๐ Daily Market Intelligence Report
Sunday, May 24, 2026
7:00 AM CST
๐ Top-Line Summary
The spot market is exhibiting classic weekend stabilization with total available loads dipping a marginal 1.3% overnight to 143,975, while the market average rate holds at $2.91/mile. Despite the overall volume plateau, severe rate spread volatility has emerged across equipment types. Brokers are currently capturing massive advantages in the specialized and flatbed sectors as carriers aggressively reposition equipment, while temperature-controlled capacity remains stubbornly tight, commanding a carrier premium driven by southern produce harvests. Punishing diesel costs at $5.622/gallon and an intensifying FMCSA crackdown on logbook fraud and chameleon carriers are structurally constraining supply, ensuring that any weekend rate relief in dry van and open-deck markets will likely evaporate as the new shipping week commences.
Insight
Weekend softness expires quickly once Midwest freight resets
Today's open-deck and specialized bargains look more like a 24-hour repositioning window than a true capacity reset. Rain over Ohio and Indiana is concentrated today, with drier conditions returning Monday through midweek; that should trigger a fast release of deferred industrial freight while many trucks are still out of position or short on hours, setting up the sharpest rate snapback from Monday afternoon into Tuesday.
โฝ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Persistent River Flooding (Midwest (OH, IN, IL, MO)): Minor to moderate flooding along the Little Miami River and other waterways is threatening low-lying infrastructure near the I-70 and I-675 corridors. This poses a significant risk of route closures, extended detours, and trapped open-deck capacity, particularly affecting construction and heavy haul freight moving through the region.
- Gulf Coast River Flooding (South (LA, MS, AL, TX)): Ongoing flooding along the Vermilion and Calcasieu rivers continues to disrupt the I-10 and I-59 corridors. Water inundation is likely to cause localized road closures and reduce travel speeds, forcing carriers to route around impacted zones and effectively tightening capacity in the Southeast.
- Pacific Northwest Flooding (Washington (WA, Chelan County)): Minor flooding along the Stehekin River is overtopping local culverts and damaging secondary roads. While isolated, this may disrupt localized agricultural and timber freight routing, requiring brokers to verify facility access before dispatching specialized equipment.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Ohio flooding risk is most disruptive through Sunday afternoon
Along the Little Miami corridor, the highest operational risk is late morning through mid-afternoon Sunday as rain intensifies around Greene and Warren counties. Even where rainfall tapers by tonight, low-water crossings and secondary access roads can remain restricted into Monday morning, so linehaul plans that look clean on the map still need facility-level access checks.
- Expect the biggest drag on Columbus-Dayton routings before evening, especially for open-deck and heavy freight that cannot absorb last-minute reroutes.
- Primary interstate routings will outperform cheaper secondary-road plans until standing water fully recedes.
Weather Insight
Gulf Coast disruption carries deeper into the week
Flooding around the Vermilion and Calcasieu basins is less about today's light rain and more about the heavy thunderstorm cycle forecast for Monday and Tuesday. That keeps I-10 and I-59 disruption risk active into midweek and raises the odds that trucks avoiding south Louisiana will be less available for Southeast reefer and flatbed reloads.
- Expect tighter cover on eastbound freight out of Houston, Lake Charles, and Lafayette as carriers build extra transit time into quotes.
- Produce-driven reefer premiums in the Southeast are more likely to hold than soften.
๐ฐ Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Global energy market pressures continue to keep diesel prices elevated, squeezing carrier operating margins and forcing strict adherence to fuel surcharges and deadhead minimization strategies.
- Carrier Financial Health: Intensifying FMCSA crackdowns on logbook manipulation and chameleon operations are actively removing marginal capacity from the market, accelerating consolidation and forcing brokers to rely on a smaller, more thoroughly vetted carrier pool.
- Economic Indicators: Significant investments in high-density warehouse expansions indicate that shippers are preparing to hold larger inventory volumes, potentially shifting demand patterns from immediate truckload fulfillment to more strategic, consolidated LTL and regional distribution models.
๐ฐ Impactful News Analysis
-
FMCSA Shuts Down Chameleon Carrier Operation ๐:
The immediate shutdown of Terri's Farm by the FMCSA highlights a severe regulatory crackdown on chameleon operations. For brokers, this necessitates hyper-vigilant carrier vetting processes. Relying on unverified or newly established MC numbers carries immense liability risk. Capacity pools will marginally shrink as unsafe operators are purged, meaning brokers must build deeper relationships with verified, compliant core carriers.
