back onto the over-the-road spot market as intermodal economics shift.
π° Impactful News Analysis
-
Van Tender Rejections Spike, Driving Contract Rates Higher π:
Increases in outbound tender rejections are translating directly into higher contract rates as carriers gain pricing leverage. Brokers should anticipate an influx of spot market freight as shipper routing guides fail, presenting opportunities to capture high-margin loads from desperate shippers, provided they can secure capacity in a tightening environment.
-
Geopolitical Tensions Drive Freight Futures Up 600% π:
The massive surge in the BWET ETF highlights how global conflicts are completely rewiring energy infrastructure and shipping costs. For domestic brokers, this signals that fuel volatility and supply chain disruptions will remain the norm, requiring agile pricing strategies and strict fuel surcharge management to protect margins.
-
Inland Waterway Freight Rates Jump 10% on Diesel Hikes π:
With lighterage and inland waterway rates increasing due to the 15% diesel price hike, the cost advantage of water transport is narrowing. Brokers handling agricultural or bulk commodities should look for opportunities to convert some of this freight to over-the-road or rail, as shippers re-evaluate their multimodal routing economics.
News Insight
Higher barge economics could spill truck demand into river-adjacent industrial freight
The 10% jump in inland waterway pricing matters most around the Mississippi basin, where shippers of agricultural inputs, metals, packaged bulk, and project cargo may start testing truck options for time-sensitive moves. That does not create an immediate nationwide surge, but it can tighten flatbed, hopper-convertible, and dry van capacity around river terminals and manufacturing nodes in Missouri, Illinois, and eastern Iowa as the week develops.
πΊοΈ Regional & Lane Analysis
π Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest remains the most volatile and strategically critical freight region today. Severe and prolonged river flooding across Illinois, Iowa, Michigan, and Missouri is fracturing transcontinental routing along I-80, I-90, and I-94. This weather disruption is trapping capacity, extending transit times, and forcing carriers to demand significant hazard and detour premiums. Concurrently, the region is seeing a massive influx of flatbed demand for spring construction, which is competing for driver hours. Despite a weekend drop in overall load volumes, the operational friction in the Midwest is creating lucrative arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can accurately price the delays and secure reliable carriers willing to navigate the affected corridors.
π£οΈ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL β Dallas, TX: This major north-south corridor is experiencing significant disruption at the origin due to Illinois river flooding, while the destination faces localized flooding in South Texas. Van capacity is available but carriers are demanding premiums to navigate out of the congested and weather-impacted Chicago market. Demand remains steady for consumer goods and industrial components.
Indianapolis, IN β Atlanta, GA: A critical lane connecting Midwest manufacturing to Southeast distribution hubs. The lane is currently insulated from the worst of the Mississippi River flooding, making it a preferred route for carriers. Flatbed demand is exceptionally high on this lane due to infrastructure projects in the Southeast.
Regional Insight
Chicago to Dallas remains a buyable van lane, but only after origin delay is priced in
Southbound demand out of Chicago still offers margin because many carriers want to get below the flood belt, but the real cost risk is at pickup, not linehaul. Loads with Monday ship windows are the most exposed as thunderstorms stack on top of existing Illinois congestion; detention, missed appointments, and same-day re-covers can erase a cheap truck faster than the linehaul spread suggests.
- Favor carriers already staged south of Chicago rather than inbounding through flooded northern corridors.
- Quote firm accessorial language up front on live-load freight and tight retail appointments.
Regional Insight
Indianapolis to Atlanta is poised to tighten as a preferred bypass corridor
This lane is likely to firm faster than the broad weekend data implies because it offers a cleaner north-south alternative while Midwest east-west networks stay impaired. Expect flatbed and specialized capacity to tighten first, then van capacity to follow as carriers increasingly choose I-65/I-75 routings that keep them productive and out of flood detours.
