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๐Ÿ“Š Daily Market Intelligence Report

Tuesday, May 05, 2026

7:00 AM CST


๐Ÿ“Š Top-Line Summary

The spot market is experiencing a massive 14.3% volume surge today, pushing total available loads to 158,800 and driving the market average rate to $2.75/mile. This surge is heavily concentrated in open-deck and specialized sectors, with flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized volumes jumping between 18% and 24% overnight. Capacity in these sectors is acutely constrained, allowing carriers to command premiums ranging from $0.09 to $0.20 per mile over posted rates. Meanwhile, record-high diesel prices, now verified at $5.659/gallon, are severely compressing carrier margins and forcing fleets to shrink deadhead radiuses. Widespread river flooding in the Midwest continues to fracture transcontinental routing, trapping equipment and exacerbating the capacity crunch in the industrial freight sectors.

Insight

National averages are masking a zip-code market in the Midwest

Record diesel and flood detours are fragmenting pricing at the origin level. Two shipments on the same lane can clear at materially different rates depending on whether the truck is already staged inside a 25- to 50-mile radius or has to burn empty miles around closed or slow corridors. That makes hyper-local coverage more important than broad market averages, especially for flatbed, heavy haul, and machinery freight.

Daily market overview

โ›ฝ Diesel Price Analysis

Price Trend Over Time

Diesel Price Trend Chart

Diesel Historical Price Comparison

Diesel Historical Price Comparison Chart

๐ŸŒฆ๏ธ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence

U.S. freight weather impact map

Current Major Weather Events:

Weather Affected Corridors:

I-55
Interstate55
Severe
States
Hazards
Flood Warning
Alert Count
1
I-64
Interstate64
Severe
States
Hazards
Flood Warning
Alert Count
1
I-10
Interstate10
Severe
States
Hazards
Flood Warning
Alert Count
1
Weather Insight

Flooding pressure is front-loaded into today, but capacity recovery will lag

Heavy rain is still falling this morning across southern Illinois and southwest Indiana, keeping the sharpest operational drag concentrated into the Tuesday pickup and delivery cycle. Conditions trend quieter Wednesday into Thursday across Illinois, Indiana, and Missouri, which should limit fresh weather deterioration, but open-deck capacity will not snap back with the forecast; equipment already delayed by detours, soft approaches, and missed appointments is likely to stay out of normal rotation through midweek.

Weather Insight

Northern Rockies freeze is tightening reefer optionality beyond the local market

Sub-freezing mornings in Idaho and Wyoming are pulling refrigerated equipment into Protect From Freeze service just as produce demand builds farther south. The immediate effect is not only higher reefer pricing in the Rockies; it also reduces the fallback option of using reefer capacity to rescue standard food or consumer loads in adjacent western lanes, which can push short-notice spot pricing higher with little warning.

๐Ÿ’ฐ Financial Market Indicators

๐Ÿ“ฐ Impactful News Analysis

  1. FMCSA Targets Chameleon Carriers: Heightened Vetting Required ๐Ÿ”—:
    With the FMCSA publicly cracking down on carriers evading safety rules, brokers must rigorously enhance their carrier onboarding and continuous monitoring protocols. The risk of negligent hiring liability is escalating, meaning compliance teams must verify operating authority and safety records more strictly than ever.
  2. Surging Diesel Prices Squeeze Agricultural Shippers ๐Ÿ”—:
    As fuel costs pressure agricultural margins, brokers should anticipate shippers pushing back on rate increases, even as reefer capacity tightens. Expect more localized sourcing and potential shifts in produce shipping volumes as farmers attempt to mitigate transportation costs.
  3. Regulatory Scrutiny on Commercial Fleet Compliance ๐Ÿ”—:
    Increased focus on DOT compliance for smaller commercial vehicles highlights the need for brokers to verify operating authority even for partial, hotshot, or specialized LTL loads, ensuring full regulatory adherence across all equipment types.
News Insight

Tight open-deck conditions raise the compliance risk on last-minute coverage

The carrier-vetting crackdown carries extra weight in today's flatbed and hotshot environment, where urgent shippers are more likely to accept unfamiliar capacity to avoid project delays. The highest-risk scenario is a last-minute equipment swap or a load quietly passed to an affiliated carrier after booking; for specialized, partial, and expedited open-deck freight, confirming the operating carrier, driver identity, and equipment details before release is becoming as important as the rate.

๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ Regional & Lane Analysis

๐Ÿ“ Primary Region Focus: Midwest

The Midwest is currently the most volatile and strategically critical freight region due to the collision of severe weather disruptions and massive industrial demand. Widespread river flooding across Illinois, Indiana, and Missouri is fracturing major transcontinental arteries like I-55 and I-64. This is trapping open-deck capacity, forcing lengthy detours, and destroying carrier turnaround times. Simultaneously, flatbed and heavy haul volumes are surging, creating a severe supply-demand imbalance. Carriers operating in this region are commanding massive premiums to offset the routing headaches and the $5.659/gallon diesel costs.

๐Ÿ›ฃ๏ธ Key Lane Watch

Chicago, IL โ†’ St. Louis, MO: This critical North-South corridor is heavily impacted by ongoing flooding along I-55. Open-deck capacity is extremely tight as carriers avoid the route due to detour risks and extended transit times. Demand for construction materials and industrial freight remains high, creating a severe bottleneck.

Route map for Chicago, IL โ†’ St. Louis, MO

Indianapolis, IN โ†’ Kansas City, MO: This cross-regional lane is experiencing severe capacity constraints due to flooding impacts on I-64 and I-70. The 24.1% surge in heavy haul demand is pulling specialized equipment out of the general flatbed pool, leaving shippers scrambling for standard open-deck coverage.

