π Daily Market Intelligence Report
Friday, April 24, 2026
7:00 AM CST
π Top-Line Summary
The national spot freight market is experiencing a notable end-of-week shift, with total available loads contracting 5.9% overnight to 167,606, though the market average rate remains stable at $2.69/mile. This volume dip is primarily driven by a 9.5% cooling in the massive open-deck sector, which is being partially offset by a sharp 8.2% surge in temperature-controlled freight demand. Diesel prices sit at a verified $5.465/gallon, continuing to apply severe inflationary pressure on carrier operating costs amid ongoing geopolitical tensions. Operationally, severe and prolonged river flooding across the Midwest continues to fracture major transcontinental routing along I-80, I-90, and I-70, forcing extensive detours and tightening regional capacity pools.
Insight
Friday softness likely gives way to an early-week Midwest repricing
The end-of-week load drop looks more like timing noise than a true loosening signal. Much of Illinois and Iowa get a brief weather break through Sunday, which should help trucks reposition, but another round of thunderstorms and heavy rain is lined up for Monday across key Midwest states. That keeps the window for cheap coverage narrow and raises the odds of firmer outbound pricing again by Monday for flood-exposed flatbed, heavy haul, and time-sensitive reefer freight.
β½ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
π¦οΈ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe River Flooding (Midwest (IL, IA, MI, MO, OH)): Prolonged flooding is forcing extensive detours along major transcontinental routes including I-80, I-90, and I-70. This is significantly reducing equipment turnaround times and tightening regional capacity pools as drivers avoid compromised areas.
- Late-Season Freeze Warnings (West (UT, OR, WA)): Sub-freezing temperatures are driving urgent protect-from-freeze (PFF) demand for temperature-controlled equipment, further tightening reefer capacity in the western regions and driving rate premiums.
- Lake and River Flooding (Upstate New York (NY)): Minor flooding along Cayuga Lake and surrounding areas may disrupt local routing and delay facility access, requiring brokers to verify receiver conditions before dispatching.
- Coastal River Flooding (South Texas (TX)): Minor lowland flooding along the Guadalupe River could disrupt local agricultural and industrial freight movements near Victoria and Bloomington.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Midwest flooding gets a short recovery window, not a clean reset
Flood friction will outlast today's calmer conditions. Weekend weather across much of Illinois and Iowa should improve local drayage and yard access, but not normalize cycle times on east-west freight; Monday's rain and thunderstorm setup across Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, and Missouri could quickly put secondary routes back in play and extend detention risk into Tuesday.
- Weekend pickups through northern Illinois and eastern Iowa are more workable than Monday appointments.
- East-west freight crossing the region still needs extra transit padding even if interstate conditions improve temporarily.
π° Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Global oil markets remain volatile due to the ongoing Iran conflict, with diesel supplies under severe pressure. Futures indicate sustained high prices, meaning carriers will continue to demand strict fuel surcharge adherence.
- Carrier Financial Health: High fuel costs and softening van rates are squeezing margins for smaller owner-operators, potentially accelerating capacity exits in the general freight sector while specialized carriers thrive.
- Economic Indicators: Union Pacific's 5% profit climb and renewed push to acquire Norfolk Southern signals ongoing consolidation in the rail sector, which could shift intermodal freight patterns and impact long-haul truckload demand.
π° Impactful News Analysis
-
DOJ Reschedules Marijuana: Long-Term Implications for CDL Drivers π:
While the DOJ's move to reschedule marijuana to Schedule III is historic, brokers must understand that this changes nothing for CDL drivers in the short term. FMCSA regulations remain strict, and positive tests will still result in out-of-service orders. Brokers should continue strict carrier vetting and not assume any relaxation in driver pool availability.
-
Diesel Prices Surge 45% Amid Geopolitical Conflict π:
The massive spike in diesel prices since the Iran conflict began is severely fracturing carrier operating budgets. Brokers must proactively address fuel costs in rate negotiations, as carriers simply cannot absorb these increases. Expect strict adherence to fuel surcharges and potential capacity drop-offs on long-haul lanes where fuel burn is highest.
