📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Tuesday, June 23, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
On Tuesday, June 23, 2026, the domestic spot market shows robust mid-week activity with total available loads climbing to 163,100, representing a 12.9% increase compared to yesterday's volume of 144,502. The market average rate has firmed to $3.02/mile, supported by a rigid cost floor established by the verified AAA national diesel average of $5.00/gallon. Peak summer produce harvests in the Southeast and West Coast are driving intense temperature-controlled demand, with reefer paid rates averaging $3.38/mile. Meanwhile, severe weather—including flash flood warnings in the South (Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma) and river flooding in the Midwest—is disrupting key transit corridors like I-10, I-30, and I-49, tightening regional capacity and creating high-margin arbitrage opportunities for proactive brokers.
Insight
National rate strength is being driven by equipment mix
The move to a $3.02/mile national average is not broad-based inflation across every mode; it is being pulled higher by the sharp surge in flatbed, heavy-haul, and reefer activity. Dry van remains comparatively disciplined, so quoting all truckload freight off the national average risks overpaying on standard van freight while still underestimating premiums on produce and weather-disrupted open-deck lanes.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe Flash Flooding (South Region (AR, LA, OK, TX, including Miller, Caddo, Bowie, Cass, Marion, McCurtain, Bienville, Bossier, Natchitoches, Red River counties/parishes)): Life-threatening flash flooding is impacting major freight corridors including I-30 and I-49. Heavy rainfall rates of 2 to 3 inches per hour are causing localized road closures and significant transit delays. Brokers should expect tight capacity and potential detours for loads moving through northeastern Texas, southwestern Arkansas, and northwestern Louisiana.
- Pearl River and Regional River Flooding (South/Gulf Coast Region (MS, LA, AL, FL, GA, including Hinds, Rankin, Calcasieu, St. Tammany, Hancock, Pearl River counties)): Minor to moderate river flooding continues along the Pearl River and other regional waterways, impacting the I-10, I-20, and I-55 corridors. Farmland and low-lying roads are inundated, which may restrict local carrier access and delay regional deliveries. Brokers should monitor route availability and communicate potential delays to shippers.
- Illinois River and Regional River Flooding (Midwest Region (IL, IN, IA, KS, MO, including Peoria, Tazewell, Woodford, Bureau, La Salle, Putnam, Edwards, Gallatin, Wabash, White, Gibson, Knox, Posey counties)): Ongoing river flooding along the Illinois River and Wabash River is disrupting local agricultural and industrial shipping routes, particularly affecting corridors like I-74, I-80, and I-39. While major interstate closures are not confirmed, localized flooding on secondary routes is trapping open-deck and flatbed capacity, driving regional rate volatility.
- Extreme Heat Risk (West Region (CA, Imperial County and Imperial Valley)): Dangerously hot conditions with afternoon temperatures of 109 to 114 degrees are forecast. This extreme heat poses a high risk of heat-related illnesses for drivers and increases the risk of equipment breakdowns (tire blowouts, reefer unit failures). Brokers moving temperature-controlled freight through the Southwest must ensure reefer units are fully operational and pre-cooled.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Ark-La-Tex flooding is most disruptive this morning, but recovery will be uneven
The heaviest rain around northeastern Texas, southwestern Arkansas, and northwestern Louisiana is concentrated in the morning hours, with conditions improving later today. Same-day pickup and linehaul starts through the I-30 and I-49 corridor are the most exposed; overnight transit should normalize faster than local first-mile access, especially where county roads and shipper yards stay waterlogged into Wednesday as additional storms redevelop in Arkansas and Oklahoma.
- Expect missed morning appointments and late tender acceptance near Texarkana and Shreveport.
- Secondary-road detours will outlast mainline improvement, especially for open-deck and heavy freight.
