๐ Daily Market Intelligence Report
Friday, June 26, 2026
7:00 AM CST
๐ Top-Line Summary
On Friday, June 26, 2026, the domestic spot market remains highly active with 165,423 total available loads, representing a minor 1.6% decrease from yesterday's volume. The market average rate has settled at $2.98/mile, supported by a firm cost floor with the AAA national diesel average at $4.832/gallon. Peak summer produce harvests in the Southeast and West Coast continue to drive intense temperature-controlled demand, with reefer paid rates averaging $3.21/mile. Meanwhile, severe weatherโincluding flash flooding in southern Illinois and river flooding in the Midwest and Gulf Coastโis disrupting key transit corridors like I-24, I-57, I-80, and I-10, tightening regional capacity. Additionally, the FMCSA's temporary suspension of the biennial update requirement and pause on USDOT deactivations due to ongoing Motus portal rollout issues provide administrative relief but highlight persistent carrier compliance volatility.
โฝ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Flash Flood Warning (Southern Illinois (IL, Johnson and Union counties)): Heavy rain and flash flooding may disrupt transit along the I-24 and I-57 corridors, slowing down regional freight movements and creating safety hazards for drivers.
- River Flooding (Midwest (IL, IN, Peoria, Bureau, La Salle counties)): Minor flooding along the Illinois River continues to affect major freight corridors including I-80, I-74, and I-39, potentially forcing detours and delaying open-deck and dry van shipments.
- Gulf Coast River Flooding (Gulf Coast (LA, MS, Calcasieu, St. Tammany, Hancock, Pearl River counties)): Minor flooding along the Calcasieu and Pearl rivers poses a risk of localized road closures and delays along the I-10 and I-59 corridors, tightening regional capacity.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Southern Illinois disruption looks front-loaded
Along I-24 and I-57 in southern Illinois, the greater risk appears concentrated in the early part of Friday from residual high water, ponding, and local cleanup rather than a fresh round of heavy rain. Conditions in the alert area improve through the day, but patchy rain and lower visibility return Saturday, so afternoon recovery moves are more workable today while weekend reloads still need extra transit padding.
Weather Insight
River flooding remains a velocity drag even where mainline interstates stay open
Minor river flooding near the Illinois River and along the Louisiana-Mississippi Gulf corridor is more likely to slow freight than fully stop it today. Mainline runs on I-80, I-74, I-39, I-10, and I-59 may remain serviceable, but ramps, frontage roads, local bridge approaches, and per mit-approved alternates can still break trip plans and delay appointments.
- Illinois gets another round of rain and lower visibility Saturday, which keeps flatbed and oversize turn times vulnerable into the weekend.
- On the Gulf Coast, the flood risk is more localized and per sistent than expanding, so expect tighter capacity around river-adjacent pickups rather than a broad corridor shutdown.
๐ฐ Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Easing crude prices have brought some relief to diesel futures, but retail prices remain high at $4.832/gallon, keeping carrier operating margins thin and fuel surcharges high.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small carriers and owner-operators remain highly sensitive to fuel costs and administrative hurdles. The revocation of Truckstaff ELD's self-certification adds compliance pressure.
- Economic Indicators: Steady consumer demand and peak agricultural activity are maintaining a stable floor for freight volumes, preventing a deeper spot market correction.
๐ฐ Impactful News Analysis
-
FMCSA Temporarily Suspends Biennial Update Requirement Amid Motus Rollout Issues ๐:
The FMCSA's decision to temporarily suspend the biennial update requirement for carriers that haven't updated since June 1 highlights ongoing technical difficulties with the new Motus registration portal. For brokers, this means temporary administrative relief for carriers on their roster, but it also requires heightened vigilance during onboarding to ensure carrier authorities remain active and compliant despite the system's instability.
-
FMCSA Pauses USDOT Deactivations and Revokes Truckstaff ELD Self-Certification ๐:
The pause on USDOT number deactivations provides breathing room for carriers struggling with the Motus rollout. However, the simultaneous revocation of Truckstaff ELD's self-certification means brokers must immediately audit their carrier networks to identify any drivers using this non-compliant ELD, as they will face out-of-service orders if not replaced, potentially disrupting active loads.