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Regulators Target Logbook Fraud and Manipulated Hours ๐:
FMCSA Administrator Derek Barrs' explicit warning regarding fake logbooks signals upcoming enforcement blitzes. Brokers must anticipate stricter HOS compliance from carriers, which translates to longer transit times and zero flexibility on delivery windows. Quoting strategies must factor in hard compliance limits, and customer expectations must be managed regarding realistic transit capabilities in a heavily monitored environment.
-
Shippers Double Warehouse Capacity with High-Density Solutions ๐:
Bosco & Roxy's consolidation into a single, high-density mobile racking facility reflects a broader shipper trend toward maximizing existing real estate. For brokers, centralized, high-volume shipping locations often mean better facility efficiency but can lead to localized capacity crunches during peak outbound surges. Brokers should target these consolidated facilities for dedicated lane opportunities and drop-trailer programs.
News Insight
The next capacity squeeze shows up in ETA discipline
The FMCSA push on chameleon carriers and manipulated logbooks will show up first in service planning: fewer carriers will agree to optimistic transit promises that rely on stretched hours, relay handoffs, or loosely managed ELD records. Freight with fixed morning appointments will increasingly price like premium freight, especially on lanes already dealing with flood detours or weekend repositioning.
- Ask for route-specific ETA commitments at booking, not generic transit times.
- Flexible delivery windows will preserve more margin than aggressive appointment times this week.
๐บ๏ธ Regional & Lane Analysis
๐ Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest is currently the epicenter of spot market volatility, driven by a massive concentration of flatbed freight (over 60,000 available loads nationally, heavily indexed here) colliding with severe, ongoing river flooding across Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Missouri. The I-70 corridor is particularly vulnerable to disruptions. While brokers currently enjoy a significant rate advantage on open-deck and specialized freight due to weekend repositioning, the physical reality of flooded infrastructure is trapping equipment and extending transit times. This creates a deceptive market where rates look favorable on paper, but execution is highly complex and prone to delays.
๐ฃ๏ธ Key Lane Watch
Columbus, OH โ Chicago, IL: This critical Midwest corridor is heavily impacted by ongoing flood warnings along the Little Miami River and surrounding waterways. Flatbed and specialized demand remains robust, but carriers are accepting lower rates today to reposition equipment out of flood-threatened zones. The current environment offers strong broker margins but carries high execution risk due to potential detours.
Indianapolis, IN โ St. Louis, MO: Running parallel to the severe Midwest flood zones, this I-70 routing is seeing significant volume as shippers push freight before further infrastructure closures occur. Dry van capacity is relatively balanced, but heavy haul and specialized equipment are commanding attention as industrial projects attempt to maintain schedules despite the weather.
Regional Insight
Midwest lane pricing needs execution buffers, not just linehaul wins
On Columbus-Chicago and Indianapolis-St. Louis, the cheapest truck on Sunday can become the most expensive outcome if the carrier is counting on secondary-road shortcuts or tight remaining hours. The stronger play is to buy slightly firmer interstate-only coverage now, protect Monday pickup compliance, and quote receivers with a wider delivery band through Tuesday while flood detours and HOS enforcement reset network velocity.
๐ Anomalous Rate Spreads: The Weekend Repositioning Phenomenon
Today's real-time load board data reveals a striking divergence between equipment types, characterized by massive rate spreads that heavily favor brokers in specific sectors. The specialized market is exhibiting an extraordinary $0.59/mile broker advantage (paid $2.76 vs posted $3.35), while flatbed shows a $0.26/mile advantage. This anomaly, occurring alongside a relatively stable total volume of 143,975 loads, suggests aggressive weekend repositioning behavior. Carriers operating specialized and open-deck equipment appear desperate to relocate assetsโlikely to escape the expanding flood zones in the Midwest and Gulf Coastโwillingly accepting severely depressed paid rates to secure immediate movement. Conversely, the reefer sector remains immune to this weekend softening, maintaining a $0.03/mile carrier premium ($3.12 paid vs $3.09 posted), indicating that temperature-controlled demand tied to southern produce harvests is robust enough to override typical cyclical dips.
๐ง Regulatory Squeeze: FMCSA Crackdowns and Capacity Attrition
The intersection of today's news regarding the FMCSA's immediate shutdown of Terri's Farm (a chameleon operation) and Administrator Derek Barrs' public targeting of logbook fraud signals a rapid tightening of the regulatory environment. For the spot market, this is a critical capacity constraint multiplier. When combined with punishing diesel costs at $5.622/gallon, marginal carriers operating on the fringes of compliance or profitability are being systematically removed from the routing pool. The crackdown on manipulated hours of service (HOS) means that the remaining legal capacity will move slower, effectively reducing the total number of turns a truck can make in a week. Brokers must anticipate that the current weekend rate advantages in van and flatbed are temporary; as the active carrier pool shrinks due to these enforcement actions, pricing power will inevitably shift back to the compliant carriers.