Weather Insight
Midwest river flooding keeps flatbed capacity sticky through late week
Conditions are relatively quiet today around central Illinois, but renewed rain and thunderstorms Wednesday through Friday across Illinois and Missouri will slow drainage and keep secondary agricultural and industrial routes compromised. That matters more for flatbed and specialized freight than for dry van linehaul, because reloads, plant access, and oversize routing are more dependent on local roads than interstate status alone.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Diesel futures remain stable but elevated, reflecting ongoing global energy market pressures. The $5.00/gallon retail average continues to squeeze carrier margins, particularly for small fleets and owner-operators, keeping spot rate floors high.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small carriers and owner-operators are facing severe financial pressure due to high operating costs and elevated diesel prices. This is driving a steady rate of carrier exits, though a steady stream of new authorities (as seen in recent FMCSA feeds) keeps the capacity pool dynamic but highly fragmented.
- Economic Indicators: Peak summer retail and agricultural demand are driving strong domestic freight volumes. Importers pulling cargo forward to preempt potential tariffs and rising fuel costs are keeping port volumes high, particularly in Savannah and West Coast ports, which is spilling over into domestic spot market demand.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
FMCSA Initiates Rollback of Obsolete Trucking Regulations to Reduce Carrier Burden 🔗:
The FMCSA's move to eliminate outdated regulations—such as rear guard labeling, rear lamp requirements when towing, and liquid-burning flare rules—is a welcome relief for carriers. For brokers, this regulatory easing reduces minor compliance friction and administrative burdens for carriers, potentially improving carrier relations. However, brokers must remain vigilant in their vetting processes, as the core safety regulations remain strictly enforced under the current administration.
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New-Authority Carrier Feeds Highlight High-Intent Lead Opportunities for Brokers 🔗:
The availability of real-time feeds tracking newly authorized FMCSA carriers provides a highly valuable pipeline for freight brokers. Newly authorized carriers are in their critical first weeks of operation and have not yet established exclusive broker or factoring relationships. Brokers can leverage these feeds to proactively onboard compliant, hungry capacity, securing reliable partners before they are captured by larger competitors.
-
Old Dominion Freight Line Stock Slump Signals Market Recovery Expectations Are Already Priced In 🔗:
The recent slump in ODFL stock, despite a recovering freight market, suggests that Wall Street has already priced in the cyclical upturn. For brokers, this indicates that while contract rates may remain stable, LTL carriers will face intense pressure to maintain margins. This creates an opportunity for brokers to pitch consolidation and partial-load services (LTL/Partial) to shippers looking for cost-effective alternatives to traditional LTL networks.
News Insight
New-authority capacity is usable, but only in narrow pockets this week
Freshly authorized carriers are best deployed on short-haul van freight, port overflow, and daytime regional moves where service can be observed closely and weather exposure is limited. This is not the week to test unproven capacity on produce reefers, oversize freight, or flood-affected lanes where a single service miss can erase the rate advantage.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast US is currently the most strategically important region for freight brokers, driven by the collision of peak summer produce harvests (blueberries in Georgia, peaches in South Carolina, watermelons in Georgia and Florida) and severe weather disruptions. This combination has created intense localized capacity constraints, particularly for temperature-controlled (reefer) and open-deck (flatbed) equipment. Savannah port import volumes remain high, further tightening dry van capacity. Brokers who can secure reliable capacity in this region can command significant rate premiums from shippers desperate to move time-sensitive agricultural and retail goods.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA → Orlando, FL: This high-volume corridor is experiencing intense demand as retail goods and peak summer produce move south into Florida's major distribution hubs. Dry van and reefer capacity is highly competitive in Atlanta, with carriers prioritizing high-paying outbound loads. The lane is highly active, and transit times are stable, but securing reliable equipment requires early booking.
Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC: This lane is driven by the ongoing surge in import volumes at the Port of Savannah, which is spilling over into the domestic spot market. Dry van and flatbed capacity is tight in Savannah as carriers are quickly snatched up to move containerized and breakbulk cargo inland to Charlotte's major distribution centers. Regional flooding in the Carolinas has caused minor routing adjustments but transit remains active.
Regional Insight
Atlanta-Orlando turns improve with morning delivery windows
Florida’s pattern of heat and scattered afternoon storms through midweek raises the risk of detention and missed unload windows on later-day arrivals into Orlando. Carriers that can load Atlanta early and deliver before peak afternoon weather will be easier to secure, particularly on reefer freight where idle time also increases fuel burn and unit-failure risk.