News Insight
Motus relief lowers deadline pressure but raises verification risk
The FMCSA pause reduces the chance of a carrier being sidelined over a missed biennial update, but it also makes stale onboarding assumptions more expensive. A carrier can remain numerically active while still carrying insurance, registration, or contact-data mismatches, so urgent spot freight is better protected with same-day authority and insurance verification than with prior-filed approvals.
News Insight
ELD decertification is a live weekend cover risk
The Truckstaff decertification is most likely to surface as last-minute fallout on produce, long-haul reefer, and other time-definite freight where small fleets are common and compliance swaps cannot wait until next week.
- Confirm the ELD platform before dispatch on newly covered loads, not after the truck is loaded.
- Keep backup coverage warm on weekend reefer and team-sensitive moves where an out-of-service event would be hardest to recover.
๐บ๏ธ Regional & Lane Analysis
๐ 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 (peaches, watermelons, tomatoes) and high import volumes. This has created a severe capacity imbalance, driving up spot rates and creating significant arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can secure reliable reefer and dry van capacity.
๐ฃ๏ธ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA โ Miami, FL: This lane is experiencing high volume as retail goods and seasonal produce move south into the Florida peninsula. Dry van and reefer capacity are highly competitive, with carriers leveraging the lack of outbound Florida freight to demand higher inbound rates. Sourcing reliable equipment requires careful planning and rate flexibility.
Savannah, GA โ Charlotte, NC: A critical short-haul corridor for port-importer freight. High container volumes at the Port of Savannah are driving strong dry van and flatbed demand, while regional distribution centers in Charlotte are actively pulling inventory. This creates a highly active and volatile lane.
Regional Insight
The Southeast margin is in reload planning, not just the headhaul rate
Atlanta-Miami and Savannah-Charlotte both favor brokers who can sell turn efficiency to carriers. Miami headhauls still need compensation for Florida's softer general outbound profile, while Savannah short-hauls lose appeal quickly if terminal or receiver delays wipe out a second turn; the strongest coverage today comes from regional carriers already aligned to a Monday South Florida reload or a same-day return out of Charlotte.
- Atlanta-Miami prices better when the carrier can see a South Florida produce or nursery reload early next week.
- Savannah-Charlotte is especially sensitive to detention because two-hour delays can erase the economics of a quick-turn run.
๐ Reefer: Peak Summer Produce Collides with Regional Capacity Squeezes
Temperature-controlled equipment is the most volatile sector in the spot market today. With available reefer loads at 8,125 and paid rates averaging $3.21/mile (representing a $0.15/mile premium over posted rates), carriers hold significant leverage. This tight capacity is driven by the peak summer produce season, with heavy volumes of blueberries, peaches, tomatoes, and watermelons moving out of Georgia, South Carolina, and California.
The demand is further complicated by regional flooding in the Midwest and Gulf Coast, which has forced carriers to take longer, less efficient routes. This restricts the overall velocity of reefer equipment, preventing rapid turnaround times. Brokers must recognize that securing pre-cooled equipment for time-sensitive agricultural commodities requires paying the current market premium, as carriers are actively rejecting lower-paying freight in favor of high-yield produce lanes.
๐ฐ Capitalizing on the Posted-vs-Paid Rate Spread
Real-time spot market data reveals substantial spreads between posted and paid rates across multiple equipment types, offering clear arbitrage opportunities for savvy brokers. Flatbed freight shows the widest gap, with average posted rates at $3.39/mile and paid rates at $3.63/mileโa $0.24/mile carrier premium. Dry van also exhibits a strong $0.21/mile spread ($2.57 posted vs. $2.78 paid).
These spreads indicate that while shippers are posting loads at lower rates, the actual market clearing price is significantly higher due to tight capacity and high operating costs. Brokers who rely solely on historical averages or posted rates will struggle to cover loads. To maximize margins, brokers should quote shippers based on the higher paid rate reality while negotiating aggressively with carriers using real-time capacity data, particularly in regions where backhaul opportunities can be leveraged to lower the carrier's asking price.
๐ฅ Agriculture and Construction Sectors Drive Summer Freight Velocity
The agriculture and construction sectors are the primary drivers of freight volume and rate volatility today. In agriculture, the full summer produce harvest is at its peak. Time-sensitive commodities like Georgia peaches and Texas watermelons require immediate transport, placing immense pressure on the reefer pool. This seasonal surge not only drives up reefer rates but also pulls multi-use capacity away from other sectors, tightening dry van availability in agricultural states.
