📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Monday, May 25, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The spot market is transitioning out of its weekend lull, with total available volumes stabilizing at 145,211 loads and the market average rate holding at $2.97/mile. As the new shipping week commences, the temporary weekend rate relief in enclosed trailer markets has evaporated, with both dry van and reefer flipping back to carrier premiums ($0.05/mile and $0.06/mile, respectively). Conversely, brokers continue to capture massive margin advantages in the specialized ($0.49/mile spread) and flatbed ($0.19/mile spread) sectors, driven by aggressive carrier repositioning and localized capacity traps caused by severe flooding in the Midwest and Gulf Coast. With national diesel prices remaining elevated at $5.599/gallon, carriers are strictly limiting deadhead miles, forcing brokers to rely on precise geographic targeting to secure profitable coverage.
Insight
Open-deck relief looks front-loaded
The outsized broker edge in flatbed and specialized freight is unlikely to be a full-week condition. Repeated rain and thunderstorms across Louisiana and Mississippi through at least midweek should keep carriers eager to exit flood-affected pockets, but once that trapped capacity clears westbound and delayed industrial freight re-enters the board, the current discount window can close quickly. Monday and Tuesday are the best margin days for brokers buying outbound open-deck freight from the Gulf.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Midwest River Flooding (Midwest (IN, IL, OH)): Ongoing minor to moderate river flooding is expected to create difficult conditions for open-deck and heavy haul routing, potentially tightening capacity and extending transit times along the I-65 and I-71 corridors.
- Gulf Coast River Flooding (Gulf Coast (LA, MS)): Persistent river flooding continues to pose risks to freight operations along the I-10 and I-59 corridors, likely causing localized capacity traps and forcing carriers to utilize extended detours.
- Pacific Northwest River Flooding (Washington (WA, Chelan County)): Minor flooding along the Stehekin River may disrupt local freight access and rural delivery routes, though major interstate impact is expected to be limited.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Gulf Coast disruptions will be more about timing than full network shutdowns
Flooding along the Gulf corridor is being reinforced by a new round of scattered storms today and again Tuesday into Wednesday, especially across Louisiana and Mississippi. That favors rolling slowdowns, short-notice detours, and missed appointment windows more than blanket closures, with the highest disruption risk during afternoon and early evening pickup windows.
- Build same-day transit cushions on freight touching the I-10 and I-59 corridors, especially flatbed, heavy haul, and crane appointments.
- Morning pickups carry the best odds of staying on schedule before convective delays build.
Weather Insight
Midwest flooding remains a routing drag, not a fresh deterioration today
Indiana and Ohio stay relatively quiet through Tuesday before rain returns midweek, which keeps the Midwest river event in a lingering-impact phase rather than an accelerating one. For brokers, that means existing detours and per mit complications remain the main issue on I-65 and I-71-linked freight, but conditions are not signaling a major new capacity shock at the start of the week.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Energy markets remain volatile amid global shipping disruptions, keeping upward pressure on middle distillates and preventing any meaningful relief in carrier fuel surcharges.
- Carrier Financial Health: The combination of $5.599/gallon diesel and strict compliance vetting continues to squeeze small fleet margins, driving capacity consolidation and reducing the active pool of spot market operators.
- Economic Indicators: Rising international shipping container rates point to an early peak season surge, which is expected to translate into increased domestic port-to-warehouse freight volumes in the coming weeks.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
Transpacific Container Rates Surge Ahead of Peak Season 🔗:
Ocean freight rates from Asia to the US are climbing rapidly due to geopolitical conflicts and blank sailings. For domestic freight brokers, this signals an impending surge in port-to-inland volumes, particularly out of West Coast ports. Brokers should begin securing drayage and transload capacity now before the anticipated July peak season fully tightens the market.
-
Dry Bulk Shipping Recovers, Signaling Industrial Demand 🔗:
The Baltic Dry Index is showing strong recovery, indicating stable global commodity flows. For domestic brokers, increased bulk material imports typically translate to higher demand for flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized equipment moving raw materials from ports to manufacturing centers. This aligns with the current high volumes seen in the open-deck spot market.
