📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The spot market has experienced a massive mid-week volume surge, with total available loads jumping 26.0% overnight to 207,407, driving the market average rate to $3.02/mile. This influx of freight has violently tightened capacity across almost all equipment types, completely erasing any lingering weekend broker advantages. Carriers are aggressively leveraging this demand to command significant premiums over posted rates, particularly in the reefer ($0.19/mile premium) and van ($0.18/mile premium) sectors. The open-deck market has also flipped back to a carrier-favorable environment, with flatbed volumes exploding by 30.6% and carriers securing a $0.11/mile premium. With national diesel prices holding at a punishing $5.579/gallon and regional flooding disrupting major corridors in the South and Midwest, carriers are strictly enforcing deadhead limits and demanding elevated compensation to navigate restricted or less desirable lanes.
Insight
Routing-guide fallout is now showing up in execution
The widening gap between posted and paid rates across van, reefer, and flatbed points to more than a normal mid-week volume bump. Freight is clearly falling out of contract and being repriced at the point of coverage, and with diesel still above $5.57 plus flood detours slowing truck turns in the South, that premium is likely to stay sticky through at least Friday rather than fading after today's surge.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Flash Flooding (West Virginia (WV, Roane and Jackson counties)): Ongoing flash flooding is disrupting the I-77 and I-79 corridors. This poses a significant risk of route closures, immediate transit delays, and localized capacity tightening as carriers avoid the impacted zones.
- Widespread River Flooding (Gulf Coast and Southeast (MS, FL, TX)): Extended flood warnings along the East Hobolochitto Creek and other regional waterways are impacting the I-10 and I-59 corridors. This is expected to create difficult conditions for freight movement, slowing transit times and forcing carriers to demand premiums for entering flood-prone areas.
- Midwest River Flooding (Indiana and Ohio (IN, OH)): Minor lowland flooding along the East Fork White River is impacting agricultural and low-lying routes. While major interstates remain largely clear, this could delay agricultural and flatbed shipments originating from or destined for these rural corridors.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Appalachian disruption is heaviest today, with recovery starting Thursday
Heavy rain and thunderstorms are lined up this afternoon and evening along the I-77 and I-79 corridor in West Virginia, which keeps same-day transit risk elevated through the close. Conditions improve materially on Thursday, so loads that can slide 12 to 24 hours should see better acceptance and fewer route changes than freight forced through the corridor tonight.
Weather Insight
Gulf Coast flood drag looks durable into the weekend
Repeated storm chances in Mississippi through Sunday, combined with a stronger thunderstorm signal in Florida on Saturday, suggest the I-10 and I-59 network will remain unreliable even if water levels improve in spots. Carriers are likely to keep favoring inland alternates and shorter turns instead of committing to tight appointment windows across coastal freight lanes.
- Build an extra half-day into Houston-to-Southeast and Gulf-to-Florida commitments.
- Expect more detention and reroute asks on freight with coastal pickup windows.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Global energy pressures continue to sustain elevated diesel costs, forcing carriers to strictly enforce fuel surcharges and deadhead limits, which structurally inflates spot market pricing.
- Carrier Financial Health: The $5.579/gallon diesel environment remains an existential threat to small carriers and owner-operators, driving industry consolidation and reducing the overall pool of available spot capacity.
- Economic Indicators: The 26% surge in spot volumes suggests robust mid-quarter industrial and agricultural activity, though some of this volume may be artificially inflated by weather-related routing guide failures.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
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FMCSA Issues Urgent HOS/ELD Waiver for Fertilizer Transport 🔗:
The FMCSA has granted a temporary waiver for hours-of-service and ELD requirements for carriers transporting fertilizer in 35 states through August. This creates a massive opportunity in the agricultural and hopper freight sectors. Brokers can leverage this added flexibility to move urgent agricultural loads, but must implement strict vetting to ensure carriers adhere to the specific safety conditions (e.g., 16-hour limits, no hazmat) to avoid liability.
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Spot Rates Soar Amid Capacity Tightening and Fuel Pressures 🔗:
Industry reports confirm that trucking spot rates are soaring due to a combination of rising fuel surcharges and tightening capacity. This validates the aggressive carrier premiums seen in today's real-time load board data. Brokers must proactively communicate these structural rate increases to shippers and adjust quoting models to account for the $0.10-$0.20/mile spread between posted and paid rates.