Simultaneously, the construction sector is fueling robust flatbed demand, with 66,744 available open-deck loads today. Despite a minor 4.9% decrease in available loads from yesterday, flatbed paid rates remain high at $3.63/mile. Industrial projects and infrastructure developments are consuming local flatbed capacity, leaving fewer trucks available for spot market moves. Brokers serving these sectors must advise clients of extended lead times and prepare for sustained rate pressure through the mid-summer months.
๐ Analyzing Spot Rate Velocity and the Fuel Cost Floor
The national spot market average rate has settled at $2.98/mile today, down slightly from $3.04/mile yesterday but remaining highly stable compared to the $2.98/mile average recorded one week ago. This stability, despite fluctuating daily load volumes, is largely due to the rigid cost floor established by diesel prices. With the AAA national average at $4.832/gallon, carriers face high operating expenses that prevent them from accepting rates below their break-even point.
This fuel cost pressure has made rates "sticky," particularly on long-haul lanes where deadhead miles are highly penalized. Brokers are seeing that carriers are refusing to budge on rates for lanes that do not offer immediate, high-paying reload opportunities. Surcharges must be calculated accurately using real-time fuel data to prevent margin erosion, and brokers should focus on short-haul or regional lanes where fuel exposure is minimized and equipment utilization can be maximized.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Pre-book reefer into Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida on reload economics, not one-way rate targets.
- Add schedule padding on Illinois flood-affected freight through Saturday, with special attention to secondary roads and river-adjacent access points.
- Use same-day authority, insurance, and ELD confirmation on urgent spot loads while FMCSA systems and carrier compliance remain uneven.
- On short-haul Southeast port freight, detention control can protect margin as much as linehaul pricing.
๐ Executive Signal Summary
This is a stable headline market with selective execution stress, not a broad collapse.
- Total available loads are 165,423, down 1.6% from 168,065.
- National average rate is $2.98/mile, down from $3.04/mile yesterday.
- The rate dip looks more like a mix shift than a true loosening signal.
The national average is still a dangerous pricing anchor for ordinary truckload freight.
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized combine for 120,590 loads, which is 72.9% of total board volume.
- That means the $2.98/mile average is still being heavily influenced by higher-rated open-deck and specialty freight.
- Do not use the all-mode average to buy vans. Use van-specific reality: $2.78 paid vs. $2.57 posted.
Execution softened faster than headline demand.
- Loads moved today are 52,250, down from 55,960 yesterday.
- Market opportunity is $296.8M, down from $308.3M yesterday.
- Translation: freight is still there, but the market is getting pickier. Clean, executable freight is clearing first.
The best urgency-buy remains temperature-controlled and flood-touched freight.
- Reefer paid rates average $3.21/mile on 8,125 loads.
- Flatbed shows the widest paid-posted spread at +$0.24/mile.
- Weather is not creating a national shock, but it is reducing truck productivity where it matters.
Diesel at $4.832/gallon still punishes lazy routing and long deadhead assumptions.
- The cheapest truck on paper is still often not the cheapest executable truck.
- Reload visibility, short deadhead, and fast turns remain major buying advantages.
๐งญ What The Board Is Really Saying Today
Volume is acceptable, but quality of cover matters more than quantity of freight.
- Vans rose to 24,267 loads (+2.4%).
- Reefers slipped to 8,125 (-1.6%).
- Flatbeds fell to 66,744 (-4.9%).
- Heavy haul fell to 32,923 (-2.5%).
- Specialized fell to 20,923 (-2.1%).
- LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload/Partial) jumped to 12,441 (+15.5%).
The drop in the national average rate is being helped by composition, not by true carrier weakness.
- High-rated open-deck categories are a smaller share of the board than yesterday.
- LTL/Partial volume increased sharply, and that mode sits at $1.68 paid.
- So the average moved down even while reefer stayed tight and flatbed remained expensive to replace.
Carrier leverage is still visible in most truckload modes.
- Van: +$0.21/mile paid-posted spread.
- Reefer: +$0.15/mile spread.
- Flatbed: +$0.24/mile spread.
- Heavy haul: +$0.18/mile spread.
- Specialized: +$0.18/mile spread.
- LTL/Partial: effectively flat at +$0.01/mile.