News Insight
Import pressure will hit inland van markets before July
The transpacific rate surge points to a domestic tightening sequence that usually starts with drayage and transload congestion, then spills into short- and mid-haul dry van freight out of major port warehousing clusters. With van already back in a carrier-premium position, the more important implication is timing: routing guide stress on West Coast-to-inland warehouse freight can build in June, not just at the traditional July peak.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast & Gulf Coast
The Southeast and Gulf Coast region is currently the epicenter of freight market volatility, driven by a collision of seasonal produce harvests, severe infrastructure disruptions, and shifting rate dynamics. Temperature-controlled capacity is exceptionally tight across Florida, Georgia, and the Carolinas as the produce season accelerates, forcing brokers to pay premiums to secure reliable reefers. Simultaneously, ongoing river flooding in Louisiana and Mississippi (Alert ID: WX141BF356) is severely disrupting the I-10 and I-59 corridors, trapping open-deck and specialized capacity and forcing extensive detours. This geographic bottleneck is creating massive arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can successfully navigate the routing challenges, particularly in the flatbed and heavy haul sectors where carriers are desperate for repositioning loads out of the flood zones.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA → Orlando, FL: This lane is experiencing severe capacity imbalances as carriers are reluctant to drive deep into Florida without guaranteed, high-paying outbound produce freight. Van and reefer rates are firming as the new week begins, with carriers demanding premiums to cover the $5.599/gallon diesel costs required for the trip.
New Orleans, LA → Houston, TX: The I-10 corridor connecting these industrial hubs is severely compromised by ongoing river flooding, causing significant routing delays for open-deck and heavy haul freight. Despite the high volume of industrial project cargo, carriers are heavily discounting rates to reposition equipment out of the flood-threatened Louisiana market.
Regional Insight
North Florida is the sharper reefer pressure point
The Florida produce story is no longer just a deep-peninsula problem. With reefer equipment already concentrated farther south, the tighter procurement challenge is increasingly in the handoff zone across north Florida and south Georgia, where brokers need trucks for early-week pickups before equipment is pulled deeper into the state for higher-paying outbound produce.
Regional Insight
New Orleans-Houston rates have a snapback risk once stranded equipment clears
The current westbound buying opportunity is real, but it is tied to carriers treating Houston as an escape market rather than a destination market. As soon as weather friction eases and enough open-deck equipment resets into Texas, the next move is likely a rebound in spot pricing as deferred refinery, construction, and industrial freight starts moving again. Brokers that need project capacity later in the week should secure it while carriers are still pricing for repositioning.
📈 Extreme Bifurcation in Equipment Rate Spreads
Today's real-time load board data reveals a violently bifurcated rate environment that freight brokers must navigate carefully. The enclosed trailer markets (van and reefer) have firmly shifted back to carrier control following the weekend, commanding premiums of $0.05/mile and $0.06/mile respectively. This indicates that carriers are successfully passing along the burden of $5.599/gallon diesel costs to shippers on standard freight. Conversely, the open-deck and specialized markets are exhibiting massive broker advantages. Flatbed paid rates are currently $0.19/mile below posted rates, and the specialized sector is showing an extreme $0.49/mile broker advantage. This massive spread suggests that specialized carriers are highly motivated to reposition equipment—likely fleeing weather-impacted zones in the Midwest and Gulf Coast—and are willing to accept steep discounts to secure immediate backhauls. Brokers handling industrial or project cargo have a narrow window to capture outsized margins before these specialized assets are fully repositioned.
🌐 Global Shipping Pressures Point to Early Peak Season
Recent news indicating a surge in transpacific shipping container rates from Asia to the US—driven by geopolitical conflicts and blank sailings—serves as a critical leading indicator for domestic freight markets. With rates to the West Coast up 56% since the start of the conflict, importers are likely accelerating their shipping schedules to avoid further price hikes and secure inventory ahead of the traditional July peak season. For domestic freight brokers, this data points to an impending surge in drayage, transload, and outbound dry van demand originating from major port markets like Los Angeles and Long Beach. As these imported goods hit the domestic supply chain, the current $0.05/mile carrier premium in the van market is likely to expand significantly. Brokers should proactively engage with retail and import customers now to secure routing guide positions before port-to-inland capacity severely tightens.
