📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Monday, June 22, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
On Monday, June 22, 2026, the domestic spot market shows a strong start-of-week rebound with total available loads climbing 11.7% overnight to 144,502. The national average spot rate has firmed to $2.99/mile, supported by a rigid cost floor established by the verified AAA national diesel average of $5.013/gallon. Peak summer produce harvests in the Southeast and West Coast are driving intense temperature-controlled demand, with reefer load availability surging 24.7% overnight. Meanwhile, severe weather—including a tornado warning in Arkansas and widespread flash flooding across the Midwest and South—is disrupting key transit corridors like I-10, I-65, and I-70, tightening regional capacity and creating high-margin arbitrage opportunities for proactive brokers.
Insight
National averages are understating the front-half squeeze
The Monday bounce is showing up nationally, but the real tightening is highly local. Reefer and flatbed are already behaving like scarcity markets in Georgia, South Carolina, Savannah and flood-affected Midwest corridors, where carriers are protecting short repositioning miles and rejecting long deadheads at $5.013 diesel. The strongest margin window is concentrated from now through Wednesday on outbound produce and short-haul port freight.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Tornado Warning (Arkansas (AR, Pope County)): A severe thunderstorm capable of producing a tornado was located near Russellville, moving east. This extreme weather event poses immediate safety hazards and may cause localized disruptions to freight operations and facility closures in central Arkansas.
- Flash Flood Warning (Kentucky (KY, Jefferson County) and Arkansas (AR, Craighead County)): Heavy rain is causing flash flooding of small creeks, highways, and underpasses. This is expected to delay transit and disrupt capacity along major corridors, including I-65 in Kentucky and I-55 in Arkansas.
- Flash Flood Warning (Missouri (MO, Barry, McDonald, Stone, Taney counties) and Indiana (IN, Spencer County)): Thunderstorms producing heavy rain are causing flash flooding of highways and low-lying areas. This may disrupt local routes and delay freight transit along the I-49 corridor in southwestern Missouri.
- River Flooding (Illinois (IL, Peoria, Tazewell, Woodford counties) and Indiana (IN, Vigo County)): Minor river flooding continues along the Illinois River and other regional waterways. This may force detours and delay open-deck and heavy-haul equipment transit along the I-70 and I-80 corridors.
- River Flooding (Louisiana (LA, Calcasieu, St. Tammany parishes) and Mississippi (MS, Hancock, Pearl River counties)): Minor flooding continues along the Calcasieu River and other regional waterways. This may disrupt local transit and impact facilities near the I-10 corridor, tightening regional capacity.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Arkansas and Louisville are the clearest same-day service risks
The sharpest weather drag is front-loaded into Monday morning and early afternoon. Heavy rain and the tornado threat near Russellville will slow I-40 crossings in central Arkansas, while flash flooding around Louisville is likely to disrupt local pickups, underpasses and I-65 approaches. Conditions improve later today and tomorrow, but missed appointments, wet yards and driver-hours burn will keep same-day recovery uneven.
Weather Insight
River flooding remains a first-mile and per mit problem after skies clear
Minor river flooding in Illinois, Indiana and along parts of the Gulf corridor matters more for open-deck and oversize freight than for standard van linehaul. Even with better driving weather, access roads, plant entrances and staging areas can stay soft or restricted, forcing per mit reroutes and slower escorts. The delay risk around Peoria-area industrial freight and I-10-adjacent heavy moves is increasingly in local access, not freeway speed.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Diesel futures show some stabilization following the preliminary US-Iran deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, but immediate relief is limited as minesweeping operations will take at least 30 days.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small carriers and owner-operators remain under intense financial pressure due to sustained high diesel prices at $5.013/gallon, which limits their operating margins and restricts their ability to deadhead for loads.
- Economic Indicators: Sustained inflationary pressures and high energy costs continue to filter through the real economy, leading to a 'higher inflation, slower growth' environment that impacts overall freight volumes but drives spot market volatility.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
Strait of Hormuz Reopening to Take Months, Keeping Ocean Rates Elevated 🔗:
The preliminary US-Iran deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz is a positive sign, but Xeneta warns that a full return of container shipping may take until mid-September due to a 30-day minesweeping period and extensive network disruptions. With spot rates from the Far East to the US West Coast already up 192% since late February, shippers are frontloading imports ahead of July bunker surcharges. For domestic brokers, this means a sustained influx of import volumes at West Coast ports, driving strong outbound intermodal and truckload demand through the summer.