That spread map gives a clean broker playbook.
- Buy early: reefer, flood-touched flatbed, oversize/project freight.
- Stay disciplined: routine dry van.
- Defend accounts creatively: LTL/Partial conversions.
๐ Mode-By-Mode Broker Strategy
๐ง Reefer: Still the urgency buy, just less noisy than yesterday
Board facts
- 8,125 available loads
- 1,453 loads moved today
- $3.06 posted / $3.21 paid
What it means
- Produce is still the strongest live pressure point on the board.
- The paid-posted spread narrowed versus the more extreme panic setups brokers sometimes see, but that does not mean reefer got easy.
- It means the market is still firm, but carriers are being more selective by lane and turn quality.
Best moves today
- Cover Southeast and California-related reefer early.
- Require pre-cooled equipment for blueberries, peaches, tomatoes, and watermelons.
- Sell reload economics to carriers, especially into Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida.
- Protect quote validity windows on same-day produce freight.
- Keep backup coverage warm on weekend-sensitive produce and long-haul reefer.
What veteran brokers see
- Reefer carriers are pricing:
- equipment readiness
- reefer fuel burn
- dock delay risk
- reload opportunity cost
- If your load interrupts a better weekend produce cycle, you must replace that value.
๐ Dry Van: Balanced nationally, but still local and rate-sensitive
Board facts
- 24,267 available loads
- 4,858 loads moved today
- $2.57 posted / $2.78 paid
What it means
- Van volume increased, but the paid-posted spread at +$0.21/mile says this is not a soft van market.
- Capacity is available where freight is clean and reloads are visible.
- Capacity gets expensive fast when you add:
- Florida inbound
- port friction
- weather-adjacent receivers
- long empty miles
Best moves today
- Price vans off van numbers, not the $2.98 all-mode average.
- Use local and regional carriers first while diesel stays elevated.
- Push flexible load/unload windows before adding rate.
- Be careful with long-haul one-way freight that strands the truck.
Commercial truth
- On van, the edge is still execution and lane design, not indiscriminate rate increases.
๐ชต Flatbed: The strongest visible margin opportunity if you scope correctly
๐๏ธ Heavy Haul and Specialized: Routing discipline beats board reading
Board facts
- Heavy haul: 32,923 loads, $3.61 posted / $3.79 paid
- Specialized: 20,923 loads, $3.10 posted / $3.28 paid
What it means
- Both are still running +$0.18/mile carrier premium.
- Flood warnings matter more here because alternate routes, bridge approaches, and permit-approved detours can fail before the mainline does.
- This is a market where one missing dimension or one bad local access assumption can erase the margin.
Best moves today
- Do not quote off incomplete dimensions.
- Confirm exact specs before commitment:
- overall dimensions
- axle group
- securement profile
- loading method
- origin access
- destination access
- Give the customer alternate routing logic up front, not after the problem appears.
- Use known project carriers, especially for weekend deliveries.
Rule of thumb
- If the customer wants a fast โballparkโ on oversize freight in a flood-affected region, they are asking you to warehouse risk.
Board facts
- 12,441 available loads
- 3,439 loads moved today
- $1.67 posted / $1.68 paid
What it means
- Volume surged 15.5% overnight, which is a very practical signal.
- Shippers are actively looking for ways to avoid full truckload replacement cost.
- This mode is not a giant margin windfall today, but it is a relationship protection tool.
Best moves today
- Convert flexible 4โ16 pallet shipments into partials where service allows.
- Bundle compatible freight to improve trailer utilization.
- Use partial solutions for accounts resisting truckload increases.
- Position it as cost control, not downgrade service.
Best use case
- When a customer has a shipment that is urgent enough to move, but not urgent enough to pay a premium truckload rescue rate.
๐บ๏ธ Regional Plays That Can Make Money Today
๐ด Southeast: Margin lives in reload planning, not just the headhaul
๐ Atlanta, GA โ Miami, FL: Still a network-positioning lane
What is happening
- This lane is not just being priced by southbound miles.
- It is being priced by:
- Florida reload uncertainty
- unload speed
- weekend positioning risk
- next outbound visibility
Best moves today
- Use Florida-committed carriers first.
- Sell receiver speed as part of the offer.
- Offer delivery flexibility if the shipper can tolerate it.
