π Daily Market Intelligence Report
Sunday, April 26, 2026
7:00 AM CST
π Top-Line Summary
The national spot freight market is navigating a typical weekend volume contraction, with total available loads dipping 3.3% overnight to 131,964, yet the overall market average rate remains highly resilient at $2.73/mile. This stickiness in pricing is heavily influenced by sustained diesel costs at $5.464/gallon and severe, ongoing river flooding across the Midwest that continues to fracture major transcontinental routing along I-80 and I-90. While dry van brokers are currently enjoying a favorable margin spread with paid rates trailing posted rates, temperature-controlled and specialized sectors are seeing carriers command significant premiums. Brokers must strategically navigate these divergent equipment trends, leveraging loose van capacity to offset the steep premiums required to move reefer and heavy haul freight through weather-impacted corridors.
Insight
Sunday softness is a brief buying window
The weekend dip in load counts looks more like a timing pause than a true easing cycle. Another round of storms is set to hit Iowa, Illinois, and Missouri on Monday, so todayβs loose van conditions in the Midwest are likely to tighten again by midweek as delayed freight is released and carriers protect trucks from getting stranded in longer flood-related turns.
β½ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
π¦οΈ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe River Flooding (Midwest (IA, IL, MI, MO, OH, WI)): Extensive flooding along the Mississippi River and tributaries is fracturing major transcontinental routing along I-80, I-90, and I-94. This is extending transit times, forcing significant detours, and trapping capacity in the region.
- High Wind Warning (New Mexico (NM, Central Highlands/Plains)): Southwest winds gusting up to 60 mph pose severe blow-over risks for high-profile vehicles along the I-40 corridor. Brokers should expect transit delays and potential capacity tightening as carriers park to wait out the winds.
- River Flooding (South Central (OK, TX)): Minor agricultural flooding is forecast along river basins, which may cause localized delays and require re-routing for freight moving through the I-35 and I-40 corridors in eastern Oklahoma and Texas.
- Freeze Warning (Northern Rockies (ID, MT)): Sub-freezing temperatures dropping to 23 degrees are driving urgent Protect-From-Freeze (PFF) requirements for sensitive freight moving along the I-90 corridor, further straining already tight reefer capacity.
- Lake Flooding (Upstate New York (NY, Tompkins County)): High lake levels are causing minor shoreline flooding. While major interstates are largely clear, local pickup and delivery operations near affected shorelines may experience delays.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Fresh storms will delay any Midwest flood normalization
River flooding across the Mississippi basin is unlikely to improve materially before Tuesday. Forecast rain and strong winds on Monday across Iowa and Illinois increase the odds of renewed local road issues, slower bridge approaches, and longer dwell near major river crossings, with the biggest service risk falling on flatbed, heavy haul, and appointment-sensitive freight.
- Expect east-west transit touching eastern Iowa or northern Illinois to carry an extra 24-hour buffer through Tuesday.
- The operational pain point is not only closures, but slower equipment turns as detours stack with weather delays.
Weather Insight
New Mexico winds can ripple into Texas reload pricing
High-profile equipment moving across I-40 in central and eastern New Mexico faces a real same-day parking risk as gusts approach 60 mph. That matters outside the immediate warning area because trucks delayed in New Mexico are trucks not reloading into Amarillo, Albuquerque, or West Texas on Monday, which can lift one-way pricing for freight trying to secure westbound coverage out of Texas.
π° Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: With national averages holding at $5.464/gallon, fuel costs remain a primary driver of carrier rate floors. Global fuel price pressures indicate these elevated costs will persist, meaning brokers cannot rely on fuel relief to expand margins.
- Carrier Financial Health: The divergence in equipment rates is creating a two-tiered carrier market. Flatbed and reefer carriers are thriving on seasonal premiums, while van-only owner-operators are facing severe margin compression due to high fuel costs and loose capacity.
- Economic Indicators: Recent industry data showing unexpected upside in trailer orders suggests that larger fleets are preparing for sustained long-term demand and potential contract market tightening, even as current spot van rates remain soft.
π° Impactful News Analysis
-
Trailer Orders Surprise to the Upside as Spot Rates Keep Pace with Diesel π:
Despite current softness in the van spot market, the unexpected surge in trailer orders indicates fleets are anticipating future capacity needs. For brokers, this suggests that while van capacity is currently loose, larger carriers are positioning for a market turn. The fact that spot rates are keeping pace with $5.464 diesel means brokers must carefully manage customer expectations regarding rate floors.