π Diverging Spreads: Reefer Premiums vs. Van Margins
Today's real-time load board data reveals a fascinating divergence in pricing power across equipment types. In the dry van sector, a negative spread has emerged with posted rates averaging $2.42/mile while paid rates sit lower at $2.33/mile. This $0.09/mile gap indicates that brokers currently hold the leverage, able to cover loads below their initial postings as carriers look to secure weekend freight. Conversely, the temperature-controlled market is exhibiting a rare positive spread, with paid rates at $2.80/mile exceeding the $2.74/mile posted average. This dynamic is being driven by the collision of accelerating produce seasons and urgent protect-from-freeze (PFF) demands in the Pacific Northwest (Alert WXF9CAEFF2). Carriers with active reefer units are successfully negotiating premiums above initial broker offers, signaling that brokers must pad their quotes to shippers when handling temperature-sensitive freight over the next 72 hours.
π§ Routing Guide Failures Fueling Spot Market Opportunities
Recent industry intelligence indicates a significant shift in carrier behavior, with outbound tender rejections climbing and carriers successfully extracting higher contract rates during mini-bids. As carriers reprice their networks to account for sustained $5.465/gallon diesel and inflationary pressures, shippers are experiencing secondary and tertiary routing guide failures. For freight brokers, this is a prime environment for margin expansion. The data shows that while overall weekend volumes dropped 18.6% today, the market average rate remained incredibly sticky at $2.72/mile. This suggests that the freight currently hitting the spot board is urgent, fallout freight from failed routing guides. Brokers who have maintained strong relationships with reliable owner-operators can step in to rescue these loads, commanding premium spot rates from shippers who are suddenly left without their contracted capacity.
π
Produce Acceleration Collides with Late-Season Freezes
The freight market is currently caught between two opposing seasonal forces. On one hand, the spring produce season is accelerating across the southern half of the United States, traditionally pulling temperature-controlled capacity southward and driving up rates out of agricultural hubs. On the other hand, late-season sub-freezing temperatures across the Lower Columbia Basin and Foothills of the Blue Mountains (Alert WXF9CAEFF2) are forcing shippers of sensitive liquids, chemicals, and specific perishables to demand protect-from-freeze (PFF) services. This geographic tug-of-war is fracturing the national reefer capacity pool. With reefer volumes currently at 6,432 available loads and paid rates hitting $2.80/mile, brokers must be hyper-aware of where their carrier base is positioned. Equipment moving into the Pacific Northwest will command high inbound rates but may face limited outbound opportunities if the freeze damages early crop yields.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Use Sunday to reposition trucks ahead of a likely Monday-Wednesday Midwest freight surge.
- Price Chicago-origin freight for pickup risk and detention, not just for miles.
- Expect Indianapolis-to-Atlanta capacity to tighten as carriers favor cleaner bypass routes.
- Keep reefer quotes padded through Tuesday as freeze-related PFF demand continues to compete with produce.
π Executive Signal Summary
This is a weekend contraction, not a market break.
- Total available loads are 136,494, down 18.6% from 167,606.
- But the national average rate is still $2.72/mile, which is the real tell: pricing stayed firm even as visible volume fell.
- In practical broker terms, that usually means the easy freight fell off first, while urgent, disrupted, or routing-guide-failure freight stayed in the market.
Dry van is the best same-day margin market, but only on operationally clean freight.
- Van loads: 18,224
- Posted: $2.42/mile
- Paid: $2.33/mile
- That -$0.09/mile spread gives brokers room, but only where pickup, dwell, and routing are predictable.
Reefer is the most dangerous mode to underquote through Tuesday.
- Reefer loads: 6,432
- Posted: $2.74/mile
- Paid: $2.80/mile
- That +$0.06/mile execution premium says the board is understating the true buy, especially where protect-from-freeze (PFF) demand and produce overlap.
Open-deck still owns the marketβs center of gravity.
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized combine for 104,034 loads, about 76.2% of visible spot volume.
- They also account for 46,181 of 54,817 loads moved today, about 84.2% of executed volume.
- If a brokerβs desk is not prioritizing industrial and project freight first, that desk is probably chasing the wrong work.
The Midwest is still a velocity problem, not just a weather story.
- Flooding across key corridors near I-80, I-90, and I-94 is not just slowing trucks.
- It is breaking turns, extending dispatch windows, increasing detention exposure, and distorting lane pricing.
- The likely pattern is soft weekend optics followed by a Monday-Wednesday spot release.
Diesel at $5.465/gallon keeps a hard floor under carrier behavior.
- Carriers are not pricing miles alone.
- They are pricing fuel, detours, idle time, uncertainty, and reload quality.