๐ Reefer Resilience: Defying the Weekend Slump
While the broader spot market shows signs of weekend rate relief, the temperature-controlled sector stands out for its structural resilience. Despite available reefer loads dropping 3.4% overnight to 7,229, carriers have maintained a pricing premium, securing an average of $3.12/mile against posted rates of $3.09/mile. This dynamic is driven by the uncompromising nature of the southern produce season colliding with exorbitant operating costs. Running a cooling unit with diesel at $5.622/gallon creates a high baseline cost that carriers simply cannot negotiate away, even during weekend lulls. Furthermore, the specialized nature of reefer equipment means it cannot easily be substituted, giving operators significant leverage. Brokers handling temperature-controlled freight must recognize that the current $3.12/mile average is likely the floor, and rates will face intense upward pressure as the new shipping week begins and agricultural volumes surge.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Pre-book flatbed and specialized for Monday and Tuesday today, but buy interstate-only execution rather than the absolute lowest rate.
- Keep reefer pricing firm; Gulf Coast storms and produce season leave little room for Monday relief.
- Re-vet weekend spot carriers for ELD and HOS discipline before dispatching time-sensitive freight.
- Midwest capacity should feel loosest before Monday afternoon, when deferred freight starts pulling trucks back out of position.
๐ Executive Signal Summary
This is a weekend buying window, not a true market reset.
- Total available loads slipped to 143,975 from 145,913, down 1.3%, while the national average rate is still $2.91/mile.
- When the board gets quieter but pricing does not materially break, that usually means capacity is repositioning, not loosening.
Open-deck is where todayโs money is.
- Flatbed is showing a $0.26/mile broker advantage with $3.53 posted vs. $3.27 paid.
- Heavy haul is showing a $0.17/mile broker advantage with $3.59 posted vs. $3.42 paid.
- Specialized is showing the biggest spread on the board at $0.59/mile with $3.35 posted vs. $2.76 paid.
- Those are excellent tactical spreads, but they are being created by carrier urgency and bad positioning, not by clean operating conditions.
Reefer is the one mode still telling the truth about real capacity.
- Reefer paid is $3.12/mile vs. $3.09/mile posted, a $0.03/mile carrier premium.
- In late-May produce conditions with diesel at $5.622/gallon, that premium matters more than its size suggests.
Dry van is cheaper today, but probably not for long.
- Van paid is $2.60/mile vs. $2.68/mile posted, giving brokers $0.08/mile of room.
- That is useful for same-day weekend coverage and Monday pickup planning, but it can disappear fast once deferred freight reloads the Midwest network.
Industrial freight is still setting carrier psychology across the board.
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized combine for 105,782 visible loads, about 73.5% of the board.
- When that much of the market is tied to construction, project freight, and weather-disrupted open-deck moves, it influences how carriers negotiate on van freight too.
The real squeeze this week is execution discipline.
- Flood detours, high fuel, Electronic Logging Device (ELD) scrutiny, Hours of Service (HOS) enforcement, and FMCSA vetting pressure all point the same direction:
- The cheapest truck this morning is not automatically the best truck for Monday or Tuesday.
๐ง What The Market Is Actually Saying
The board has fallen faster than rates.
- Two days ago, total loads were 194,659 with an average rate of $2.96/mile.
- Now total loads are 143,975 with an average rate of $2.91/mile.
- That is a sharp volume drop with only a small rate concession, which is classic evidence of structural cost support.
Compared with a month ago, the market is smaller but more expensive.
- One month ago: 167,606 loads at $2.69/mile.
- Now: 143,975 loads at $2.91/mile.
- Fewer visible loads with materially higher rates means this is not demand euphoria. It is capacity discipline, operating cost pressure, and slower network turns.
OTRI (Outbound Tender Rejection Index) staying elevated matters.
- Brokers should read that as contract freight still not flowing cleanly through routing guides.
- That means spot softness is selective, not universal.
Todayโs rate spreads are telling a behavioral story.
- Carriers in flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized are willing to take less money to fix next weekโs position.
- Reefer carriers are not.
- That split is important: repositioning freight is cheap when a truck wants location; perishable freight is expensive when the market wants the truck.