-
Virginia Seeks Emergency Powers to Extend Expiring CDLs 🔗:
Virginia has petitioned the FMCSA for the authority to extend the validity of expiring Commercial Driver's Licenses (CDLs) during emergencies. If granted, this regulatory flexibility could help prevent sudden capacity drops during regional crises by keeping qualified drivers on the road. Brokers should monitor this development as a potential model for other states, which could ease short-term driver shortages during severe weather events or other disruptions.
News Insight
Import frontloading will tighten short inland turns before it tightens long haul
The extended recovery timeline for Gulf shipping should keep importers pulling freight forward, but the first domestic pinch point is likely to be short inland distribution rather than transcontinental truckload. Southeast gateways such as Savannah will see the fastest rate escalation on 150- to 350-mile turns, where regional carriers can recycle equipment back to port quickly. That keeps Charlotte, Greenville and Atlanta resets firmer than national dry van averages suggest.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast is currently the most lucrative region for freight brokers due to the convergence of peak summer produce harvests (blueberries, peaches, watermelons) and a massive influx of frontloaded import volumes at major ports like Savannah. This combination has created severe capacity imbalances, driving up spot rates and creating high-margin arbitrage opportunities, particularly for reefer and flatbed equipment.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA → Miami, FL: This lane is experiencing high volume as retail goods and imported cargo from Atlanta's distribution hubs move south to Florida's consumer markets. Sourcing capacity is highly competitive due to the peak produce season in Georgia, which draws reefers and vans away from standard freight. High diesel prices at $5.013/gallon further pressure carrier margins, making them reluctant to accept lower-paying backhauls.
Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC: This short-haul corridor is seeing a massive surge in volume as shippers frontload imports through the Port of Savannah to preempt potential tariffs and rising fuel costs. The high volume of containerized freight is straining local drayage and truckload capacity. Additionally, regional flooding along the East Coast has caused minor routing delays, further tightening capacity.
Regional Insight
Atlanta-Miami is pricing like a round-trip lane
Southbound Atlanta-Miami freight is tightening faster than headline van averages imply because carriers are pricing the full tour, not just the loaded miles. With reefers and some vans being pulled into Georgia produce, any truck committing to South Florida will want compensation for reload uncertainty and high fuel burn. Shippers with firm pickup windows and fast loading will secure materially better coverage than freight with loose appointments.
Regional Insight
Savannah-Charlotte will reward velocity more than mileage
On Savannah-Charlotte, speed is the commodity. Carriers are favoring freight that can clear port friction and turn back toward Savannah within a day, which keeps this short regional lane expensive even when longer-haul Southeast lanes look calmer.
- Live-unload uncertainty and chassis or gate delays can erase the economics of a short haul.
- Detention terms and flexible pickup windows need to be priced in upfront, not negotiated after dispatch.
📰 Breaking Down: Strait of Hormuz Reopening to Take Months, Keeping Ocean Rates Elevated
The preliminary US-Iran agreement to reopen the Strait of Hormuz is a major geopolitical breakthrough, but ocean freight analytics firm Xeneta warns that a full recovery of container shipping through the key waterway may take until mid-September. The primary bottleneck is a mandatory 30-day minesweeping operation required to ensure safe passage. Currently, only 11 of the original 99 container services transiting the Arabian Gulf remain active, with hundreds of vessels diverted around Africa. This massive disruption has already pushed spot rates from the Far East to the US West Coast up by 192% since late February.
For domestic freight brokers, the downstream effects of this prolonged recovery are profound. Shippers are actively frontloading imports ahead of anticipated July bunker fuel surcharges and fears of capacity shortages, leading to a massive surge in container volumes at major US ports. This frontloading is driving early peak-season demand for domestic truckload and intermodal capacity, particularly outbound from West Coast and East Coast port cities. Brokers must prepare for sustained high volumes and tightening capacity on major transcontinental corridors like I-10 and I-80 as these imports are distributed inland.
🚛 Reefer: Peak Produce Season Collides with Regional Flooding
Temperature-controlled equipment is currently the most volatile and high-opportunity sector in the spot market. Available reefer loads surged by 24.7% overnight to 8,005, driven by the peak summer produce harvest across the Southeast, West Coast, and Midwest. Key commodities like blueberries, peaches, and watermelons are moving in high volumes, requiring immediate, pre-cooled capacity and tight transit windows. This seasonal surge is colliding with severe flash flooding in the Midwest and South, which has disrupted major transit corridors and trapped equipment, further tightening the available pool of reefers.