-
Union Pacific Pushes Forward with Norfolk Southern Acquisition π:
UP's strong Q1 profits are fueling its $85 billion bid for Norfolk Southern. If approved, this transcontinental rail merger could significantly alter intermodal freight flows. Brokers should monitor this closely, as improved rail efficiency could threaten long-haul truckload volumes, while creating new short-haul drayage opportunities around major rail hubs.
News Insight
Diesel is reshaping acceptance patterns more than headline rates
At $5.465 per gallon, the market impact is showing up in lane selection as much as in surcharge enforcement. Carriers are more willing to accept disciplined rates on freight that exits the Midwest cleanly and leads into a second reload, while resisting long-haul tenders with uncertain routing, detention risk, or empty-mile exposure. That makes network fit a stronger pricing lever than broad market averages on today's quote desk.
πΊοΈ Regional & Lane Analysis
π Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest remains the most operationally complex and volatile freight region today. Severe, prolonged river flooding across Illinois, Iowa, Michigan, and Missouri is fracturing major transcontinental routing along I-80, I-90, and I-70. This infrastructure disruption is colliding with a massive flatbed demand boom, though open-deck volumes cooled slightly overnight. Capacity is critically tight as equipment turnaround times stretch due to extensive detours. Carriers are demanding significant hazard and routing premiums to enter compromised zones, giving them strong pricing leverage despite broader market stabilization.
π£οΈ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL β Dallas, TX: This major north-south corridor is experiencing significant friction due to localized flooding around the Chicago metro area and broader Illinois river systems. Van capacity is relatively stable, but flatbed and reefer equipment are commanding premiums. Demand remains strong for consumer goods and industrial materials moving into the Texas market.
Columbus, OH β Atlanta, GA: This lane bridges the flooded Midwest with the tightening Southeast market. While Ohio is experiencing some flood impacts, the primary driver here is the shift in reefer demand as the Southeast produce season begins to ramp up. Flatbed demand remains robust for construction materials.
Regional Insight
Chicago to Dallas remains a favorable southbound cover for vans
Chicago-to-Dallas should stay easier to cover in dry van than the broader Midwest headline suggests because carriers are motivated to reposition south out of disrupted flood zones and into a stronger Texas reload environment. That advantage fades quickly for reefer and open-deck freight once route specifics are known, since even modest Chicago-area delays can wipe out a next-day North Texas reload and trigger sharper pricing on accessorial-heavy moves.
- Use southbound repositioning into Texas to hold van buy rates in line today.
- Quote flatbed and reefer with detour fuel and firmer layover terms upfront.
Regional Insight
Columbus to Atlanta reefer still prices like a positioning move
Southbound reefer into Atlanta remains one of the few lanes where carrier appetite can offset some of the national reefer squeeze, because the freight sets trucks up for Southeast produce reloads. That directional benefit is strongest through the weekend; by Monday, tighter outbound produce coverage in the Southeast and another round of unsettled weather in Ohio should reduce carrier flexibility and narrow negotiating room.
π Reefer Surges While Open-Deck Cools: Analyzing the 8.2% Shift
Today's real-time load board data reveals a significant divergence in equipment demand. While the broader market saw a 5.9% contraction in available loads, the temperature-controlled sector bucked the trend with a sharp 8.2% overnight surge to 7,959 loads. This is driving a positive rate spread, with paid reefer rates ($2.70/mile) outpacing posted rates ($2.67/mile), indicating that carriers hold the pricing power and brokers are paying premiums to secure trucks. Conversely, the massive flatbed sector cooled by 9.5% to 74,074 loads. However, despite this volume drop, flatbed paid rates remain highly elevated at $3.22/mile, suggesting that while new load injections have slowed, existing capacity remains critically constrained. Brokers should pivot their daily strategy to aggressively cover reefer freight early in the day, as the positive rate spread indicates capacity will only get more expensive as the day progresses.
π Geopolitical Tensions Sustain $5.465 Diesel Floor
The verified AAA diesel price of $5.465/gallon continues to act as a massive inflationary floor for the spot market. News reports indicating a 45% surge in diesel prices since the onset of the Iran conflict highlight the severe pressure on carrier operating margins. This macro-level fuel crisis is directly visible in the load board data, particularly in the van sector where the negative rate spread ($2.37 posted vs $2.24 paid) suggests smaller carriers are capitulating to lower linehaul rates just to keep cash flowing to cover fuel. However, this is a fragile equilibrium. If global oil markets push diesel prices any higher, we could see a sudden wave of capacity exits from marginal owner-operators, which would rapidly flip the van market from loose to tight.