๐ Mode-By-Mode Broker Playbook
๐ Dry Van
Market read
- 22,376 loads
- $2.68/mile posted
- $2.60/mile paid
- $0.08/mile broker advantage
What it means
- Van has loosened just enough to buy today, especially on flexible freight.
- But with diesel at $5.622/gallon and compliance pressure removing marginal carriers, this is likely temporary weekend relief.
Best move
- Cover Monday appointment freight before the market fully resets.
- Keep quote validity short on any freight not yet covered.
- Prioritize carriers with clean reload options over carriers offering the absolute lowest linehaul.
Big trap
- Quoting Monday and Tuesday van loads as if todayโs $2.60/mile paid average will still hold.
- It may not, especially on Midwest-origin or Midwest-destination freight.
๐ง Reefer
Market read
- 7,229 loads
- $3.09/mile posted
- $3.12/mile paid
- $0.03/mile carrier premium
What it means
- Reefer is still tight, even on a weekend.
- Southern produce, cooling-unit fuel burn, and Gulf weather risk are keeping a hard floor under pricing.
Best move
- Hold firm on customer pricing.
- Pre-book Monday and Tuesday reefer now, especially any Southeast, Texas, or Gulf-connected freight.
- Separate linehaul, fuel, and temperature-control burden when explaining price to shippers.
Big trap
- Assuming a small premium means negotiable capacity.
- In reefer, a small premium during produce pressure often becomes a larger premium very quickly.
๐๏ธ Flatbed
Market read
- 60,177 loads
- $3.53/mile posted
- $3.27/mile paid
- $0.26/mile broker advantage
What it means
- This is a strong buying opportunity, but it is an execution-sensitive one.
- Flooding around Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, and Gulf corridors means some of these cheap trucks are cheap because they need out, not because they can execute cleanly.
Best move
- Buy Monday and Tuesday flatbed capacity today.
- Use interstate-only routing assumptions on flood-exposed freight.
- Price detention, layover, and access issues separately from base linehaul.
Big trap
- Buying a discount truck that needs secondary roads or a tight clock to succeed.
๐๏ธ Heavy Haul
Market read
- 29,015 loads
- $3.59/mile posted
- $3.42/mile paid
- $0.17/mile broker advantage
What it means
- Heavy haul is buyable, but not forgiving.
- Permit, route, escort, and HOS realities still matter more than the spread.
Best move
- Validate dimensions, permit path, and weather detours before finalizing price.
- Use exact-fit carriers only, even if they are not the cheapest option.
- Get route-specific ETA commitments before dispatch.
Big trap
- Negotiating price first and route feasibility second.
๐ง Specialized
Market read
- 16,590 loads
- $3.35/mile posted
- $2.76/mile paid
- $0.59/mile broker advantage
What it means
- This is the best raw margin setup on the board.
- It is also the one most likely to snap back fastest once Monday freight starts pulling equipment into better positions.
Best move
- Lock fully specโd specialized freight now.
- Use complete shipment details up front: dimensions, securement needs, loading type, route notes, permit constraints, and access conditions.
- Keep some of the spread instead of immediately giving all of it back to the shipper.
Big trap
- Treating specialized like generic truckload because the rate is temporarily cheap.
๐ฆ LTL / Partial (Less Than Truckload / Partial)
Market read
- 8,588 loads
- $1.87/mile posted
- $1.65/mile paid
- $0.22/mile broker advantage
What it means
- This is one of the best retention tools available today.
- High diesel encourages carriers to fill trailers, not run half-empty.
Best move
- Offer partial and consolidation options proactively, especially to cost-sensitive customers.
- Use regional density lanes and Midwest reroute freight to build better trailer economics.
- Sell flexibility honestly: lower price in exchange for broader delivery windows.
Big trap
- Using partial pricing to promise truckload-level timing.
๐ง๏ธ Weather-Driven Lane Tactics For The Next 24โ72 Hours
๐ฃ๏ธ Midwest: Buy execution, not just linehaul
Primary posture
- Columbus, OH โ Chicago, IL and Indianapolis, IN โ St. Louis, MO should be treated as high-risk execution lanes, not simple rate opportunities.
- The issue is not just rain. It is flooded secondary access, route uncertainty, trapped equipment, and HOS compression.
Best tactical move
- Pay slightly more for interstate-capable, hours-clean carriers.
- Build wider delivery bands through Tuesday.
- Require facility-level access confirmation, not just map-based routing.
Why this matters
- A truck bought $150 cheaper can become $600 more expensive once you absorb missed appointments, layover, or a recovery truck.