- Morning Orlando appointments will price better than afternoon deliveries.
- Round-trip economics improve sharply if the return leg is covered before the truck reaches Florida.
Regional Insight
Savannah-Charlotte pricing should favor velocity over headline linehaul
On this short-haul port corridor, diesel at $5.00 and TWIC-gated access mean carriers are valuing fast in-gate, fast out-gate, and same-day turns more than small increases in linehaul rate. Brokers offering flexible appointment windows, pre-cleared port information, and reload visibility into Charlotte will often win capacity ahead of higher-paying but slower-moving freight.
📊 Load Board Deep Dive: Analyzing the Mid-Week Volume Surge and Rate Spreads
Today's real-time load board data reveals a significant mid-week volume surge, with total available loads climbing 12.9% overnight to 163,100. This surge is led by flatbed and heavy haul equipment, which saw overnight volume increases of 15.4% and 23.4% respectively. The market average rate has firmed to $3.02/mile, indicating that carriers are successfully demanding higher rates to cover their operating costs under the $5.00/gallon diesel price floor.
An analysis of the posted-vs-paid rate spreads reveals highly favorable conditions for carriers in the reefer and flatbed sectors. Reefer paid rates averaged $3.38/mile against a posted rate of $3.16/mile, representing a substantial $0.22/mile carrier premium. This spread indicates that shippers are willing to pay significant premiums to secure temperature-controlled equipment for time-sensitive produce. Similarly, flatbed paid rates averaged $3.64/mile against a posted rate of $3.50/mile, a $0.14/mile carrier premium driven by peak summer construction and weather-related routing disruptions.
For dry van, the spread is much tighter, with paid rates at $2.77/mile against posted rates of $2.74/mile (a minor $0.03/mile carrier premium). This suggests that dry van capacity is relatively balanced nationally, though highly localized constraints exist near major ports and manufacturing hubs. Brokers should focus their energy on high-margin reefer and open-deck opportunities where the wide rate spreads indicate strong shipper desperation and willingness to pay.
💰 Broker Opportunity Matrix: Capitalizing on Rate Spreads and Capacity Imbalances
The current spot market presents distinct high-margin opportunities for brokers who can navigate the wide spreads between posted and paid rates. The most lucrative sector today is temperature-controlled freight, where the $0.22/mile carrier premium ($3.38 paid vs $3.16 posted) signals intense shipper demand. Brokers can capture significant margins by securing capacity at or near the posted rate from carriers looking for reliable, quick-paying loads, while billing shippers at premium spot rates that reflect the tight market conditions.
Another major opportunity lies in the heavy haul and specialized sectors. Heavy haul paid rates averaged $3.76/mile against a posted rate of $3.60/mile ($0.16/mile premium), while specialized equipment showed a $0.05/mile premium ($3.21 paid vs $3.16 posted). These high-value, complex moves are less sensitive to minor rate fluctuations, allowing brokers to build substantial margins by offering turn-key logistics solutions to industrial and construction shippers.
Conversely, the LTL/Partial sector shows a $0.07/mile broker advantage, with paid rates averaging $1.62/mile against posted rates of $1.69/mile. This indicates that brokers have strong negotiating power in the partial-load market. By consolidating multiple partial shipments into full truckloads, brokers can bypass expensive traditional LTL networks and capture the rate spread, offering cost savings to shippers while maintaining healthy margins.
🔧 Carrier Dynamics: Navigating Regulatory Easing and New-Authority Pipelines
The carrier landscape is experiencing notable shifts driven by regulatory developments and ongoing financial pressures. The FMCSA's recent initiative to remove obsolete regulations—such as rear guard labeling and liquid-burning flare rules—is a positive step toward reducing administrative burdens for small fleets and owner-operators. While these changes do not materially impact highway safety, they reduce the risk of minor compliance violations that can lead to carrier downtime or safety rating downgrades.