🏗️ River Flooding Traps Open-Deck Capacity
Ongoing severe weather events are creating significant structural bottlenecks for industrial freight. National Weather Service alerts confirm persistent river flooding across both the Midwest (Alert ID: WX2AB6F81F) and the Gulf Coast (Alert ID: WX141BF356). These dual weather events are severely compromising major freight arteries, particularly the I-10, I-65, and I-71 corridors. The operational impact is most visible in the flatbed and heavy haul data, where a massive 60,761 flatbed loads and 29,275 heavy haul loads remain available. Carriers operating specialized, over-dimensional equipment are highly vulnerable to these infrastructure disruptions, as flooded secondary roads eliminate viable detour routes for permitted loads. This is actively trapping capacity in affected regions, forcing carriers to heavily discount outbound rates (driving the $0.49/mile specialized broker advantage) just to escape the operational friction. Brokers must factor extended transit times into their customer communications while leveraging the current rate spreads.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Buy Gulf Coast open-deck freight aggressively early this week; the discount window is likely narrower than it looks.
- Prioritize morning pickups on Louisiana and Mississippi freight to reduce storm-related appointment misses.
- Pre-position or pre-book reefers in north Florida and south Georgia before they are pulled deeper into Florida produce cycles.
- Treat West Coast import-related van tightening as a June setup, not a July surprise.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is not a loose market — it is a selective market.
- Total available loads sit at 145,211, up 0.9% from 143,975 yesterday, and the national average rate is $2.97/mile.
- The more important signal is context: one week ago the board showed 184,540 loads at $2.98/mile. Today the board is 21.3% smaller, yet the rate is only a penny lower. That is classic usable-capacity tightness, not broad weakness.
Van and reefer have snapped back to carrier control.
- Dry van paid is $2.74 vs. $2.69 posted for a $0.05/mile carrier premium.
- Reefer paid is $3.19 vs. $3.13 posted for a $0.06/mile carrier premium.
- Translation: weekend buying leverage is over in enclosed equipment.
Open-deck is still the best margin window, but it looks front-loaded.
- Flatbed: $3.33 paid vs. $3.52 posted = $0.19/mile broker advantage
- Heavy haul: $3.46 paid vs. $3.58 posted = $0.12/mile broker advantage
- Specialized: $2.85 paid vs. $3.34 posted = $0.49/mile broker advantage
- That is real opportunity, but it is being driven by carrier urgency and weather-distorted positioning, not by clean network conditions.
Diesel at $5.599/gallon is the market’s hidden enforcer.
- Carriers are not donating deadhead, not tolerating weak reloads, and not absorbing extra stop time for free.
- Any freight that is hard to access, slow to load, or unattractive on the back end will get priced accordingly.
Weather is a timing problem more than a shutdown problem.
- Along I-10 and I-59, the near-term threat is rolling delay, detours, and missed appointments, especially in afternoon pickup windows.
- In the Midwest, I-65 and I-71-linked freight remains an execution drag, even if conditions are not sharply worsening this morning.
🧠 What the market is actually saying
The board is smaller than last week, but the price floor is holding.
- 145,211 loads today vs. 184,540 one week ago
- $2.97/mile today vs. $2.98/mile one week ago
- Brokers should read that as: demand visibility is softer, but operational supply is tighter.
Compared with a month ago, freight is materially more expensive.
- One month ago: 136,494 loads at $2.72/mile
- Today: 145,211 loads at $2.97/mile
- That is a $0.25/mile rate increase with only a moderate volume increase. The driver is not just demand; it is fuel, slower turns, tighter compliance, and lane selectivity.
The posted-to-paid split is the clearest behavioral signal on the board.
- In van and reefer, carriers are saying: “Your post is not enough.”
- In flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized, carriers are saying: “I need a better next position.”
- Experienced brokers make money when they understand why a truck is cheap, not just that it is cheap.
Industrial freight is still setting the tone.
- Flatbed + heavy haul + specialized = 106,717 loads, which is 73.5% of the entire board.
- Those same modes account for 5,117 of 6,906 loads moved today, or about 74.1% of execution.
- That matters because when industrial/open-deck freight dominates the board, it shapes carrier psychology everywhere, including van negotiations.
The 8-day trend matters.
- Truckstop’s trend signal shows total loads decreasing and market opportunity decreasing over the last 8 days.
- So today’s firmness is not a broad freight boom.
- It is a friction market: fewer clean trucks, fewer cheap mistakes, and less willingness to chase bad freight.
🎯 Best broker plays for today
1) Buy Gulf Coast open-deck early and decisively
- Best targets: outbound Louisiana and Mississippi flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized.
- Why it works: carriers are still treating Texas and westbound markets as escape markets.