๐ Gulf Coast: Price eastbound freight for slippage
Primary posture
- Flooding risk around Louisiana and Mississippi corridors should keep I-10 and connected Southeast reloads under pressure into midweek.
- That is especially relevant for reefer and flatbed.
Best tactical move
- Quote Houston, Lake Charles, Lafayette, and nearby eastbound freight with extra transit cushion.
- Expect carriers to bake reroute time into their ask.
- Do not underprice Southeast reefer just because the board looks quieter overall.
๐ฒ Pacific Northwest: Verify access before dispatch
- Primary posture
- The Pacific Northwest flooding is more localized, but localized is enough to break a specialized or ag move.
- Best tactical move
- Confirm shipper and receiver access on secondary roads before loading specialized equipment.
๐ฌ How To Position This Market With Shippers
Reset the conversation away from posted rates.
- Use: โThe board is softer in a few modes, but executed capacity is still expensive where timing and routing matter.โ
Sell service options, not one number.
- Option 1: Premium execution
- For fixed appointments, flood-exposed lanes, reefer, and high-value freight.
- Option 2: Flexible truckload
- For shippers willing to widen pickup or delivery windows.
- Option 3: Partial / consolidation
- For shippers who need cost relief more than exact timing.
Explain why cheap trucks are not always cheap outcomes.
- High diesel, flooding, and stricter HOS enforcement all punish unrealistic planning.
- Customers usually accept higher price more easily when you frame it as risk avoidance and service protection.
๐ค How To Buy Trucks Better Today
Ask better questions before awarding.
- What route are you planning to run?
- How many legal hours are left after pickup?
- Are you relying on secondary roads?
- What is your next reload market?
- Can you commit to a route-specific ETA, not just a generic transit estimate?
Use compliance as a competitive advantage.
- With FMCSA scrutiny on chameleon carriers and logbook manipulation, the broker with the best pre-vetted carrier bench will win more freight than the broker who collects the most quotes.
Match carrier quality to shipment sensitivity.
- Use your cleanest carriers on reefer, appointment freight, flood-exposed lanes, and anything with claim exposure.
- Use opportunistic cheap coverage only where specs are clear and timing is elastic.
๐ Probability-Weighted 24โ72 Hour Outlook
55% Base case: Monday afternoon into Tuesday tightens
- Dry van broker leverage narrows
- Flatbed and specialized spreads compress
- Reefer stays firm to higher
- Midwest execution becomes more expensive than todayโs screens suggest
30% Tighter case: Weather and compliance amplify the squeeze
- Gulf and Midwest delays stack
- Morning appointment freight prices like premium freight
- Heavy haul and specialized exact-fit capacity gets selective fast
15% Softer case: Weekend feel lingers into Monday
- Flexible van, partial, and some flatbed remain buyable
- Even in this case, reefer is least likely to soften meaningfully
โ
Todayโs Broker Action Plan
First 60โ90 minutes
- Audit every uncovered Monday reefer and appointment-sensitive van load
- Identify flatbed and specialized loads that can be covered today for Monday or Tuesday execution
- Flag all Midwest and Gulf freight for route and access verification
By midday
- Push partial/consolidation alternatives to price-sensitive accounts
- Requote any flood-exposed lane with wider delivery windows
- Pre-book quality open-deck trucks before carriers finish repositioning
Before handoff
- Build backup carrier options for every time-sensitive flood-exposed load
- Document ETA assumptions, route assumptions, and detention/layover exposure
- Hand off Monday and Tuesday risk loads with clear execution notes, not just rates
๐ Bottom Line
- The market is quieter, but not truly cheap.
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and especially specialized are offering real margin windows today.
- Reefer remains the clearest sign that usable capacity is still tight.
- Dry van is temporarily buyable, but likely to re-firm once the week starts.
- The brokers who win today will buy ahead in open-deck, stay disciplined in reefer, use partials as a retention tool, and refuse to confuse a low quote with a low-risk move.
๐
This Day in History
1798: The Irish Rebellion of 1798 led by the United Irishmen against British rule begins.
1944: Congress of Pรซrmet occurs which establishes a provisional government in Albania in areas under partisan control, the first independent Albanian government since 1939. In honor of this the national emblem of Albania inscribed this date from 1946 until 1992.
1961: American civil rights movement: Freedom Riders are arrested in Jackson, Mississippi, for "disturbing the peace" after disembarking from their bus.
๐ญ Quote of the Day
"Life is not a problem to be solved, but a reality to be experienced."
โ Soren Kierkegaard