-
FMCSA Categorical Exclusion Determination Impacts Cargo Insurance π:
Regulatory adjustments regarding cargo insurance requirements underscore the critical need for rigorous carrier vetting. Brokers must ensure their compliance teams are actively monitoring carrier insurance statuses, as regulatory shifts can inadvertently expose brokerages to liability if carriers let specialized coverage lapse in a high-cost environment.
-
Global Fuel Pressures Highlight Sustained High Operating Costs π:
Reports of fuel prices topping equivalent thresholds globally reinforce that the $5.464/gallon domestic diesel average is part of a broader macroeconomic trend. Brokers should not anticipate near-term relief in carrier fuel surcharges and must continue to price fuel volatility into their long-term shipper quotes.
News Insight
Trailer orders are a later-cycle signal, not near-term relief
The increase in trailer orders should not be read as a quick fix for spot tightness. New equipment may help larger fleets position for second-half demand, but it does nothing for the immediate constraints of flood detours, driver hours, and high diesel, which means routing guide failures can still cluster sharply in weather-hit reefer and open-deck lanes even while national van capacity looks loose.
πΊοΈ Regional & Lane Analysis
π Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest is currently the most volatile and strategically critical freight region due to the intersection of severe weather and high industrial demand. Widespread river flooding (WX12B21D91) across IA, IL, MO, and WI is severely fracturing major East-West corridors including I-80 and I-90. This weather disruption is colliding with massive flatbed demand for spring construction, trapping specialized equipment in detour loops and extending transit times. While van capacity remains relatively accessible, any freight requiring open-deck or temperature-controlled equipment is subject to steep carrier premiums as drivers demand compensation for flood-related delays and complex routing.
π£οΈ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL β Columbus, OH: This critical Midwest corridor is heavily impacted by regional flooding and infrastructure constraints. While dry van freight is moving smoothly with a favorable broker spread, flatbed and heavy haul shipments are facing tight capacity and elevated rates as carriers navigate weather-related congestion.
St. Louis, MO β Dallas, TX:
This lane connects the flooded Midwest to the rain-soaked South Central region. Carriers are facing minor flooding at both the origin (WX12B21D
- and destination (WX1C5E33C
- , making this a highly undesirable route for owner-operators without significant rate incentives
Regional Insight
Chicago eastbound freight has a narrow service advantage
Chicago-to-Columbus stands out as a practical escape lane from the flood-disrupted Midwest network. Ohio remains comparatively workable into Monday, so carriers have a clear incentive to grab eastbound freight that gets them out of Illinois and Iowa before the next storm round, keeping van execution cleaner than most intra-Midwest options while flatbed still prices in detour and reload uncertainty.
Regional Insight
St. Louis-Dallas pricing will reflect lost turns more than mileage
On St. Louis-to-Dallas, carriers are not just charging for weather risk; they are charging for weaker network productivity. Flood friction at the origin side, unsettled conditions through eastern Oklahoma, and a hot Dallas start to the week all make next-load planning less attractive, which favors carriers that insist on firmer all-in rates and tighter appointment windows.
π° Equipment Spread Divergence: The Van vs. Reefer Margin Gap
Today's real-time load board data reveals a stark divergence in broker margin opportunities across equipment types. In the dry van sector, brokers are operating in a highly favorable environment with a $0.14/mile negative spread (posted rates at $2.43/mile vs. paid rates at $2.29/mile). This indicates that despite high fuel costs, van capacity is loose enough that carriers are accepting loads below initial broker offers. Conversely, the reefer market is heavily tilted toward carriers, showing a $0.13/mile positive spread (posted at $2.80/mile vs. paid at $2.93/mile). This inversion is driven by the collision of early produce season demand and urgent Protect-From-Freeze (PFF) requirements in the Northern Rockies (WX877D23C3). Brokers must adopt a bifurcated strategy: aggressively widen margins on van freight to build profitability, while quoting reefer freight with substantial buffers to account for the steep premiums carriers are successfully demanding at the point of booking.
ποΈ Midwest Flooding Fractures Heavy Haul and Flatbed Routing
The severe river flooding across IA, IL, MO, and WI (WX12B21D91) is creating a compounding crisis for the open-deck and specialized sectors. While van carriers can often reroute with minimal friction, heavy haul and specialized flatbed loads are bound by strict permitting and bridge weight restrictions. As primary corridors like I-80 and I-90 face localized closures and congestion, specialized carriers are being forced onto secondary routes that may not support their permitted dimensions or weights. This is effectively trapping capacity, extending transit times by 24-48 hours, and artificially reducing the pool of available trucks. With flatbed already dominating the spot market at over 57,000 available loads, this weather-induced infrastructure constraint is a primary reason why flatbed paid rates remain stubbornly high at $3.09/mile and heavy haul is commanding $3.35/mile.