- Best timing: this morning through early Tuesday.
- Risk: once stranded equipment clears and deferred industrial freight restarts, pricing can snap back fast.
2) Protect every reefer quote in north Florida and south Georgia
- The real pressure point is not just deep Florida.
- The tighter procurement zone is increasingly the north Florida / south Georgia handoff area, where brokers need trucks before equipment gets pulled deeper into produce.
- If you have early-week reefer exposure there, cover it before lunch.
3) Reprice dry van using paid-market reality, not posted-market hope
- Dry van paid is above posted.
- That means any shipper still anchored to weekend or posted-rate logic needs to hear a clear reset:
- “The executable market is above the board today.”
- Use short quote validity on van freight, especially on retail, appointment, or less-desirable reload lanes.
- LTL/Partial is balanced at $1.88 paid vs. $1.89 posted with 8,441 loads.
- This is where you can save customer relationships when truckload quotes are getting pushback.
- Sell it honestly:
- better price
- slightly wider transit window
- good fit for non-urgent freight
5) Secure later-week project capacity while open-deck is still discounted
- If a customer has Wednesday-through-Friday industrial freight, today may still be the cheapest day to lock it.
- Especially true on Texas-bound open-deck freight coming out of the Gulf.
- Do not wait for the shipper to “see what tomorrow looks like” if the load is real and specs are ready.
🚚 Mode-by-mode broker playbook
🚚 Dry Van
- Market read:
- 22,665 loads
- $2.69 posted
- $2.74 paid
- $0.05/mile carrier premium
- Broker move:
- Tighten quote validity
- Cover appointment freight early
- Do not assume reload-friendly trucks will accept deep-peninsula, weak-backhaul, or detention-heavy freight at posted numbers
- Big trap:
- Treating today like a continuation of the weekend. It is not.
🧊 Reefer
- Market read:
- 7,388 loads
- $3.13 posted
- $3.19 paid
- $0.06/mile carrier premium
- Broker move:
- Pre-book produce-adjacent freight
- Protect north Florida / south Georgia coverage
- Use your cleanest reefer carriers on appointment freight
- Big trap:
- Thinking a small premium means easy negotiation. In produce season, small reefer premiums often become bigger premiums very quickly.
🏗️ Flatbed
- Market read:
- 60,761 loads
- $3.52 posted
- $3.33 paid
- $0.19/mile broker advantage
- Broker move:
- Buy today for Monday-Tuesday-Tentative Wednesday execution
- Prioritize westbound Gulf freight
- Build extra transit time into flood-touched loads
- Big trap:
- Buying the cheapest truck without confirming route plan, access, and reload intent.
🏋️ Heavy Haul
- Market read:
- 29,275 loads
- $3.58 posted
- $3.46 paid
- $0.12/mile broker advantage
- Broker move:
- Validate permits, escort needs, and detour feasibility before final award
- Confirm exact dimensions and commodity details up front
- Big trap:
- Negotiating rate before confirming route viability.
🔧 Specialized
- Market read:
- 16,681 loads
- $3.34 posted
- $2.85 paid
- $0.49/mile broker advantage
- Broker move:
- This is the biggest raw margin setup on the board
- Move fast on fully spec’d, clearly loadable freight
- Vet authority, cargo insurance, equipment type, and compliance history carefully
- Big trap:
- Treating specialized like generic truckload because the price looks cheap. Cheap specialized freight often hides paperwork risk, spec mismatch, or service risk.
📦 LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload / Partial)
- Market read:
- 8,441 loads
- $1.89 posted
- $1.88 paid
- $0.01/mile broker advantage
- Broker move:
- Offer consolidation proactively
- Use it for margin defense and customer retention
- Best fit on regional lanes with flexible delivery windows
- Big trap:
- Selling partial like truckload service. Price savings and transit precision rarely come together.
🌦️ Weather-driven lane tactics for the next 24–72 hours
🌊 Gulf Coast: manage time risk, not panic
- Affected corridors: I-10 and I-59
- Best operating posture:
- Prioritize morning pickups
- Build same-day transit cushion
- Expect afternoon and early evening appointment risk
- Broker lesson:
- The outbound truck may be cheap because the carrier wants out.
- That does not mean the shipment is operationally easy.