While national average reefer rates show a slight broker advantage on paper ($3.12 posted vs $3.08 paid), this national average masks intense regional rate volatility. In agricultural hotspots like Georgia, South Carolina, and California, carriers are commanding significant rate premiums. Brokers must be prepared to pay above-market rates to secure reliable reefer capacity in these regions. Conversely, inbound lanes to these produce-producing areas offer excellent opportunities to negotiate favorable backhaul rates with carriers eager to reposition their equipment for high-paying outbound agricultural loads.
📅 Summer Peak and End-of-Quarter Surge Horizon
As we approach the end of June, freight brokers must prepare for a powerful convergence of seasonal and cyclical market forces. The final week of the second quarter traditionally brings a significant surge in shipping volumes as manufacturers and retailers push to clear inventory and meet quarterly revenue targets. This end-of-quarter rush will collide directly with the peak of the summer produce season, which is already straining reefer and dry van capacity across the southern half of the United States.
Additionally, the upcoming July 4th holiday week will create a temporary but severe capacity contraction as many drivers take time off, leading to a sharp spike in spot market rates. Brokers should advise their customers to frontload as much freight as possible this week to avoid the inevitable capacity squeeze and rate spikes of early July. Securing carrier commitments now for next week's shipments, particularly on critical lanes outbound from the Southeast and West Coast, will be essential for maintaining service levels and protecting margins.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Prioritize coverage early on Southeast reefer and port-adjacent 150-350 mile freight; those lanes are tightening faster than national averages show.
- Quote Arkansas, Louisville and river-corridor freight with delay buffers today; road conditions may improve before yards and appointment schedules do.
- Treat South Florida loads as round-trip economics, especially when competing with Georgia produce for reefer and van capacity.
- For Savannah freight, sell speed and clear accessorial terms as much as linehaul rate; same-day turn capability is commanding the premium.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
The board snapped higher, but this is not a broad cheap-capacity day: 144,502 total available loads is a strong +11.7% overnight rebound, yet the national average of $2.99/mile is hiding a much tighter market in Southeast reefer, Savannah short-haul port turns, and flood-affected Midwest/South corridors.
Diesel at $5.013/gal is still the market’s discipline mechanism: carriers will protect shorter repositioning miles, reject uncertain deadhead, and price freight based on reload certainty, not just posted linehaul.
Open-deck still controls truck positioning across the country: flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized total 102,786 loads, which is 71.1% of all available freight. If you misread open-deck tightness, you will misprice nearby van and reefer replacement costs.
Reefer is tighter than the national spread suggests: on paper, reefer shows a slight broker edge at $3.12 posted vs. $3.08 paid, but in real produce markets that edge is mostly optical. Georgia, South Carolina, California, and short produce-support lanes will clear like scarcity freight.
Specialized has become a true carrier-power segment: $3.11 posted vs. $3.57 paid is a $0.46/mile carrier premium. That is not normal negotiation slippage; it is the market charging for limited qualified capacity and summer project urgency.
Today’s best margin is in execution quality, not rate squeezing: the winners will be brokers who sell speed, clarity, appointment discipline, and return-load visibility—especially on Savannah, Atlanta, South Florida, and weather-disrupted open-deck freight.
🧠 What the market is really saying
The most important read this morning is that activity has improved faster than practical capacity has normalized.
The volume rebound is real:
- Total available loads: 144,502
- National average rate: $2.99/mile
- Range: $1.54 to $3.69/mile
But executable capacity is still constrained by three forces:
- Fuel economics: at $5.013/gal, carriers are less willing to chase freight that has uncertain reloads or long unpaid repositioning.
- Weather friction: Arkansas, Louisville, Missouri, Illinois/Indiana river corridors, and Gulf-adjacent areas may drive worse outcomes in yard access, missed appointments, and driver-hours burn than in raw interstate closure.
- Seasonal pull: produce and import-frontload freight are rewarding fast-cycle regional trucks, especially on 150- to 350-mile turns.
That means the national average is a poor quoting anchor today:
- A clean dry-van move from a major manufacturing hub can trade close to board logic.
- A reefer in produce country, a port turn around Savannah, or a flood-exposed flatbed move can reprice quickly and sharply.
- The same equipment type is behaving like multiple different markets depending on location and cycle time.
My read: today through Wednesday is a front-half execution market. If you wait for more price softness before buying freight, you risk paying replacement rates instead of planned rates.
📦 Mode-by-mode broker playbook
🚚 Dry Van: Usable broker edge, but only on clean freight
🧊 Reefer: Still an urgency-buy market in the right geographies
🪵 Flatbed: High volume, tight execution
Board facts:
- 60,249 loads
- $3.53 posted
- $3.55 paid
- $0.02/mile carrier premium
Broker interpretation:
- Flatbed remains the largest single mode on the board.