At the same time, the steady stream of newly authorized carriers entering the market (as highlighted by recent FMCSA feeds) presents a critical sourcing opportunity for brokers. These new entrants are highly motivated to secure freight and have not yet established exclusive relationships with larger brokerages or factoring companies. However, onboarding these carriers requires strict vetting and compliance checks, especially in light of heightened broker liability concerns and the risk of fraudulent 'chameleon' operations.
Brokers must balance the opportunity of sourcing hungry, cost-effective new capacity with the necessity of rigorous compliance. Utilizing automated vetting tools and verifying carrier operating history is essential to mitigate liability risks while expanding the usable carrier pool. Additionally, with diesel prices holding firm at $5.00/gallon, carriers are highly sensitive to deadhead miles; brokers who can offer local, round-trip, or backhaul opportunities will have a significant advantage in securing reliable capacity.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Keep dry van quoting disciplined; most of today’s rate lift is concentrated in reefer and open-deck freight.
- Use longer buffers on freight touching the I-30/I-49 flood zone, especially for Tuesday pickups and Wednesday local deliveries.
- Sell morning delivery windows into Florida and fast-turn port execution in Savannah as premium service, not free add-ons.
- Deploy new-authority carriers selectively on simple regional freight while reserving proven capacity for produce, specialized, and weather-exposed loads.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a selective tightening market, not a universal rate-up market. Total available loads are 163,100, up 12.9% from 144,502, but the strength is being driven by reefer, flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized—not by broad-based dry van inflation.
The national average rate of $3.02/mile is being distorted by equipment mix. If you quote ordinary van freight off that headline number, you will overbuy clean van freight and still underestimate premiums on produce, open-deck, and flood-disrupted freight.
Open-deck is controlling truck positioning today. Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized total 120,611 loads, which is 73.9% of all available loads. That matters because open-deck demand is pulling regional capacity, especially around industrial corridors and flood-exposed reload zones.
Reefer is the clearest urgency-buy segment. Reefer paid rates are $3.38/mile versus $3.16/mile posted, a $0.22/mile carrier premium. In full summer produce season, that spread usually widens first in the Southeast and California before it shows up everywhere else.
Diesel at $5.0/gallon is still the market’s discipline mechanism. Carriers are valuing reload certainty, short deadhead, and fast turns more than small linehaul bumps. The nearest usable truck is often cheaper than the cheapest posted truck.
Weather is a productivity problem first and a closure problem second. The I-30 / I-49 Ark-La-Tex zone and Illinois river corridor should be priced for missed appointments, slow yard access, detours, and reload disruption, not just interstate closure headlines.
Today’s best margins come from execution quality. The brokers who win will buy reefer and open-deck early, sell morning Florida delivery windows as premium service, package backhauls, and separate linehaul from accessorial risk on flood-exposed freight.
📈 What The Board Is Really Saying
The most important read this morning is that volume surged faster than practical capacity loosened.
Top-line numbers
- Total available loads: 163,100
- Yesterday: 144,502
- Change: +12.9%
- National average rate: $3.02/mile
- Rate range: $1.62 to $3.76/mile
- Diesel: $5.0/gallon
Short-term pattern
- Versus 1 week ago, total loads are slightly lower than 165,824, and average rate is just under $3.04/mile.
- Versus 1 month ago, total loads are above 143,975 and average rate is above $2.91/mile.
- That tells me this is not a breakout market. It is a firm, seasonal, selective opportunity market.
Key interpretation
- Demand is healthy.
- Carrier productivity is impaired by fuel, weather, and produce pull.
- Replacement cost risk is higher than the national average suggests.
That is the kind of market where brokers lose money by treating freight as interchangeable.
🚚 Mode-by-Mode Broker Playbook
🟦 Dry Van: Disciplined market, not panic market
🧊 Reefer: Highest urgency, strongest real pricing power
That is how you lower buy cost without asking the carrier to take a bad rate.
🪵 Flatbed: Volume-rich, execution-sensitive
In flatbed, bad scope control eats margin faster than the linehaul rate does.
🏗️ Heavy Haul: Project management disguised as brokerage
Board facts
- 32,852 loads
- Posted: $3.60/mile
- Paid: $3.76/mile
- Carrier premium: $0.16/mile
Broker read
- Heavy haul is tight for the usual reason—specialized equipment—but also for a more important reason: routing friction.