π Trailer Orders and Fuel Stickiness Signal Long-Term Rate Floors
A critical intersection of macroeconomic indicators is visible in today's market data. Despite the current softness in van spot rates, news of trailer orders surprising to the upside suggests that well-capitalized fleets are preparing for a long-term stabilization or increase in freight volumes. However, this future positioning is clashing with immediate operational realities: diesel remains anchored at a painful $5.464/gallon. This fuel stickiness is creating an absolute floor for how low rates can drop, even in oversupplied van markets. Carriers simply cannot afford to run below certain thresholds when fuel consumes such a massive percentage of their gross revenue. For brokers, this means the current van margin opportunity may be at its maximum width; as fleets take delivery of new trailers and position for contract freight, and fuel remains high, the spot market floor will likely begin to rise.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Use Sunday to cover Midwest outbound van freight before Monday storms convert cheap capacity into delayed capacity.
- Price flatbed and heavy haul with turn-time risk in mind; the real premium is reduced productivity, not just longer miles.
- Treat Chicago eastbound as a cleaner outbound option than most Midwest reloads over the next 48 hours.
- Do not expect macro fleet expansion signals to soften weather-disrupted spot lanes in the near term.
π Executive Signal Summary
This is a weekend pause, not a real market break.
- Total available loads are 131,964, down 3.3% from 136,494.
- But the national average rate is still $2.73/mile, up from $2.72/mile at the same checkpoint one week ago and well above $2.57/mile one month ago.
- Translation: visible volume is softer, but execution friction is still holding pricing up.
Today is a strong buying window in van, but a dangerous waiting game in reefer.
- Van: 18,275 loads, $2.43 posted, $2.29 paid.
- Reefer: 5,920 loads, $2.80 posted, $2.93 paid.
- Translation: brokers can still buy van below the screen, but reefer is already trading above the screen.
Open-deck freight still owns the marketβs center of gravity.
- Flatbed + Heavy Haul + Specialized = 100,233 loads, about 76.0% of all visible spot freight.
- Those same categories account for 7,088 of 9,322 loads moved today, also about 76.0%.
- Translation: if your desk is not prioritizing industrial, construction, project, and weather-sensitive open-deck freight, you are probably focusing on the wrong part of todayβs market.
The Midwest is a productivity problem more than a simple closure problem.
- Flooding along the Mississippi basin is slowing turns, extending transit, and trapping equipment in unattractive reload loops.
- The real premium is lost truck productivity, not just extra miles.
Diesel at $5.464/gallon keeps a hard floor under carrier decisions.
- Carriers will still discount for the right reload story in van.
- But they will not absorb deadhead, idle time, detours, and uncertainty for free.
π§ What the market is really telling you
The board is not cheap. Parts of the board are cheap.
- That distinction matters.
- A lighter headline load count can fool newer brokers into assuming Monday will be easier.
- Experienced brokers know that rates staying firm while volume falls usually means the remaining freight is more urgent, more disrupted, or more operationally difficult.
Van softness is real, but it is conditional.
- The -$0.14/mile spread in van is meaningful.
- That tells you carriers are still accepting less than the posted market when the load is:
- easy to pick up
- easy to transit
- easy to reload from
- It does not mean every Midwest van load is cheap.
Reefer is the clearest first-call cover market on the screen.
- Reefer loads fell 8.0% to 5,920.
- Paid rates are $0.13/mile above posted.
- That is the market saying: if you wait, you will probably pay more than you quoted.
Heavy haul is quietly more dangerous than flatbed today.
- Heavy Haul: 28,427 loads, $3.25 posted, $3.35 paid.
- That +$0.10/mile execution premium matters because routing errors in heavy haul are expensive and slow to fix.
- Flooding plus bridge and permit limitations can turn a βcoveredβ load into a margin leak fast.
Specialized is the best spec-audit market on the board.
- Specialized: 14,547 loads, $3.04 posted, $2.72 paid.
- That -$0.32/mile spread is too large to ignore.
- In practical terms, it usually means a meaningful share of loads are being over-posted relative to what is truly required.
πΈ Where the best money is today β and where brokers get trapped
β οΈ Most dangerous underquote markets
Reefer
- Trap: quoting off $2.80 posted when actual buys are landing around $2.93.
- Risk: you win the freight and lose the load.