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Regulatory Scrutiny Increases on SAP Fraud and Carrier Compliance 🔗:
Lawmakers are increasing pressure on the DOT and FMCSA regarding Substance Abuse Professional (SAP) fraud and overall carrier compliance. This highlights the ongoing regulatory tightening that is shrinking the legitimate driver pool. Brokers must maintain rigorous, continuous carrier vetting processes to avoid compliance risks and negligent selection liability.
News Insight
The fertilizer waiver loosens one niche while tightening adjacent capacity
The emergency fertilizer exemption should help bulk agricultural freight move faster, but it can also tighten nearby markets by pulling tractors and drivers toward exempt freight with cleaner turns and less ELD friction. In the Southeast, that means produce and fertilizer are now competing for the same daytime capacity pool; it should not be treated as a relief valve for reefer or standard van coverage.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast is currently the most volatile and opportunity-rich region for freight brokers. The combination of peak produce season, the newly announced FMCSA fertilizer transportation waiver, and ongoing Gulf Coast flooding (impacting I-10 and I-59) has created a highly fragmented capacity environment. Reefer capacity is exceptionally tight, commanding a $0.19/mile premium nationally, with much of that pressure concentrated in Florida and Georgia. Meanwhile, the fertilizer waiver is driving a surge in specialized and hopper demand across the region's agricultural corridors.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA → Miami, FL: This lane is experiencing intense pressure due to the imbalance of outbound Florida produce freight versus inbound general freight. Carriers are demanding high rates to head south into Florida, knowing they can command premium rates for the return trip, while van capacity remains tight due to regional flooding.
Houston, TX → Charlotte, NC: This major cross-regional corridor is heavily impacted by the ongoing flooding along I-10 and I-59 in Mississippi and Florida. Flatbed and specialized volumes have surged, but carriers are demanding significant premiums to navigate the weather-disrupted routes.
Regional Insight
Atlanta to Miami is now a roundtrip pricing lane
Southbound pricing into Florida is being set by the value of the northbound produce reload, not by the inbound commodity alone. Capacity will cover more cleanly when the reload window is defined before the truck crosses into Florida; open-ended delivery schedules and vague backhaul plans will keep getting rejected at today's fuel and utilization levels.
- Trucks committed before Friday should be easier to control than weekend capacity.
- Saturday storm risk in Florida raises the odds of produce loading delays and a tighter Monday northbound market.
Regional Insight
Houston to Charlotte will reward carriers with inland routing discipline
With weather friction concentrated along Gulf Coast corridors, carriers that can confidently route inland and stay off the most flood-prone coastal paths should outperform on this lane. Paying slightly above the current flatbed premium for a truck with a credible inland plan is likely cheaper than missing a fixed delivery and covering a rescue load a day later.
📊 Breaking Down the 26% Volume Surge: A Carrier's Market
Today's real-time load board data reveals a violent mid-week market shift, characterized by a massive 26.0% overnight surge in total available loads to 207,407. This influx has completely erased the slight broker advantages seen over the weekend and firmly placed pricing power back in the hands of carriers. The spread between posted and paid rates is the most critical indicator of this shift: carriers are successfully negotiating an $0.18/mile premium in dry van and a $0.19/mile premium in reefer. This indicates that shippers and brokers are posting loads at rates that carriers are flatly rejecting, forcing the market upward at the point of execution. The open-deck sector is equally volatile, with flatbed volumes exploding by 30.6% to over 91,000 loads, flipping yesterday's broker advantage into a $0.11/mile carrier premium. Brokers must immediately adjust their pricing algorithms; quoting based on posted averages will result in significant margin erosion or uncovered freight in today's environment.