ποΈ Midwest Flooding Fractures Transcontinental Routing
The cluster of severe Flood Warnings (WX687C5A0F) across Illinois, Iowa, Michigan, and Missouri is creating massive operational friction for east-west freight flows. Major corridors including I-80, I-90, and I-70 are compromised, forcing carriers into extensive detours. This infrastructure constraint is artificially tightening capacity by extending transit times; a truck that normally takes two days to cross the region may now take three, effectively removing that equipment from the spot pool for an extra 24 hours. Brokers moving freight through the Midwest must factor these delays into their transit times and expect carriers to demand higher rates to cover the extra fuel burn required for detours, especially with diesel sitting at $5.465/gallon.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Treat today's Midwest easing as a short cover window, not a durable loosening trend.
- Lean into southbound positioning narratives on Chicago-Dallas and Columbus-Atlanta to contain buy rates.
- Build detour, layover, and transit-time protection into any flood-exposed Midwest shipment before tendering.
- Prioritize carriers with strong reload options over lowest headline rate while diesel stays above $5.46.
π Executive Signal Summary
This is a selective Friday reset, not a true loosening event.
- Total available loads are 167,606, down 5.9% from 178,171.
- The national average rate is still $2.69/mile, which tells you the market did not break just because the board got lighter.
Reefer is the dayβs clearest early-cover priority.
- Reefer loads climbed to 7,959, up 8.2%.
- Paid reefer is $2.70/mile versus $2.67/mile posted, a +$0.03/mile execution premium.
- That is a classic sign that carriers hold leverage on service-sensitive freight, especially with produce season and protect-from-freeze (PFF) demand colliding.
Dry van is still broker-favorable nationally, but only on clean freight.
- Van loads sit at 20,579.
- Posted van is $2.37/mile and paid is $2.24/mile, a -$0.13/mile spread.
- That gives brokers room, but only where the load has fast turns, low dwell, and a credible reload story.
Open-deck remains the center of gravity even after the overnight drop.
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized total 128,903 loads, about 76.9% of visible spot volume.
- Those same segments account for 53,600 of 61,961 loads moved today, about 86.5% of executed volume.
- If your desk is not prioritizing industrial, project, and open-deck freight first, you are misallocating attention.
Diesel at $5.465/gallon keeps the floor under pricing and raises the cost of mistakes.
- Carriers are not just pricing linehaul.
- They are pricing detours, empty miles, uncertain routing, detention exposure, and reload quality.
π§ What the market is actually telling you
Headline volume softness is misleading.
- A weaker broker sees -5.9% total loads and assumes trucks will get cheaper through the day.
- A better read is that the market mix is rotating, not relaxing.
- The freight that remains difficult is still the freight that matters most: reefer, flatbed, heavy haul, and flood-exposed Midwest freight.
The market is paying for productivity loss more than demand growth.
- Flatbed paid is $3.22/mile, above the $3.17/mile posted rate.
- Heavy haul paid is $3.31/mile, above the $3.26/mile posted rate.
- That means carriers are being compensated for time loss and route complexity, not just demand.
Reefer has moved back into true execution-premium behavior.
- When paid exceeds posted, the board is underrepresenting the real buy.
- That usually worsens as the day progresses on:
- produce-related freight
- PFF (Protect From Freeze) loads
- tight pickup windows
- weekend-sensitive appointments
Specialized is your best verification market.
- Specialized paid is $2.88/mile versus $3.00/mile posted, a -$0.12/mile spread.
- That is the biggest gap on the board.
- Translation: a lot of specialized asks are richer than the executable market.
- Smart brokers will audit the trailer spec before paying the ask.
LTL/Partial is a real account-defense tool today.
- LTL/Partial sits at 10,165 loads with paid at $1.71/mile versus $1.79/mile posted.
- That is not just cheap capacity.