🛣️ Midwest: routing drag remains real
- Affected corridors: I-65 and related river-impact routes tied to Indiana and Ohio
- Best operating posture:
- Use interstate-oriented routing assumptions
- Verify shipper/receiver access
- Budget extra time for heavy haul and open-deck
- Broker lesson:
- This is not a fresh panic event today, but it is still a cost-of-execution issue.
🍓 Southeast produce zone: tighter than many brokers think
- Pressure points:
- North Florida
- South Georgia
- Atlanta → Orlando
- Best operating posture:
- Pre-book reefer
- Price Florida depth honestly
- Avoid selling “easy reload” assumptions into Florida unless you actually have the outbound solved
- Broker lesson:
- Florida is still a positioning market, and bad assumptions there can ruin your day fast.
💬 Shipper and carrier psychology you can use today
💼 With shippers
- Reset rate expectations quickly
- Use language like:
- “Weekend screens softened, but executable van and reefer capacity has already moved back above posted levels.”
- Sell options, not arguments
- Option 1: premium execution for fixed appointments
- Option 2: flexible truckload with a wider delivery band
- Option 3: partial/consolidation for cost control
- Frame higher rates as risk control
- Customers tolerate price increases better when they understand they are buying:
- clean coverage
- better on-time probability
- less recovery risk
🤝 With carriers
- Be direct with Gulf open-deck carriers
- If they are escaping a bad position, they value speed and certainty.
- A decisive broker often beats a slightly higher but slower offer.
- Ask route-specific questions
- What route are you planning to run?
- How many legal hours are left after pickup?
- Are you relying on secondary roads?
- What reload market are you targeting next?
- Do not over-negotiate specialized
- When a spread is this wide, the broker mistake is often greed.
- Take a good margin on a real truck, not a perfect margin on a truck that should never have been awarded.
📈 Probability-weighted 24–72 hour outlook
50% Base case: enclosed tight, open-deck spread narrows
- Dry van stays carrier-favored
- Reefer firms further in Southeast produce lanes
- Flatbed and specialized discounts compress by Tuesday into Wednesday
- Best broker result: buy open-deck now, defend van/reefer pricing
35% Tighter case: weather timing and appointments amplify the squeeze
- Gulf afternoon pickups start missing
- Open-deck bargain trucks become harder to use on tight schedules
- Reefer premiums widen in produce-adjacent lanes
- Best broker result: use higher-quality carriers and widen delivery windows before problems hit
15% Softer case: some flexible freight stays buyable longer
- A few van and flatbed pockets remain negotiable into Tuesday
- LTL/partial stays useful
- Even here, reefer is still least likely to loosen materially
✅ Today’s execution plan
⏰ First 60–90 minutes
- Cover all exposed reefer loads in north Florida, south Georgia, and produce-linked Southeast freight
- Call on every real Gulf outbound flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized load
- Reprice uncovered van freight using paid-market logic
☀️ Mid-morning
- Verify route, facility access, and loading conditions on Midwest and Gulf weather-touch freight
- Lock later-week project freight while open-deck carriers are still pricing for repositioning
- Update customer quote validity windows
🕛 By lunch
- Offer partial/consolidation alternatives to price-sensitive accounts
- Push morning pickup requests on Louisiana and Mississippi freight
- Build backup coverage on appointment-sensitive loads
🌆 Afternoon
- Watch Gulf pickup timing closely
- Communicate ETA risk before detention, layover, or missed appointments become claims disputes
- Do not let a cheap truck become an expensive exception
🏁 Bottom line
- Dry van and reefer are no longer weekend-buying markets.
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and especially specialized still offer real broker margin, but the window looks early-week, not full-week.
- Diesel at $5.599 is keeping carriers disciplined and unforgiving on deadhead, dwell, and bad geography.
- Flooding is creating asymmetric opportunity: cheap outbound open-deck from trapped zones, but expensive execution if you ignore timing and route reality.
- The brokers who win today will move fast on Gulf open-deck, stay firm on reefer and van pricing, use partials intelligently, and buy execution quality before they buy a cheap rate.
📅 This Day in History
1660: Charles II lands at Dover at the invitation of the Convention Parliament, which marks the end of the Cromwell-proclaimed Commonwealth of England, Scotland and Ireland and begins the Restoration of the British monarchy.
1819: The Argentine Constitution of 1819 is promulgated.
1938: Spanish Civil War: The bombing of Alicante kills 313 people.
💭 Quote of the Day
"All things come into being by conflict of opposites."
— Heraclitus