💰 Arbitrage Opportunities in a Tightening Market
While the broader market heavily favors carriers today, specific data signals reveal actionable margin opportunities for agile brokers. The LTL/Partial sector is currently the only equipment type showing a broker advantage, albeit a slim $0.01/mile, despite a massive 44.2% surge in available partial loads. This suggests that carriers are eager to fill empty trailer space to offset the punishing $5.579/gallon diesel costs, making consolidation highly profitable. Additionally, the FMCSA's new temporary waiver for fertilizer transportation creates a unique arbitrage window. By understanding the specific HOS and ELD exemptions (and their limitations, such as the 16-hour rule and hazmat restrictions), brokers can aggressively target agricultural shippers who are struggling to find capacity, offering solutions that standard routing guides cannot accommodate. The key to profitability today lies in exploiting these niche regulatory and consolidation opportunities rather than competing head-to-head in the hyper-inflated standard van and reefer spot markets.
📅 Agricultural Convergence: Produce, Fertilizer, and Floods
The freight market is currently caught in a perfect storm of seasonal and regulatory events. The Southeast is experiencing the peak of its spring/early summer produce harvest, which is driving the aggressive $0.19/mile carrier premium in the reefer sector. Simultaneously, the critical spring fertilizer application season has prompted the FMCSA to issue an emergency HOS/ELD waiver across 35 states to prevent supply chain failures. This dual agricultural demand is absorbing massive amounts of specialized, hopper, and temperature-controlled capacity. Complicating this seasonal surge are the ongoing flood warnings across the Gulf Coast (I-10/I-59) and the Midwest (East Fork White River). These weather events are trapping equipment and extending transit times precisely when agricultural shippers need rapid turnaround. Brokers should expect this convergence to sustain elevated spot rates and tight capacity through at least the end of the month, particularly for any freight touching the Southeast or lower Midwest.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Quote off paid-market reality, not posted averages; full-truckload coverage is clearing roughly $0.10 to $0.20 per mile higher in core modes.
- Bundle reloads before tendering freight into Florida and other tight agricultural markets.
- Treat Gulf Coast transit times as unstable through the weekend, especially on freight tied to I-10 and I-59.
- Use the fertilizer waiver selectively for agricultural freight, but do not assume it frees up reefer or dry van capacity.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a real pricing reset, not a normal mid-week bounce.
- Total available loads are 207,407, up 26.0% from 164,594.
- That jump has not created easier buying. It has created harder execution.
- The clearest proof is the paid-versus-posted spread: carriers are not accepting board prices in core full truckload markets.
Carriers have the leverage in every major full-truckload mode except LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload / Partial).
- Van: $2.88 paid vs. $2.70 posted = +$0.18/mile carrier premium
- Reefer (refrigerated): $3.30 paid vs. $3.11 posted = +$0.19/mile carrier premium
- Flatbed: $3.63 paid vs. $3.52 posted = +$0.11/mile carrier premium
- Heavy Haul: $3.62 paid vs. $3.59 posted = +$0.03/mile carrier premium
- Specialized: $3.23 paid vs. $3.14 posted = +$0.09/mile carrier premium
- LTL/Partial: $1.73 paid vs. $1.74 posted = -$0.01/mile broker advantage
Do not let the national average fool you.
- The market average rate is $3.02/mile, slightly below yesterday’s $3.05/mile.
- That does not mean the market got easier.
- It means mix shifted, while execution-sensitive freight got more expensive. Experienced brokers know the spread matters more than the headline average on days like this.
Fuel and weather are turning capacity from “visible” into “selective.”
- Diesel is $5.579/gallon.
- Flooding across West Virginia, Mississippi, Florida, Indiana, and Ohio is slowing turns and making carriers choosier on reload quality, deadhead, and appointment risk.
Best posture today: buy certainty early, shorten quote life, and sell realistic transit.
- If you wait for “better” pricing, you are likely buying later at a worse all-in cost.
📈 What the market is actually saying
Routing-guide fallout is now hitting live execution.
- When paid rates outrun posted rates across van, reefer, flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized at the same time, that is usually contract leakage, not just enthusiasm on the board.
- Translation: freight is being repriced at the point of coverage.
Industrial and open-deck freight are setting the day’s tempo.