π§ What the market is actually telling you
Headline softness is misleading.
- Less experienced brokers see 136,494 loads and assume trucks will get cheaper all weekend.
- More experienced brokers see $2.72/mile holding firm and recognize that capacity is not truly loose where service matters.
- This is a classic setup where Monday and Tuesday become more expensive than Saturday suggests.
Rates are sticky for a reason.
- The market average is $2.72/mile, the same as one week ago, despite todayβs sharp pullback in visible volume.
- It is also well above the $2.54/mile average from one month ago.
- That is a strong sign that cost inflation and execution friction are holding the floor, not just demand.
The freight mix matters more than the total load count.
- Flatbed: 59,243 loads at $3.19 paid
- Heavy haul: 29,736 loads at $3.26 paid
- Specialized: 15,055 loads at $2.72 paid
- These categories are where real money, real service risk, and real customer pain are concentrated today.
Execution ratios confirm where the real urgency sits.
- Van moved today: 3,557 of 18,224
- Reefer moved today: 1,573 of 6,432
- Flatbed moved today: 26,301 of 59,243
- Heavy haul moved today: 13,262 of 29,736
- Specialized moved today: 6,618 of 15,055
- LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload/Partial) moved today: 3,506 of 7,804
- The open-deck side is still executing at a much deeper pace than van, which tells you industrial freight remains the higher-priority freight in the market.
Routing-guide failure is probably the next 72-hour catalyst.
- Rising tender rejections combined with elevated diesel and weather friction usually create a delayed effect:
- contract freight fails later than expected
- backup carriers refuse original assumptions
- spot freight appears in bursts, not smoothly
- That is why Sunday repositioning matters more than Saturday volume counts.
π Mode-by-mode broker playbook
π Dry Van
π§ Reefer
π§ Flatbed
ποΈ Heavy Haul
πͺ Specialized
π¦ LTL/Partial
π§οΈ Weather-driven strategy for the next 24β72 hours
Midwest flooding is still distorting truck productivity.
- The key issue is not merely road closure.
- The real issue is:
- late arrivals into pickup zones
- conservative dispatching
- longer turn times
- reduced daily truck utilization
- That is why capacity can feel loose on a board and still be hard to execute in reality.
Sunday is the best repositioning window.
- Use Sunday to stage trucks south, east, or around the flood belt before Monday thunderstorms hit Iowa and Illinois.
- That is especially valuable for:
- Chicago outbound
- Quad Cities freight
- northern Illinois cross-docks
- Wisconsin-connected runs
Add transit padding now, not after the first missed appointment.
- East-west freight touching northern Illinois should carry extra lead time through Tuesday.
- If you wait for a service failure before resetting expectations, the conversation becomes defensive instead of strategic.
Pacific Northwest freeze demand keeps reefer and insulated assets tied up through at least Tuesday.
- That matters beyond food.
- It impacts:
- beverages
- liquids
- chemicals
- temperature-sensitive industrials
- Brokers should assume reefer rotation back into mainstream produce lanes will be slower than normal.
π£οΈ Lane tactics that can win today
ποΈ Chicago, IL β Dallas, TX
π Indianapolis, IN β Atlanta, GA
π΅ Pricing and negotiation tactics for today
Use paid rates as your operating truth.
- Van baseline: $2.33/mile
- Reefer baseline: $2.80/mile
- Flatbed baseline: $3.19/mile
- Heavy haul baseline: $3.26/mile
- Specialized baseline: $2.72/mile
- LTL/Partial baseline: $1.80/mile
Negotiate around productivity, not just pennies.
- Carriers at $5.465/gallon diesel care about:
- route confidence
- dwell risk
- next-load potential
- detention likelihood
- reload geography
- A broker who tells a credible network story will often beat a broker who simply offers a few extra cents.
Use structured quoting on weather-sensitive freight.
- Option 1: Flexible service
- broader pickup window
- lower buy
- lower certainty
- Option 2: Priority service
- dedicated truck
- firmer pickup
- explicit accessorial protections
- higher sell rate
Break accessorials out visibly.
- On flood-disrupted or jobsite freight, keep these separate from linehaul:
- detention
- layover
- reroute
- tarp
- jobsite delay
- PFF handling
- permit or escort changes
Challenge shipper assumptions where the board is misleading.
