📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Saturday, June 20, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
On Saturday, June 20, 2026, the domestic spot market remains highly active with 134,397 available loads, while the national average rate holds steady at $2.93/mile. High operating costs persist as the national AAA diesel average is verified at $5.062/gallon, establishing a rigid cost floor that limits carrier deadhead and keeps capacity highly localized. Peak summer produce harvests in the Southeast, California, and Midwest are driving intense temperature-controlled demand, while severe flash flooding in Texas, Louisiana, and the Midwest disrupts major transit corridors like I-10, I-20, I-49, and I-74. For freight brokers, these regional capacity imbalances, combined with a widening spread between posted and paid rates across flatbed, reefer, and dry van sectors, present high-margin arbitrage opportunities.
Insight
Flood disruption is immediate, but not uniform across the week
The cleanest pricing edge today is separating short-lived flood premiums from tighter structural markets. Louisiana and East Texas should see the worst same-day disruption on Saturday, with some normalization beginning Sunday into Monday, while Arkansas and the Illinois River corridor carry a longer delay tail into early next week. That makes Southeast produce and port-driven reefer demand the more durable source of rate firmness, while flood-related premiums should be quoted lane by lane rather than treated as a broad regional surcharge.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Flash Flood Warning (South (AR, LA, TX - Bienville, Jackson, Lincoln, Ouachita, Union, Bossier, Caddo, Webster parishes in LA; Freestone, Leon, Limestone, Cass, Marion counties in TX; Columbia, Lafayette, Miller counties in AR)): Heavy rain of 2-3 inches has fallen, with an additional 1-2 inches possible. This may disrupt transit along the I-20, I-49, and I-45 corridors, causing localized delays and routing challenges.
- River Flooding (Gulf Coast (AL, FL, LA, MS, TX - St. Tammany, Calcasieu, Livingston, Tangipahoa parishes in LA; Hancock, Pearl River counties in MS)): Minor flooding is occurring on the Tchefuncte, Tickfaw, Tangipahoa, and Amite rivers. This could delay local deliveries and restrict capacity along the I-10 and I-59 corridors.
- River Flooding (Midwest (IA, IL, IN, MO - Peoria, Tazewell, Woodford, Bureau, La Salle, Putnam, Clark, Crawford counties in IL; Sullivan, Vigo counties in IN)): Minor flooding continues along the Illinois River, which is expected to remain above flood stage until June 26. This poses a risk of delays for open-deck and dry van freight along the I-74 and I-70 corridors.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
I-20 and I-49 face rolling service failures through the Shreveport-Texarkana belt
Heavy rain this morning in northern Louisiana is likely to turn into a rolling disruption pattern rather than a full-day shutdown, with localized flooding, slower turns, and missed appointment windows most likely on loads crossing the I-20/I-49 network.
- Same-day pickups moving through Monroe, Shreveport, or Texarkana should carry extra transit padding and flexible delivery windows.
- Weather improves in Louisiana after Saturday, but Arkansas turns wetter again Monday and Tuesday, extending east-west network friction beyond the initial flood zone.
Weather Insight
Post-storm heat will keep reefer costs elevated along Gulf lanes
Once the rain clears, Louisiana swings back into 90s heat with triple-digit heat indices through midweek. That matters for refrigerated freight: continuous unit run time, tighter fuel planning, and a higher risk of service disputes on produce and frozen loads if trailers are not pre-cooled or arrive with weak fuel levels.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Crude oil and diesel futures are easing slightly following reports of a potential US-Iran agreement that could reopen the Strait of Hormuz, raising hopes of increased supply. However, current diesel prices remain high, maintaining upward pressure on carrier operating costs.
- Carrier Financial Health: Carrier margins remain under pressure despite the slight dip in diesel prices. The high cost of fuel relative to spot rates continues to force smaller owner-operators to limit deadhead miles, keeping capacity highly localized and increasing the risk of carrier failures.
- Economic Indicators: Rebounding import volumes (up 6.6% MoM in May) and surging China-origin volumes (up 28.1% YoY) are driving strong demand at West Coast ports, signaling an early start to the peak shipping season and downstream capacity contraction.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
ITS Logistics Warns of Downstream Price Surges as Peak Season Begins 🔗:
The June freight index highlights that the U.S. freight market is entering peak shipping season with record spot rates and contracting capacity. Van tender rejections at 18.3% and reefer rejections at 25% indicate severe contract capacity strain. Brokers must prepare for downstream price surges in drayage and intermodal sectors, and advise clients to secure capacity early as shippers accelerate a shift toward rail, creating new bottlenecks.