- Flatbed + Heavy Haul + Specialized = 157,940 loads
- That is roughly 76.1% of total available loads
- Those same three modes account for 51,409 of 66,104 loads moved, or about 77.8% of early execution
- When industrial freight dominates that heavily, it affects:
- truck positioning
- trailer commitment length
- dispatch patience
- how quickly van and reefer capacity disappears from shared markets
This market is tighter than a week ago in execution terms, even if total volume is similar.
- One week ago: 208,609 loads and $2.98/mile
- Today: 207,407 loads and $3.02/mile
- Similar board size, but a firmer cost structure. That is a classic sign of usable capacity tightening, not broad loosening.
The big broker trap today is anchoring to posted rates.
- Shippers will still see the post.
- Carriers are selling the paid number.
- Your job today is to close that expectation gap before a service failure closes it for you.
🚚 Mode-by-mode broker playbook
Dry Van: strong but still manageable if covered early
- 27,239 loads
- $2.70 posted / $2.88 paid
- Broker move: raise quotes on flood-affected, low-reload, or fixed-appointment freight immediately.
- Best freight to pursue: consumer staples, warehouse replenishment, food packaging, predictable shipper facilities.
- Avoid: late tenders into poor reload geographies without detention protection.
Reefer: tightest execution market on the board
- 8,505 loads
- $3.11 posted / $3.30 paid
- Reefer is showing the largest premium and the smallest room for sloppiness.
- Broker move: secure trucks before mid-morning on Southeast and Florida-related freight.
- Best freight to pursue: produce, food and beverage, temperature-sensitive contract overflow.
- Avoid: vague loading windows, uncertain reload plans, and “we’ll know the temp setting later” freight.
Flatbed: open-deck has fully flipped back to carriers
- 91,293 loads
- $3.52 posted / $3.63 paid
- Broker move: stop treating flatbed like a margin bank. It is now a service-risk mode with pricing pressure.
- Best freight to pursue: clean industrial loads, known shippers, daylight loading, solid securement instructions.
- Avoid: muddy sites, uncertain loading equipment, flood-exposed first/last mile.
Heavy Haul: still buyable only if operational details are clean
- 41,924 loads
- $3.59 posted / $3.62 paid
- Small premium, but the real risk is not linehaul. It is routing, permits, escorts, and delay cost.
- Broker move: confirm route feasibility before arguing over pennies.
- Avoid: pricing first and discovering bridge, flood, or permit trouble later.
Specialized: scarce capacity is being monetized
- 24,723 loads
- $3.14 posted / $3.23 paid
- Broker move: no instant quoting without exact specs, loading method, and commodity details.
- Best freight to pursue: niche, high-consequence loads where carrier quality matters more than speed-shopping.
- Avoid: first-time carriers without compliance depth.
LTL/Partial: the only real tactical buy-side pocket
- 13,723 loads
- $1.74 posted / $1.73 paid
- This is not a huge edge, but it is the only one.
- Broker move: use consolidation selectively on freight with exact dimensions, flexible windows, and low claims exposure.
- Avoid: using partial as a panic button for urgent freight or unclear dimensions.
🌦️ Weather-adjusted lane tactics for the next 24–72 hours
Appalachia today: delay beats heroics
- Flash flooding on I-77 and I-79 corridors in West Virginia keeps same-day risk elevated.
- Broker move: if the freight can slide 12 to 24 hours, Thursday should be easier to cover and execute.
- Best use: renegotiate pickup timing before you renegotiate rescue coverage.
Gulf Coast: the drag is durable, not temporary
- Flood warnings in Mississippi and Florida keep I-10 and I-59 unreliable through the back half of the week.
- Broker move: build an extra half-day into Houston-to-Southeast and Gulf-to-Florida commitments.
- Expect: more detention asks, more reroute asks, and more resistance to tight receiver appointments.
Atlanta → Miami: this is now a roundtrip pricing lane
- Southbound pricing is being set by the northbound Florida reload, not just the inbound commodity.
- Broker move: define the reload before awarding the southbound truck.
- What wins: clean delivery windows, known produce reloads, and commitment before Friday.
Houston → Charlotte: inland discipline matters more than headline rate
- Flood friction along Gulf corridors means the cheapest carrier is often the least executable.
- Broker move: pay slightly above market to carriers with a credible inland routing plan.