- Flood warnings in Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, and Oklahoma-adjacent corridors complicate permits, escorts, and local access.
Best moves today
- Do not hard-quote without dimensions and access details.
- Recheck permit path assumptions on any route touching the South or Midwest flood footprint.
- Build extra lead time into pickups and deliveries even where the interstate itself remains usable.
- Use known heavy-haul partners, not broad load-board shopping, for high-consequence moves.
Hard rule
- If the customer wants a fast price without exact dimensions, axle profile, access notes, or appointment details, they are trying to hand you the risk. Push back.
⚙️ Specialized: Carrier-leaning, but not runaway tight
Board facts
- 18,205 loads
- Posted: $3.16/mile
- Paid: $3.21/mile
- Carrier premium: $0.05/mile
Broker read
- Specialized is still a relationship market, but today it is less extreme than heavy haul or reefer.
- That means you can still win business here—but only if you control the scope and know the carrier.
Best moves today
- Quote only after confirming equipment specifications.
- Use relationship carriers first.
- Avoid vague all-in quotes on project freight with uncertain loading conditions.
- Sell planning lead time to customers as cost control.
Broker edge
- Margin here comes from knowing the right carrier, not from trying to squeeze the last nickel out of the linehaul.
🌎 Regional Money Map
🍑 Southeast: Best near-term revenue zone
⚓ Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC: Velocity lane, not mileage lane
🌴 Atlanta, GA → Orlando, FL: Morning delivery is a pricing lever
What is happening
- Florida heat and afternoon storm patterns increase detention and service risk later in the day.
- Carriers prefer freight that can load early, deliver early, and reposition quickly.
Broker play
- Sell morning Orlando appointments as premium value.
- Try to secure the Florida return leg before the truck commits southbound.
- Use Florida-committed carriers, not opportunistic one-way carriers.
- Avoid loose appointment windows that burn driver hours and raise replacement cost.
Key insight
- Florida pricing is still often bought as a cycle, not a one-way move. The shipper who helps the truck turn efficiently will buy capacity better than the shipper who creates uncertainty.
🌧️ Weather-Adjusted Risk Map
🚨 Ark-La-Tex: Front-half disruption, back-half lag
🌊 Illinois River / Midwest Flooding: Sticky capacity problem
🌡️ Imperial Valley / Southwest Heat: Hidden reefer and equipment risk
Primary issue
- Extreme heat in California’s Imperial Valley raises risk of reefer unit stress, tire failures, and driver fatigue.
Broker actions
- Verify reefer maintenance status.
- Require pre-cooled trailers.
- Favor carriers with clean operating history in desert lanes.
- Pad delivery commitments if long dwell or border-area congestion is part of the trip.
This is a classic market where one preventable equipment failure can erase the profit on multiple loads.
🧠 Customer And Carrier Psychology Today
🧑💼 What shippers are likely to believe
“The national average is $3.02, so my load should move near that.”
- Wrong for produce, flood-exposed, port, open-deck, and Florida cycle freight.
“If the weather clears, rates should drop immediately.”
- Not how freight works. Appointments, yards, empties, and reload chains recover slower than radar.
“A few more hours of shopping will save money.”
- On reefer and open-deck today, waiting often converts a planned buy into a replacement buy.
🚛 What carriers are rewarding
Clear load details
- commodity
- exact appointments
- securement requirements
- access conditions
- unload reality
Turn quality
- fast pickup
- fast unload
- low dwell
- known reload path
Operational honesty
- If the load is messy and you disclose it early, the right carrier prices it accurately.
- If you hide the mess, the carrier either falls off or hits you with accessorial pain later.
🗣️ Best shipper message today
- “Your lane is being priced by truck position, weather-adjusted productivity, fuel cost, and replacement risk—not by the national average alone.”
That is the right message because it is factual, commercially credible, and helps rate conversations feel strategic instead of defensive.
💰 Where The Best Margin Is Actually Hiding
1. Reefer bought early with a return plan
- Margin comes from cycle design, not heroic spot negotiation.