-
Diesel Prices Ease Slightly on Potential US-Iran Supply Hopes 🔗:
A potential agreement between the U.S. and Iran has raised hopes of increased oil supply, causing diesel prices to drop 11 cents over the past week. While this provides minor relief to carriers, California continues to have some of the highest fuel prices in the country. Brokers should monitor these negotiations closely, as any long-term stability in fuel prices will help stabilize carrier operating costs and spot rate volatility.
-
FMCSA ELD Revocations Signal Sourcing Risks for Brokers 🔗:
The FMCSA has revoked at least 79 electronic logging devices since January 2025 for failing to meet federal standards. This creates a hidden compliance risk for brokers, as carriers using revoked devices may face out-of-service orders. Brokers must verify carrier compliance and ELD status during the vetting process to avoid transit disruptions and liability issues.
-
Florida Breaks Ground on Truck Parking; Oregon Waives HOS 🔗:
Florida's investment in new truck parking addresses a critical driver safety issue, while Oregon's temporary HOS waiver provides operational flexibility. Brokers should leverage these developments to improve carrier relations and optimize transit times on Pacific Northwest and Southeast lanes.
News Insight
ELD compliance risk is highest on appointment-sensitive freight
The ELD revocations matter most on produce, port, and expedited freight where a roadside compliance failure can turn into a same-day service miss. Carrier vetting should include confirmation of the active ELD provider before dispatch, especially on reefer loads with hard delivery windows and short-haul port freight built around rapid turn times.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast remains the most lucrative region for freight brokers today, driven by the peak summer produce harvest (peaches, blueberries, watermelons) and surging import volumes at major ports like Savannah. This combination of agricultural demand and port activity has created a highly competitive environment for temperature-controlled and dry van capacity, driving rate volatility and arbitrage opportunities.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA → Orlando, FL: This high-volume corridor is experiencing strong seasonal demand as retail and food service distributors in Florida pull inventory from Atlanta hubs. Outbound capacity from Atlanta is tightening due to the regional produce harvest competing for equipment. This has led to increased spot market activity and rate volatility.
Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC: Surging import volumes at the Port of Savannah are driving intense demand for dry van and flatbed capacity along this short-haul corridor. Shippers are rushing to move containerized cargo inland to distribution hubs in Charlotte. This has created a highly active spot market with rapid rate movements.
Regional Insight
Savannah short-haul turns are pulling vans away from inland Georgia freight
On the Savannah-to-Charlotte corridor, carriers can stack quick port turns and stay close to fuel-efficient freight, which is drawing capacity away from longer inland reloads. The practical spillover is tighter Monday coverage not only at the port, but also on outbound Atlanta and central Georgia dry van freight as trucks stay committed to shorter, faster-yielding moves.
🚛 Reefer Spotlight: Peak Produce Collides with High Operating Costs
The temperature-controlled sector is currently experiencing its annual summer peak, with reefer available loads at 7,001 and paid rates averaging $3.21/mile, commanding a $0.03/mile carrier premium over posted rates. This demand is heavily concentrated in primary agricultural hubs across California, Georgia, and South Carolina, where time-sensitive commodities like peaches, blueberries, and watermelons require immediate transport. The urgency of these shipments, combined with high diesel prices ($5.062/gallon), has created a highly competitive capacity environment. Carriers are prioritizing high-paying produce loads, forcing non-agricultural shippers to pay significant premiums to secure temperature-controlled equipment. Brokers must act quickly to secure capacity, as reefer tender rejections have reached 25%, indicating that contract carriers are rejecting loads in favor of higher-paying spot opportunities.
💰 Capitalizing on the Specialized and Flatbed Rate Spreads
Today's load board data reveals significant rate spreads that brokers can exploit for high-margin opportunities. In the specialized sector, the average posted rate is $3.17/mile, while the average paid rate is $2.70/mile, representing a massive $0.47/mile broker advantage. This wide spread suggests that carriers are aggressively repositioning equipment and are willing to accept lower rates on backhaul or repositioning lanes. Similarly, the flatbed sector shows an average posted rate of $3.56/mile and an average paid rate of $3.50/mile, a $0.06/mile broker advantage. With 54,213 available flatbed loads, volume remains high, but the slight broker advantage indicates that capacity is accessible if brokers target the right lanes. By focusing on lanes where carriers need to reposition open-deck or specialized equipment, brokers can negotiate highly favorable rates and maximize their margins.