- Book early if delivery falls into late Friday or weekend timing.
What newer brokers miss
- Miami usually becomes expensive because the truck is buying its way back out.
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather-Adjusted Risk Map
๐ Southern Illinois: Morning risk, better afternoon recovery
Operational reality
- The flash flood threat around Johnson and Union counties is most disruptive early.
- Recovery conditions should be more workable later in the day.
- Weekend reloads still need extra transit padding.
Broker actions
- Avoid overpromising first-wave recovery moves this morning.
- Use afternoon recoveries where possible.
- Add Saturday padding on any freight with local-road exposure.
๐ง Illinois River and Gulf flood zones: Velocity drag, not always hard closure
Operational reality
- The problem is often:
- ramps
- frontage roads
- local bridge approaches
- permit alternates
- not necessarily the interstate mainline itself.
Broker actions
- Price productivity loss first, not just closure headlines.
- Warn customers that transit may look open on maps but still run slower in practice.
- Treat flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized as most vulnerable because first/last-mile access matters more.
๐ก๏ธ Compliance Risk That Can Blow Up Weekend Freight
The FMCSA (Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration) Motus pause is relief, not safety.
- Carriers may remain numerically active while still having stale insurance, registration, or contact-data issues.
- That increases the cost of assuming yesterdayโs onboarding file is โgood enough.โ
Truckstaff ELD (Electronic Logging Device) decertification is a real live risk.
- Small fleets and owner-operators are most exposed.
- The worst failures will show up on:
- produce
- long-haul reefer
- team-sensitive freight
- weekend freight with thin backup options
Desk actions today
- Use same-day authority verification on urgent spot loads.
- Use same-day insurance verification on new or marginal carriers.
- Confirm ELD platform before dispatch, not after loading.
- Keep backup trucks warm on weekend reefer and time-definite freight.
Simple rule
- Coverage found is not the same thing as coverage legally executable.
๐ต How To Quote And Negotiate Better Today
๐ 24โ72 Hour Probability Outlook
Base case โ 55%
- Reefer stays firm
- Flatbed and specialty stay tight
- Van remains balanced nationally but expensive in pockets
- Flood-affected regions stay slower than they look
Stress case โ 30%
- Weekend produce tightens Southeast reefer further
- South Florida inbound gets more expensive late-day
- Flood-related local access failures create appointment misses
- Compliance fallout removes a few small-carrier options at the worst time
Opportunity case โ 15%
- Brokers with pre-vetted regional carriers widen margins
- Savannah short-hauls clear well when operationally clean
- Partial conversion protects customer relationships without full truckload rate fights
โ
Todayโs Priority Stack
Buy produce-linked reefer early
- Focus on Georgia, South Carolina, Florida, and California-linked cycles.
- Keep a backup option on weekend-sensitive loads.
Reprice flood-touched open-deck freight before it reprices you
- Especially freight touching southern Illinois, the Illinois River corridor, and Gulf river-adjacent moves.
Keep van disciplined
- Anchor on $2.78 paid, not $2.98 all-mode.
- Only pay up where reload pain or service risk is real.
Use partials to save the account before the account asks
- Especially for customers with smaller urgent shipments resisting truckload spend.
Tighten compliance checks on new carriers
- Same-day authority, insurance, and ELD confirmation on urgent freight.
Sell turn quality on Southeast short-hauls
- Savannah-Charlotte and similar runs clear better when the carrier sees the full day plan.
๐ฏ What To Track Before The Day Closes
๐ Bottom Line
- The market is softer on the surface than yesterday, but not easier where brokers actually make or lose money.
- Reefer still deserves urgency.
- Flatbed is the clearest spread-driven margin opportunity.
- Dry van requires discipline, not panic.
- LTL/Partial is your best customer-retention lever.
- Weather should be priced as lost velocity first.
- Compliance friction makes trusted carriers more valuable than cheap carriers.
๐ก 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.
๐
This Day in History
221: Roman emperor Elagabalus adopts his cousin Alexander Severus as his heir and grants him the title of Caesar.
1934: United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs the Federal Credit Union Act, which establishes credit unions.
2003: The U.S. Supreme Court rules in Lawrence v. Texas that sex-based sodomy laws are unconstitutional.
๐ญ Quote of the Day
"The more I want to get something done, the less I call it work."
โ Richard Bach