2. Flatbed with clearly scoped accessorials
- Brokers who define tarp, detention, securement, and detour exposure before dispatch keep the margin they quote.
3. LTL/Partial consolidation
- $1.69 posted versus $1.62 paid is a real invitation to build smarter multi-stop or partial solutions.
4. Savannah turns with clean execution
- If you reduce gate friction and improve reload visibility, you can win trucks without being the highest-rate post.
5. Florida inbound loads with morning delivery windows
- The service premium is real. Charge for it.
📊 Probability-Weighted Outlook: Next 24–72 Hours
Base case — 55%
- Reefer stays firm in produce regions.
- Open-deck remains tight due to volume mix and weather drag.
- Dry van stays mostly balanced nationally but firmer in the Southeast and port-adjacent pockets.
Stress case — 30%
- Ark-La-Tex and Midwest disruptions create more missed appointments and replacement freight.
- Flatbed and heavy haul premiums widen further.
- More shippers come into the afternoon needing same-day rescue coverage.
Opportunity case — 15%
- Mainline weather improvement outpaces expected disruption.
- Brokers with pre-positioned regional carriers capture strong margins on inbound produce repositioning, Savannah short turns, and partial consolidations.
✅ Today’s Priority Stack
Buy reefer early
- Especially for Southeast, California, and any produce-support lanes.
Keep van quoting disciplined
- Use van data, not the $3.02 national average, as your anchor.
Treat open-deck as the market’s center of gravity
- 120,611 open-deck-related loads means truck positioning is being shaped there first.
Price weather as productivity loss
- Add buffers for yard access, detours, and missed appointments, not just highway closure risk.
Monetize service quality
- Morning Florida delivery windows and Savannah fast-turn execution should be sold as premium value.
Convert resistance into partial solutions
- Use LTL/Partial when truckload repricing gets pushback.
Use new-authority carriers narrowly
- Short-haul van, port overflow, daytime regional freight only.
- Do not test unproven capacity on produce reefers, oversize, or flood-exposed freight.
📋 What Your Team Should Track By Noon
First-call acceptance rate
- reefer in Southeast
- Savannah port freight
- flood-adjacent flatbed
Replacement-cost delta
- early-covered loads versus afternoon rescues
Accessorial capture rate
- tarp
- detention
- layover
- detour-related extras
Return-load coverage rate
- especially on Florida and produce-related reefer freight
Appointment revision count
- loads touching I-30, I-49, and Illinois river corridors
These are the intraday metrics that tell you whether your desk is being proactive or expensive.
🏁 Bottom Line
The board is firmer, but the opportunity is selective.
The market is telling you:
- dry van is workable
- reefer is urgent
- flatbed and heavy haul are absorbing capacity
- diesel at $5.0/gallon is keeping trucks local
- weather is cutting productivity
- Savannah rewards speed
- Florida rewards cycle planning
- partials remain a clean margin-defense tool
The brokers who maximize today will buy early, quote specifically, sell certainty, and think in two-load economics instead of one-load pricing.
💡 Tony's Tip
Please set up multi-factor authentication (MFA) on your ETA email account this week.
Visit
https://aka.ms/mfasetup to get started.
Text Tony at 205-876-3715 if you have any issues.
Also, please note, you should be using
https://freightmap.remote.etaagencyinc.com for google maps lookups so we dont get rate limited by Google.
You can check routes on the operations panel on the left via the red Check Route button.
📅 This Day in History
1757: Battle of Plassey: Three thousand British troops under Robert Clive defeat a 50,000-strong Indian army under Siraj ud-Daulah at Plassey.
1758: Seven Years' War: Battle of Krefeld: British, Hanoverian, and Prussian forces defeat French troops at Krefeld in Germany.
1985: A terrorist bomb explodes at Narita International Airport near Tokyo, killing two and injuring four. An hour later, the same group detonates a second bomb aboard Air India Flight 182, bringing the Boeing 747 down off the coast of Ireland killing all 329 aboard.
💭 Quote of the Day
"The key to success is to focus our conscious mind on things we desire not things we fear."
— Brian Tracy