🌐 Early Peak Season Influx and Geopolitical Fuel Pressures
The domestic freight market is experiencing an unusually early start to the peak shipping season, driven by a surge in containerized imports. May import volumes rose 6.6% month-over-month, with China-origin volumes up 28.1% year-over-year. This influx of cargo is straining drayage and intermodal networks, leading to downstream price surges and contracting truckload capacity. At the same time, geopolitical tensions in the Strait of Hormuz have kept fuel costs elevated, with diesel prices running approximately 50% above last year's levels. Although a potential US-Iran agreement has recently eased oil prices, the current AAA diesel average of $5.062/gallon continues to act as a rigid cost floor for carriers. This combination of surging import demand and high operating costs is driving SONAR's National Truckload Index to record highs, signaling a volatile summer for freight brokers and shippers alike.
📅 End-of-Quarter Surge and Produce Transitions
As we approach the final week of June, brokers must prepare for the traditional end-of-quarter shipping surge. Shippers will be rushing to clear inventory and meet quarterly revenue targets, driving a sharp increase in dry van and LTL volumes. This seasonal surge will collide with the peak of the Southeast produce harvest and the ongoing transition of West Coast agricultural shipping. Reefer capacity will remain extremely tight, and dry van capacity will likely tighten near major manufacturing and retail distribution hubs. Brokers should advise their clients to pre-book shipments and expect upward pressure on spot rates over the next 7 to 14 days. Sourcing capacity early and securing carrier commitments will be critical to maintaining service levels and protecting margins during this high-volume period.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Price Saturday flood disruption as a tactical lane premium, not a blanket Gulf Coast surcharge.
- Protect Monday and Tuesday Southeast coverage now; produce and port freight are the stickier capacity drains.
- Use Florida- and Carolinas-based carriers for Southeast turns, but expect inland Georgia vans to tighten as Savannah short-haul freight absorbs capacity.
- On reefer and expedited freight, compliance screening is now a service-risk issue, not just a safety-box exercise.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a selective broker-opportunity market, not a blanket easy-margin market.
- Total available loads are 134,397, down 20.1% from 168,187 yesterday, but that drop does not automatically mean looser execution.
- With national average spot rate at $2.93/mile and diesel at $5.062/gallon, the market still has a hard operating-cost floor.
The real divide today is between short-term disruption and durable tightness.
- Flood premiums in East Texas and Louisiana are tactical and should be priced lane by lane.
- Southeast produce and Savannah-driven freight are structural and are more likely to stay firm into Monday and Tuesday.
Open-deck still controls the day’s truck positioning.
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized total 95,681 loads, which is 71.2% of all available freight.
- Those same segments account for 38,867 of 47,007 moved loads, or 82.7% of moved freight.
- If you miss open-deck positioning, you will misread carrier availability in adjacent van and reefer markets too.
Reefer is still the cleanest urgency buy.
- 7,001 reefer loads
- $3.18/mile posted
- $3.21/mile paid
- +$0.03/mile carrier premium
- That is a small spread numerically, but in produce season it often signals fast execution pressure, not soft pricing.
Specialized is the biggest negotiation edge on the board.
- 15,503 specialized loads
- $3.17/mile posted
- $2.70/mile paid
- $0.47/mile broker advantage
- That is the day’s clearest sign that repositioning and backhaul behavior can create outsized margin—if the lane is right.
Carrier behavior remains hyper-local because fuel is expensive.
- At $5.062/gallon, carriers are still choosing:
- reload certainty
- shorter turns
- known dwell
- weather-safe routing
- The nearest usable truck is often better than the cheapest truck on the board.
🧠 What the market is really saying
Headline volume is down, but replacement-cost risk is still alive.
- Weekend board contraction often tempts brokers to assume softer pricing.
- In reality, today’s lower board count is happening alongside:
- produce harvest pressure
- elevated tender rejections
- port pull from Savannah
- flood-related turn destruction
- That combination usually means fewer truly executable trucks, especially on appointment-sensitive freight.
Dry van looks balanced nationally, but not everywhere that matters.
- Van: 22,638 loads, $2.60 posted, $2.57 paid
- The $0.03/mile broker advantage is narrow enough that any lane with:
- port congestion
- retail replenishment
- flood detours
- produce competition
can erase that advantage quickly.
Reefer tightness is structural, not just weather-driven.
- Flooding matters, but reefer firmness is mainly coming from:
- blueberries
- peaches
- tomatoes
- watermelon
- corn
- Add continuous unit fuel burn, pre-cool requirements, and hard delivery windows, and the cheapest reefer option becomes the riskiest option.