Route map for Indianapolis, IN โ†’ Kansas City, MO
Regional Insight

Thursday is the cleanest make-up window on the core Midwest open-deck lanes

The best near-term opportunity to move delayed industrial freight is Thursday, when Missouri turns dry and Illinois and Indiana remain largely stable before another round of rain returns late Friday. That timing matters most on Chicago-St. Louis and Indianapolis-Kansas City, where carriers are pricing not just transit risk but the probability of losing the next reload if a flood detour blows up the schedule.

๐Ÿ“Š Breaking Down the 14.3% Volume Surge: An Open-Deck Explosion

Today's real-time market data reveals a massive 14.3% overnight surge in total available loads, pushing the market to 158,800. However, this growth is entirely asymmetric. While dry van volumes actually contracted by 4.4%, the open-deck and specialized sectors exploded. Flatbed volumes jumped 18.2% to 68,564 loads, specialized freight surged 20.8%, and heavy haul spiked an incredible 24.1%. This indicates a massive release of industrial, construction, and project cargo into the spot market. The rate data confirms the severity of this shift: carriers in these sectors are not just holding the line; they are commanding massive premiums. Specialized carriers are securing paid rates $0.20/mile higher than posted averages, while heavy haul operators are extracting a $0.15/mile premium. For brokers, this signals a market where standard dry van freight is easily covered, but any load requiring specialized equipment requires aggressive bidding and immediate execution.

๐Ÿš› Specialized & Heavy Haul: The Capacity Scarcity Crisis

The specialized and heavy haul sectors are currently the most constrained and inflationary segments of the freight market. With heavy haul paid rates hitting $3.45/mile and specialized reaching $3.02/mile, carriers hold absolute leverage. This scarcity is being driven by a confluence of factors: robust infrastructure spending, seasonal construction peaks, and the severe Midwest flooding that is physically trapping specialized trailers in extended transit cycles. When a heavy haul rig is delayed by three days due to a flooded transcontinental route, that capacity is removed from the national pool, creating a compounding shortage. Brokers moving project cargo must abandon historical pricing models today; securing a specialized trailer requires paying the current market premium, and shippers must be educated on the reality of this localized capacity crisis.

๐Ÿ”ง The $5.659 Diesel Squeeze: Shrinking Radiuses and Rate Floors

The verified AAA diesel price of $5.659/gallon is fundamentally altering carrier behavior on the load boards today. At these fuel levels, the cost of empty miles is devastating to an owner-operator's bottom line. Consequently, carriers are aggressively shrinking their deadhead radiuses. A load that might have attracted a truck from 100 miles away last month now requires a carrier within a 30-mile radius. This dynamic explains why dry van rates show a broker advantage ($2.41 paid vs $2.45 posted)โ€”carriers are willing to take a slight discount on the linehaul *if* the load picks up immediately adjacent to their current location, thereby eliminating deadhead fuel burn. Brokers must adapt their sourcing strategies: blasting a load to a wide geographic radius is less effective than hyper-targeting carriers known to be unloading in the exact origin zip code.

Strategic Takeaways

High-Signal Additions

๐Ÿงญ Savvy Broker's Playbook

๐Ÿ”‘ Executive Signal Summary


๐Ÿง  What the market is really saying


๐Ÿ’ธ Best money-making moves for today

1) Buy open-deck early and sell service, not just linehaul


2) Use van as a tactical margin pocket, but only on clean freight


3) Defend price-sensitive accounts with LTL/Partial


4) Treat reefer as a truck-first market


5) Exploit Thursday as the best make-up window for Midwest open-deck


๐Ÿšš Mode-by-mode trading plan

๐Ÿš Dry Van


๐ŸงŠ Reefer


๐ŸŸง Flatbed


๐Ÿ—๏ธ Heavy Haul


๐ŸŸช Specialized


๐Ÿ“ฆ LTL/Partial


๐ŸŒŠ Midwest playbook: what to do by lunch


๐Ÿ—ฃ๏ธ How to negotiate in this market

๐Ÿค With carriers


๐Ÿงพ With shippers


๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ Risk controls to tighten immediately


๐Ÿ“ˆ 24โ€“72 hour probability map


๐Ÿ“‹ Desk priorities for maximum performance today

  1. Cover reefer, flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized before you finalize customer certainty
  2. Use van and LTL/Partial as your main margin-defense tools
  3. Price Midwest freight by origin radius, not lane average
  4. Call flood-affected facilities before assigning trucks
  5. Push flexible industrial freight into Thursday where possible
  6. Shorten quote validity on every weather-sensitive shipment
  7. Tighten carrier identity verification on hotshot, partial, and specialized loads
  8. Track these live desk metrics
    • time to cover
    • carrier fallout rate
    • paid-vs-posted spread by mode
    • accessorial recovery
    • on-time pickup percentage
    • number of quote revisions per shipment

๐Ÿงพ Bottom line

๐Ÿ“… This Day in History

1877: American Indian Wars: Sitting Bull leads his band of Lakota into Canada to avoid harassment by the United States Army under Colonel Nelson Miles.
1904: Pitching against the Philadelphia Athletics at the Huntington Avenue Grounds, Cy Young of the Boston Americans throws the first perfect game in the modern era of baseball.
1964: The Council of Europe declares May 5 as Europe Day.

๐Ÿ’ญ Quote of the Day

"You are the average of the five people you spend most time with."

โ€” Jim Rohn