- That is usually cheaper than a missed delivery plus a rescue load.
💰 Where the best broker money is today
💬 Negotiation angles that work today
With shippers: reframe the conversation
- Use language like:
- “The board price is not the execution price this morning.”
- “The gap between posted and paid is real across van, reefer, and flatbed.”
- “I can protect service, but I need a realistic quote window and transit expectation.”
- Give options:
- Premium execution
- Standard execution with wider transit
- Partial/LTL alternative where the freight profile fits
With carriers: sell trip economics, not just rate
- Ask:
- What route are you running?
- How much Hours of Service (HOS) do you have after pickup?
- What reload market are you targeting next?
- Are you okay with flood-affected local access?
- Carriers today are rewarding:
- fast decisions
- precise load details
- honest dwell expectations
- credible reload visibility
With your internal team: stop old quotes from becoming losses
- Shorten quote validity
- Reprice aging tenders
- Escalate all weather-touched loads
- Do not let customer silence become broker exposure
⚠️ Risk controls that matter today
Carrier vetting matters more in specialized freight
- Regulatory scrutiny around compliance and SAP (Substance Abuse Professional) fraud means cheap unknown capacity is more dangerous than usual.
- Broker move: verify authority, insurance, equipment, and operating fit before award.
Accessorial discipline is mandatory
- At $5.579/gallon diesel, carriers will push hard on:
- detention
- layover
- TONU (Truck Ordered Not Used)
- reroute compensation
- Broker move: get terms confirmed before dispatch, not after the delay.
ETA management must get ahead of problems
- On flood-exposed lanes, the broker who updates first often keeps the customer.
- The broker who goes silent usually gets blamed for weather, fuel, and the carrier.
⏱️ Today’s execution plan
First 60–90 minutes
- Cover reefer first
- Reprice flatbed and specialized immediately
- Update all van quotes using paid-market reality
- Call customers on Southeast and Gulf freight before they tender late with old expectations
By late morning
- Verify route access on all flood-exposed pickups and deliveries
- Solve Florida reloads before sending trucks south
- Push Thursday and Friday tenders forward
- Screen open-deck carriers harder for route and securement credibility
By lunch
- Audit all uncovered loads by age and appointment sensitivity
- Add detention and reroute language where needed
- Convert suitable freight to LTL/Partial
- Remove stale posted-rate assumptions from your team’s active quotes
This afternoon
- Watch for carrier repricing on loads that sat too long
- Get ahead of ETA slippage
- Pre-position for Thursday relief in Appalachia
- Do not award late-day appointment freight to unknown carriers just to “get it covered”
🎯 Probability-weighted outlook
Base case — 60%: tight through Friday
- Van, reefer, flatbed, and specialized remain carrier-favored
- Best move: cover early and defend margin with honest service commitments
Tighter case — 25%: Gulf and Florida worsen
- Flood drag plus produce plus fertilizer competition tighten daytime capacity further
- Best move: prioritize known carriers and premium service freight
Relief case — 15%: localized Thursday easing
- Appalachia improves first
- Some delayed freight clears more cleanly
- Best move: use relief tactically, not as a reason to lower the whole market
🏁 Bottom line
- This is a carrier market in every major full-truckload mode except a very slight LTL/Partial buy-side pocket.
- The most important data point today is not the $3.02 average rate; it is the widening paid-over-posted spread.
- Flatbed’s 91,293-load surge means industrial freight is controlling truck positioning nationwide.
- Reefer is the most dangerous mode to underquote, especially with Florida and Southeast reload economics in play.
- Diesel at $5.579/gallon and active flooding mean carriers are selling total trip economics, not just linehaul.
- The brokers who win today will buy earlier, quote shorter, communicate faster, and stop pretending posted rates are executable rates.
📅 This Day in History
1595: A Gaelic Irish army successfully ambushes an English force in the battle of Clontibret during the Nine Years' War.
1863: American Civil War: The first Union infantry assault of the Siege of Port Hudson occurs.
1967: The U.S. Navy aircraft carrier USS John F. Kennedy is launched by Jacqueline Kennedy and her daughter Caroline.
💭 Quote of the Day
"He is not a lover who does not love forever."
— Euripides