Specialized’s wide spread should not be misread as easy money everywhere.
- A $0.47/mile gap usually means one of two things:
- posted rates are aspirational
- carriers are accepting discounted repositioning loads
- The profit is real, but only when you match:
- backhaul geography
- correct equipment
- real loading conditions
- permit or escort needs if applicable
Flooding is reducing network productivity more than headline closures suggest.
- The main risk is not just “road closed.”
- It is:
- missed appointments
- late unloads
- broken reload chains
- same-day service failures
- That kind of friction tends to reprice freight after a broker has already quoted it.
🚚 Mode-by-mode broker playbook
🟦 Dry Van: Tradable, but don’t get lazy
What the board says
- 22,638 loads
- $2.60/mile posted
- $2.57/mile paid
- $0.03/mile broker advantage
What it means
- Nationally, van is not broken.
- Operationally, van is still vulnerable near:
- Savannah
- Atlanta
- Florida retail lanes
- flood-exposed Gulf and lower Midwest corridors
Best play today
- Buy early on Southeast outbound freight
- Use Carolina- and Florida-based carriers for tighter regional turns
- Protect Monday Atlanta and inland Georgia coverage now, because Savannah short-haul turns are pulling trucks away from longer inland reloads
What to avoid
- Selling van freight off national averages
- Assuming a posted rate will still clear after lunch
- Treating weather-exposed lanes like normal weekend freight
🧊 Reefer: Still the premium-first mode
🪵 Flatbed: Margin is in scope control
🏗️ Heavy Haul: Still a project-management mode
What the board says
- 25,965 loads
- $3.67/mile posted
- $3.64/mile paid
- $0.03/mile broker advantage
What it means
- The spread is small, but execution risk is large.
- Flooded or restricted corridors can slow:
- permits
- escorts
- legal routing
- first-mile and final-mile access
Best play today
- Do not quote from dimensions alone
- Verify permit path and timing before giving firm service commitments
- Use known heavy-haul carriers first, not lowest-bid general capacity
Key broker principle
- If the customer wants a fast quote without full scope, they are transferring uncertainty to you.
⚙️ Specialized: Best spread, but stay disciplined
What the board says
- 15,503 loads
- $3.17/mile posted
- $2.70/mile paid
- $0.47/mile broker advantage
What it means
- This is today’s best pure margin signal.
- It strongly suggests:
- repositioning freight
- backhaul equipment availability
- selective carrier discounting to stay loaded
Best play today
- Target lanes where equipment naturally needs to reposition
- Work your approved specialized base before posting broadly
- Use this mode for negotiated margin capture, not speed quoting
Big caution
- A wide spread does not mean every specialized lane is cheap.
- It means the right specialized lane can be bought very well.
📦 LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload/Partial): Overflow valve, not bargain bin
What the board says
- 9,077 loads
- $1.62/mile posted
- $1.68/mile paid
- +$0.06/mile carrier premium
What it means
- LTL/partial is getting pulled into service as shippers try to avoid full truckload pain.
- Paid over posted tells you these moves are clearing where service matters.
Best play today
- Offer partial solutions to customers with flexible appointment windows
- Use it on repeat regional freight where consolidation is operationally realistic
- Protect your truckload network by moving non-urgent freight into partial channels
🗺️ Regional opportunity map for the next 24–72 hours
🌴 Southeast: The best structural market on the board
Why it stays firm
- Produce harvest
- Savannah import pull
- localized capacity due to high diesel
- elevated tender rejection environment
Best positioning
- Buy Monday/Tuesday coverage today
- Favor carriers with Southeast reload history
- Sell certainty, appointment discipline, and reload visibility—not just rate
🚛 Atlanta, GA → Orlando, FL: Still a cycle lane, not a one-way lane
What is happening
- Florida demand remains healthy, but outbound carrier willingness depends heavily on their next move.
- Trucks do better here when they can see:
- return to Georgia
- reload into the Carolinas
- a produce-related northbound turn
Broker posture
- Negotiate the roundtrip logic while buying the southbound
- Do not assume cheap coverage just because it is a weekend
⚓ Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC: Fast-turn freight is tightening nearby markets
What is happening
- Port-driven short hauls are absorbing dry van and some flatbed capacity because they offer:
- quick turns
- reload certainty
- lower deadhead risk
- That tightens not just Savannah, but also Atlanta and central Georgia.