Heavy Haul
- Trap: assuming the screen is close enough.
- Risk: reroute, permit, escort, bridge, and dwell costs show up after dispatch.
Midwest Flatbed
- Trap: seeing $3.09 paid versus $3.21 posted and assuming easy margin.
- Risk: the linehaul may buy fine, but detour time, tarp exposure, site wait, and weaker reload quality eat the spread.
π Mode-by-mode broker playbook for today
π Dry Van
π§ Reefer
π§ Flatbed
ποΈ Heavy Haul
πͺ Specialized
π¦ LTL/Partial
π§οΈ Regional tactics that can win the next 24β72 hours
ποΈ Chicago, IL β Columbus, OH
Why it matters
- This is one of the cleaner eastbound escape lanes from the Midwest disruption zone.
- Carriers have a natural incentive to take freight that gets them out of Illinois and away from flood-fractured routing.
Broker play
- Move van freight aggressively here while the market still feels weekend-soft.
- Sell the carrier on network quality, not just rate.
- easier eastbound positioning
- cleaner Monday reload potential
- less flood exposure than many intra-Midwest turns
- Flatbed still needs risk pricing because detours and jobsite timing remain issues.
π St. Louis, MO β Dallas, TX
Why it matters
- This lane will price off lost productivity, not just miles.
- Origin-side weather friction plus South Central flooding risk weakens carrier confidence in the next turn.
Broker play
- Quote this lane with firmer all-in expectations.
- Do not oversell tight appointment certainty unless the truck is already local and committed.
- Build wider appointment cushions than normal.
π¬οΈ New Mexico wind ripple into Texas reloads
Why it matters
- Trucks delayed along the I-40 corridor are trucks that do not reload normally into Amarillo, Albuquerque, or West Texas.
- That can create a Monday pricing ripple even outside the exact warning area.
Broker play
- Watch Monday westbound Texas freight closely.
- If you have discretionary freight out of Texas heading west, cover sooner rather than assuming Monday morning trucks will be plentiful.
π£οΈ Carrier and shipper psychology β how to negotiate today
π€ When talking to carriers
πΌ When talking to shippers
π Probability-weighted outlook for the next 24β72 hours
Base case β 55%
- Van remains buyable today
- Reefer stays tight through Tuesday
- Midwest spot pricing firms Monday into Wednesday as delayed freight releases
Stress case β 30%
- Fresh storms worsen Illinois and Iowa execution
- Transit times stretch further
- Chicago-area, river-adjacent, and appointment-sensitive freight reprices sharply
- Flatbed, reefer, and heavy haul become materially harder to recover at quoted numbers
Opportunity case β 15%
- Sunday positioning works
- Brokers secure clean eastbound and southbound trucks before the market resets
- Specialized loads get reclassified correctly
- LTL/Partial conversions protect both margin and customer relationships
Cover reefer first
- Do not quote off the posted market alone
- Build in service and temperature precision
Then lock Midwest open-deck with route-sensitive freight
- Especially flatbed and heavy haul touching flood-affected corridors
Exploit van leverage while it still exists
- Focus on clean freight
- Avoid chasing fake savings on messy appointment loads
Audit every specialized load
- This is the fastest same-day margin lever on the board
Convert flexible freight into LTL/Partial
- Save accounts without discounting full truckload unnecessarily
π What to track by close
- Time-to-cover by mode
- Quote-to-book variance
- First-call cover rate on reefer
- Carrier fallout on Midwest freight
- Accessorial recovery rate on flatbed and heavy haul
- Specialized loads reclassified to standard equipment
- Customer savings created through LTL/Partial conversion
π§Ύ Bottom line
- The market looks softer than it really is.
- Van is your margin window today.
- Reefer is your first-call priority.
- Flatbed and heavy haul are not expensive because of miles alone; they are expensive because truck productivity is being destroyed by weather and routing friction.
- Specialized is where sharp brokers out-earn average brokers.
- The brokers who win today will buy clean van aggressively, cover reefer early, route heavy haul before quoting, and treat Midwest weather as a turn-time problem instead of a simple rate problem.
π
This Day in History
1802: Napoleon Bonaparte signs a general amnesty to allow all but about one thousand of the most notorious Γ©migrΓ©s of the French Revolution to return to France.
1960: Forced out by the April Revolution, President of South Korea Syngman Rhee resigns after 12 years of dictatorial rule.
1994: South Africa begins its first multiracial election, which is won by Nelson Mandela's African National Congress.
π Quote of the Day
"Success is getting what you want... Happiness is wanting what you get."
β Dale Carnegie