- If a shipper sees total loads dropped and demands a cheaper rate, the correct pushback is:
- the market average is still $2.72/mile
- diesel is $5.465/gallon
- weather is reducing truck productivity
- urgent freight is what remains active
- That conversation protects margin and positions you as an advisor, not a rate messenger.
π§ Behavioral edge: what carriers and shippers are likely to do next
Carriers
- Van carriers will accept some discounted freight if it improves weekend positioning.
- Reefer carriers will press for premiums where temperature exposure or time sensitivity is present.
- Open-deck carriers will look reasonable on linehaul, then protect themselves on accessorials and delay exposure.
- Translation: the βcheap yesβ is most likely in van, least likely in reefer, and most misleading in flatbed/specialized if not scoped correctly.
Shippers
- Many shippers will interpret the weekend board drop as a soft market.
- Better brokers will reframe the conversation around execution risk, not just availability.
- This is especially true for customers with:
- Monday pickups
- retail appointments
- flood-affected origins
- specialized freight
- temperature-sensitive product
Competing brokers
- Weak brokers will chase visible posted rates.
- Strong brokers will win by:
- auditing equipment needs
- staging trucks ahead of Monday
- quoting accessorials correctly
- avoiding service failures on weather-exposed freight
π Probability-weighted 24β72 hour outlook
Base case β 55%
- Weekend volume stays soft
- Van remains negotiable on clean lanes
- Reefer stays firm through Tuesday
- Midwest spot activity rebounds late Monday into Wednesday
Stress case β 30%
- Monday thunderstorms worsen Illinois/Iowa disruption
- Pickup delays cascade into missed appointments
- Chicago-area and northern Illinois freight reprices sharply
- Flatbed, reefer, and appointment-sensitive van loads get materially more expensive
Opportunity case β 15%
- Sunday repositioning works
- Brokers secure local Midwest and southbound trucks before the surge
- Specialized freight gets reclassified correctly
- Margin expands through cleaner buys and fewer rescue loads
β
Todayβs priority action plan
Re-bucket the desk now
- Bucket 1: Reefer and PFF freight
- Bucket 2: Midwest flatbed and heavy haul
- Bucket 3: Chicago-origin and storm-exposed Monday loads
- Bucket 4: Specialized loads needing spec audit
- Bucket 5: LTL/Partial conversion candidates
Cover in this order
- Urgent reefer
- Flood-exposed open-deck
- Heavy haul with route sensitivity
- Monday Chicago-area appointment freight
- Clean van with strong reload story
- Flexible freight that can be consolidated
Use Sunday as a positioning day
- Stage trucks outside the flood belt
- Secure preferred bypass-lane capacity
- Confirm Monday dispatch status with core carriers
Protect margin where the board is deceptive
- Do not quote reefer off posted numbers
- Do not treat flatbed parity as low risk
- Do challenge specialized equipment assumptions
- Do use van leverage only on truly clean freight
Track the right metrics by close
- Time-to-cover by mode
- Quote-to-book variance
- Carrier fallout rate on Midwest freight
- Accessorial recovery rate
- Specialized loads reclassified to standard equipment
- Customer saves generated through LTL/Partial conversion
π§Ύ Bottom line
- This is not a weak market. It is a selective market.
- The load board got lighter, but the market did not get cheaper where execution matters.
- Dry van offers negotiable buys, reefer must be covered early, open-deck remains the revenue core, and specialized freight is the best place to win through better diagnosis.
- The brokers who make the most money over the next 72 hours will not be the ones who chase the lowest posted number.
- They will be the ones who price pickup risk correctly, stage capacity before Monday, separate accessorials from linehaul, and turn weather friction into service advantage.
π
This Day in History
-404: Admiral Lysander and King Pausanias of Sparta blockade Athens and bring the Peloponnesian War to a successful conclusion.
1959: The Saint Lawrence Seaway, linking the North American Great Lakes and the Atlantic Ocean, officially opens to shipping.
2005: A seven-car commuter train derails and crashes into an apartment building near Amagasaki Station in Japan, killing 107, including the driver.
π Quote of the Day
"Truth is the offspring of silence and meditation."
β Isaac Newton