Broker posture
- Price Monday inland Georgia outbound freight firmer than the board may suggest
- Protect detention and appointment language on port-related freight
- Use carriers already in coastal rotation
🌧️ Shreveport–Texarkana–Monroe belt: Tactical disruption market
What is happening
- I-20 and I-49 are likely to experience rolling service failures, not universal shutdown.
- The risk is concentrated in:
- same-day pickups
- tight receiver appointments
- multi-stop freight
- reload chains that require perfect timing
Broker posture
- Charge a tactical lane premium
- Add transit padding
- Avoid broad Gulf Coast surcharges
- Give customers a realistic window, not a heroic ETA
🌊 Illinois River corridor / I-74 / I-70: Longer-tail disruption
What is happening
- This is more likely to create persistent delay friction into early next week than a one-day spike.
- Open-deck freight will feel it first because of:
- access issues
- route sensitivity
- jobsite timing
- permit complications
Broker posture
- Advance pickups where possible
- Protect Monday delivery promises
- Check local access, not just interstate routing
💬 Customer psychology and how to sell today’s market
Shippers will anchor to the national average of $2.93/mile.
- That is understandable—and dangerous.
- The national average does not reflect:
- produce urgency
- port bunching
- lane-specific flooding
- appointment-risk pricing
Best customer message
- “The national market is tradable, but your lane is being priced by service risk and truck positioning.”
- That framing is accurate and credible.
What to separate in your quote
- linehaul
- weather or routing exception cost
- detention or accessorial exposure
- appointment sensitivity
Quote discipline that wins
- Short validity windows
- Lane-specific language
- No blanket weather surcharge
- Clear ETA risk notes on I-10, I-20, I-49, I-70, and I-74 exposure
🤝 Carrier psychology and how to buy better today
🛡️ Risk controls that matter most today
📈 Probability map for the next 24–72 hours
Base case — 55%
- East Texas and Louisiana improve after the immediate Saturday window
- Arkansas and Illinois corridor friction lingers longer
- Southeast reefer and regional van stay firm into Monday
- Savannah spillover keeps inland Georgia tighter than it looks
Stress case — 30%
- Flood delays create missed appointments and replacement freight
- Reefer paid rates widen further above posted
- Open-deck productivity drops because of access, routing, and permitting friction
- Monday dry van tightens suddenly in Atlanta/central Georgia
Opportunity case — 15%
- Weather disruption clears faster than expected
- Specialized and flatbed backhaul buying becomes highly favorable
- Brokers with pre-vetted Southeast carriers capture premium freight without overpaying
✅ Today’s priority stack
Buy Southeast Monday/Tuesday capacity now
- Focus on reefer first, then regional van tied to Georgia, the Carolinas, and Florida.
Price flood disruption tactically
- Use lane-level premiums, not broad regional surcharges.
Exploit the specialized spread
- The $0.47/mile posted-to-paid gap is today’s best negotiation edge.
Protect inland Georgia van coverage
- Savannah short-haul activity is likely to tighten Atlanta and central Georgia faster than the national van average suggests.
Scope every open-deck load before posting
- Especially freight touching I-20, I-49, I-70, and I-74.
Treat compliance as an execution filter
- On reefer and expedited freight, ELD confirmation is now a service-protection step, not just a safety formality.
Sell service reality to customers
- Anchor the conversation around appointment protection, route conditions, and reload geometry, not just cents per mile.
🏁 Bottom line
The board looks smaller. The market is still sharp.
The best brokers today will not be the ones who chase the lowest posted rate. They will be the ones who:
- separate temporary flood premiums from durable Southeast tightness
- buy reefer and Southeast van coverage before Monday reprices them
- use specialized as a margin-capture mode
- quote open-deck with real routing and site conditions
- treat compliance and weather as same-day capacity filters
Best money today: Southeast reefer, Savannah-adjacent van timing, and lane-selective specialized backhaul buying.
💡 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
1210: Michael I Komnenos Doukas, the first ruler of the despotate of Epirus, signs a treaty with the Republic of Venice and becomes their vassal.
1943: World War II: The Royal Air Force launches Operation Bellicose, the first shuttle bombing raid of the war. Avro Lancaster bombers damage the V-2 rocket production facilities at the Zeppelin Works while en route to an air base in Algeria.
1988: Haitian president Leslie Manigat is ousted from power in a coup d'état led by Lieutenant General Henri Namphy.
💭 Quote of the Day
"To forgive means pardoning the unpardonable."
— Gilbert Chesterton