- Even a small carrier premium matters when flood conditions and summer project freight reduce equipment productivity.
- This is a market where a broker can still win, but only by being operationally cleaner than competitors.
Best use today:
- Quote routed miles, not idealized map miles
- Confirm securement needs before posting
- Add local-access risk to flood-adjacent industrial freight
- Separate linehaul from tarp, detention, and site-delay exposure
Big risk:
- Many flatbed losses today will come from soft yards, wet jobsites, crane timing misses, and detention, not from the base linehaul rate.
🏗️ Heavy Haul: Still a project-management market
Board facts:
- 26,628 loads
- $3.62 posted
- $3.69 paid
- $0.07/mile carrier premium
Broker interpretation:
- Heavy haul is not just tight because of equipment.
- It is tight because route certainty, permit timing, and local access reliability are all under pressure.
Best use today:
- Validate permit path before hard-quoting
- Confirm escort exposure and local restrictions
- Recheck first-mile and final-mile access in flood areas
- Use known heavy-haul partners rather than broad board shopping
Broker rule:
- If the customer wants a fast quote without full dimensions, access details, or route constraints, they are asking you to absorb the risk. Don’t.
⚙️ Specialized: Hard carrier market, not a margin-harvest market
Board facts:
- 8,948 loads
- $1.68 posted
- $1.54 paid
- $0.14/mile broker advantage
Broker interpretation:
- This remains the cleanest place to defend margin when customers resist full truckload repricing.
- High fuel costs are pushing carriers to seek better trailer utilization, which helps partial and consolidation options.
Best use today:
- Convert flexible truckload freight into partials where timing allows
- Offer consolidation alternatives to cost-sensitive shippers
- Use partials to preserve strategic accounts instead of fighting unwinnable truckload rate battles
🌎 Regional money map for today
🍑 Southeast: Best near-term revenue zone
Why it is strongest:
- Produce pull
- Savannah import-frontload pressure
- High diesel reducing deadhead tolerance
- Regional carrier preference for quick turns
What to do:
- Buy Southeast capacity early
- Lead with reload visibility
- Use daypart pricing—morning trucks are often cheaper than afternoon replacements
- Quote service certainty, not just mileage
What not to do:
- Do not use $2.99 national average as a negotiating anchor for Georgia, South Carolina, or Savannah-influenced freight.
⚓ Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC: Velocity lane, not mileage lane
What is happening:
- Port-related freight is rewarding carriers that can turn same day or next day and get back toward the port quickly.
- On this lane, time is the commodity.
Broker tactics:
- Spell out detention upfront
- Confirm gate, chassis, and live-unload exposure early
- Use flexible pickup windows to improve acceptance
- Prioritize carriers with prior Savannah operating experience
Key insight:
- A cheap linehaul quote loses its value if port friction kills the turn. Carriers know this, and they are pricing accordingly.
🌴 Atlanta, GA → Miami, FL: Price it as a two-load cycle
What is happening:
- South Florida is still a lane where carriers think in round-trip economics.
- They are pricing not only the southbound move, but also the reload risk and fuel burn after delivery.
Broker tactics:
- Sell the return leg when covering the outbound
- Use Florida-committed carriers
- Reward fast loading and firm appointments
- Avoid loose pickup windows that increase driver-hours loss
Key insight:
- The shipper who loads cleanly and commits to firm schedule discipline will buy this lane materially better than the shipper who creates uncertainty.
🌧️ Weather-adjusted execution plan
🚨 Same-day risk zones: Arkansas and Louisville
What matters most today:
- Central Arkansas tornado and flood risk can slow I-40 crossings, local pickups, and terminal rhythm.
- Louisville-area flooding can disrupt underpasses, local approaches, and appointment flow, even if the main linehaul path looks passable later.
Broker actions:
- Add delay buffers to all same-day pickups
- Pre-alert shippers on likely schedule slippage
- Secure backup coverage sooner than normal
- Do not assume morning disruption fully clears into normal afternoon throughput
🛣️ River corridors: Access risk beats highway risk
Affected logic:
- Illinois, Indiana, and Gulf-adjacent flood areas matter most for:
- flatbed
- heavy haul
- specialized
- The danger is often not interstate speed—it is plant access, staging yards, escorts, and soft local roads.