- It is a way to save customers money without giving away truckload margin on flexible freight.
π Mode-by-mode broker playbook
π Dry Van
π§ Reefer
π§ Flatbed
ποΈ Heavy Haul
πͺ Specialized
π¦ LTL/Partial
π§οΈ Regional priorities for the next 24β72 hours
π Midwest flooding
βοΈ West freeze and PFF demand
π£οΈ Lane tactics that can win today
ποΈ Chicago, IL β Dallas, TX
π Columbus, OH β Atlanta, GA
π¬ Pricing and negotiation tactics for today
Use paid rates as your operating truth, not posted hopes
- Van baseline: $2.24/mile
- Reefer baseline: $2.70/mile
- Flatbed baseline: $3.22/mile
- Heavy haul baseline: $3.31/mile
- Specialized baseline: $2.88/mile
- LTL/Partial baseline: $1.71/mile
Use two-option pricing on weather-sensitive freight
- Option 1: Flexible service
- wider pickup/delivery window
- lower buy
- less certainty
- Option 2: Priority service
- committed truck
- tighter execution
- higher buy with accessorial protections
Break out costs visibly
- Fuel
- Detour exposure
- Layover
- Detention
- Tarp
- PFF (Protect From Freeze)
- Permit/reroute risk
Sell network fit, not just rate
- At $5.465/gallon diesel, carriers care deeply about:
- next load
- deadhead
- dwell risk
- route confidence
- A broker with a believable reload story often wins over a broker simply adding pennies.
π‘οΈ Risk controls smart brokers should tighten today
π Probability-weighted 24β72 hour outlook
Base case β 60%
- Van stays negotiable on clean lanes
- Reefer stays tight
- Flatbed and heavy haul remain firm
- Midwest outbound pricing firms again by Monday
Stress case β 25%
- Monday rain rebuilds detour risk
- Midwest cycle times extend into Tuesday
- Late-cover reefer and open-deck freight gets materially more expensive
Opportunity case β 15%
- Weekend repositioning creates a short-lived van buying window
- Southbound Midwest freight covers cleaner than the regional headlines imply
- Brokers who convert flexible orders into partials protect both margin and service
β
Todayβs priority action plan
Re-bucket the board immediately
- Bucket 1: Midwest flood-exposed flatbed and heavy haul
- Bucket 2: Reefer and PFF freight
- Bucket 3: Clean southbound van
- Bucket 4: Specialized loads needing spec audit
- Bucket 5: LTL/Partial conversion candidates
Cover in this order
- Urgent reefer
- Midwest flatbed
- Heavy haul with route complexity
- Weekend appointment freight
- Clean van
- Flexible freight that can be consolidated
Call customers before they call you
- Reset expectations on Monday Midwest pricing now
- Offer flexible-service and priority-service options
- Explain detour and dwell risk before tendering
Protect margin where the board is misleading
- Challenge specialized asks
- Avoid quoting reefer from posted numbers
- Do not let a van-friendly national spread trick you into underpricing flood-exposed lanes
Track the right desk metrics by close
- First-call cover ratio
- Quote-to-book variance by mode
- Carrier fallout rate on Midwest freight
- Average time-to-cover on reefer
- Savings from specialized-to-standard equipment reclassification
π§Ύ Bottom line
- Today is not a cheap-truck day. It is a selective-execution day.
- Reefer should be bought early, flatbed should be covered with discipline, heavy haul should be routed before quoted, and specialized should be challenged before paid.
- Van still offers broker leverage, but only where the load is operationally clean and the reload story is strong.
- The brokers who win today will not chase the lowest number on the board β they will buy dependable productivity in a market where diesel, detours, and dwell are worth more than headline volume changes.
π
This Day in History
858: Consecration of Pope Nicholas I following the death of Pope Benedict III earlier that month.
1704: The first regular newspaper in British Colonial America, The Boston News-Letter, is published.
1965: Civil war breaks out in the Dominican Republic when Colonel Francisco CaamaΓ±o overthrows the triumvirate that had been in power since the coup d'Γ©tat against Juan Bosch.
π Quote of the Day
"Fear is your worst enemy. Risk is your best friend."
β Gurbaksh Chahal