Broker actions:
- Verify first-mile and final-mile conditions
- Build permit delays into heavy-haul timelines
- Separate weather risk from accessorial terms in your quote
- Avoid “all-in, no-exceptions” pricing on flood-exposed project freight
💰 Where the best margin is actually hiding
1. Speed premium on port and produce-support freight
- Savannah short turns
- Southeast reefer
- tight pickup windows with clean reload visibility
2. Inbound repositioning into produce markets
- Trucks heading into Georgia and South Carolina can often be bought more intelligently if you are helping the carrier get to the next premium reload.
3. LTL/partial conversion
- When a shipper resists a truckload reprice, partial can preserve both margin and customer trust.
4. Scope-controlled open-deck freight
- On flatbed and heavy haul, brokers who define securement, route, site access, and detention before posting will outperform brokers trying to make it up after dispatch.
5. Customer education on round-trip economics
- South Florida and similar reload-uncertain destinations are more profitable when you get the customer to understand they are buying a tour, not just a loaded segment.
🧩 Customer and carrier psychology today
🧑💼 What shippers are likely to do
Anchor to the national average
- They hear $2.99/mile and assume their lane should clear near that.
- Today, that is often wrong.
Assume better weather equals immediate market recovery
- It does not.
- Freight markets recover slower than radar because appointments, yards, empties, and reload chains stay disrupted.
Wait too long to approve a rate
- This is especially dangerous on reefer, Savannah turns, and flood-affected open-deck freight.
🚛 What carriers are rewarding
Clear details
- exact commodity
- exact appointments
- exact access conditions
Fast turns
- Especially on short port and regional cycles
Reload visibility
- Carriers are pricing confidence as much as linehaul
Operational honesty
- If the load is messy, say so early. The carrier will price it more accurately and is less likely to fall off later.
🗣️ Best shipper message today
- “Your lane is not being priced by the national average; it is being priced by truck position, fuel discipline, local access risk, and replacement cost.”
That message is credible because it explains the market without sounding defensive.
📈 Probability-weighted outlook for the next 24–72 hours
Base case — 55%
- Southeast reefer and port-adjacent short-haul freight stay firm through Wednesday
- Van remains workable nationally but tightens regionally near Savannah and produce zones
- Open-deck remains sensitive to weather-related productivity loss
Stress case — 30%
- Flood-related missed appointments create replacement freight
- Specialized and heavy-haul premiums widen further
- Afternoon and next-day repricing accelerates on weather-exposed lanes
Opportunity case — 15%
- Corridor conditions improve faster than yard conditions worsen
- Brokers with pre-positioned regional carriers capture strong margins on inbound produce repositioning, partials, and clean flatbed turns
✅ Today’s priority stack
Buy Southeast reefer and Savannah-influenced freight early
- The cheapest truck this morning is often the truck that does not exist this afternoon.
Price South Florida as round-trip freight
- Especially from Atlanta and nearby Southeast hubs.
Separate linehaul from execution risk on open-deck
- Tarp, site delay, detour, permit, and access need their own logic.
Use LTL/partial as a deliberate margin tool
- Not as a last-resort salvage tactic.
Be selective on specialized
- If you do not control the carrier relationship, do not over-promise the customer.
Quote weather-exposed freight with recovery lag
- Roads can improve before facilities do.
Push reload visibility in every carrier conversation
- At $5.013 diesel, this is one of the strongest acceptance levers in the market.
📋 What your team should track by noon
- First-call acceptance rate on Southeast reefer and port freight
- Replacement-cost delta between early-covered loads and late rescues
- Detention/accessorial capture rate on Savannah and weather-affected shipments
- Percentage of reefer loads booked with confirmed return-leg visibility
- Number of same-day pickups in Arkansas/Louisville that require revised appointment windows
Those are the intraday indicators that tell you whether you are trading proactively or reacting expensively.
🏁 Bottom line
This is a firmer Monday than the national averages imply.
The board says activity is up. The real market says:
- diesel is keeping trucks local
- produce is pulling reefer capacity hard
- Savannah is rewarding velocity
- South Florida is still bought as a cycle
- weather is reducing productivity more than it is shutting down linehaul
- specialized is now a carrier-power market
The brokers who win today will buy early, define scope clearly, sell certainty, and think in two-load economics instead of one-load pricing.
💡 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
1807: In the Chesapeake–Leopard affair, the British warship HMS Leopard attacks and boards the American frigate USS Chesapeake.
1978: Charon, the first of Pluto's satellites to be discovered, was first seen at the United States Naval Observatory by James W. Christy.
2002: An earthquake measuring 6.5 Mw strikes a region of northwestern Iran killing at least 261 people and injuring 1,300 others and eventually causing widespread public anger due to the slow official response.
💭 Quote of the Day
"The only way to do great work is to love what you do."
— Steve Jobs