📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Friday, July 03, 2026
11:48 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
On Friday, July 03, 2026, the domestic spot market is navigating a highly active pre-holiday environment. While total available loads on real-time platforms dipped slightly to 126,538, the market average rate remains exceptionally firm at $3.03/mile. This rate resilience, combined with a verified AAA national diesel average of $4.811/gallon, indicates that carriers are successfully commanding rate premiums to cover holiday-week runs. Severe regional flooding in the Midwest and South, alongside extreme heat warnings stretching across the Great Lakes, Northeast, and Central Plains, are compounding transit delays on major corridors like I-80, I-70, and I-10. For freight brokers, the positive spreads between posted and paid rates—particularly in the dry van ($0.21/mile) and reefer ($0.22/mile) sectors—present high-margin arbitrage opportunities for those who can lock in capacity early and leverage carrier desire for holiday-positioning.
Insight
Holiday pricing strength is strongest on loads with a reload story
Friday’s premium market is most durable on freight delivering into reload-rich markets rather than one-way holiday moves. Carriers are more willing to honor elevated rates into Atlanta, Savannah, Charlotte, Dallas, and other freight-dense hubs where Monday and Tuesday utilization looks defendable, while isolated destination freight is more exposed to late-day falloff and repricing.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Midwest River Flooding (Iowa (IA, Polk, Dallas, Jasper counties) and Illinois (IL, Pike, Scott counties)): Moderate flooding along Fourmile Creek and the Illinois River is disrupting local freight corridors, including I-35 and I-72. Water is affecting businesses and roads, forcing carriers to take circuitous routes and demand rate premiums to cover the extra miles.
- Gulf Coast River Flooding (Louisiana (LA, Washington, St. Tammany parishes) and Mississippi (MS, Pearl River, Hancock counties)): Minor flooding along the Pearl River is inundating secondary roads and threatening residential areas. This flooding is disrupting local freight movements and forcing carriers to reroute around the affected areas, particularly along the I-10 and I-59 corridors.
- Great Lakes and Northeast Extreme Heat (Michigan (MI), Ohio (OH), Connecticut (CT), Massachusetts (MA), Rhode Island (RI), and New York (NY)): Dangerously hot conditions with heat index values up to 105 degrees are increasing the risk of heat-related illnesses. This extreme heat is affecting driver HOS, reducing loading dock efficiency, and putting additional strain on reefer cooling units, potentially leading to equipment failures.
- Central Plains and Ohio Valley Extreme Heat (Kansas (KS), Missouri (MO), Ohio (OH), Pennsylvania (PA), West Virginia (WV), and Kentucky (KY)): Dangerously hot conditions with heat index values up to 110 degrees are expected. This extreme heat is restricting driver activity during peak daylight hours, slowing down loading operations, and increasing the risk of tire blowouts and engine overheating on major corridors like I-70 and I-80.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Midwest flooding remains an access problem even where skies improve
Central Iowa and Illinois should see better daytime driving weather, but flood disruptions will outlast the dry window because the real bottleneck is local access near rivers, industrial parks, and secondary routes. Another round of Iowa showers late Friday into Saturday raises the risk of fresh pickup and per mit-route delays, so linehaul timing may improve before first-mile and last-mile reliability does.
Weather Insight
Gulf Coast conditions favor loaded linehaul more than live-load flexibility
Around the Pearl River and Northshore corridor, mostly dry weather through Saturday should keep the mainline portion of I-10 and I-59 moves more serviceable than the flooding headlines imply. The bigger vulnerability is facility access on secondary roads, which makes drop-and-hook or preloaded weekend freight more dependable than small-shipper live loads until local water fully recedes.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Diesel futures are holding steady, reflecting a balance between easing global oil pressures and steady domestic demand, which suggests that fuel surcharges will remain stable in the near term.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small carrier margins remain under pressure due to high operating costs, though the current spot market rate spike is providing temporary financial relief for owner-operators.
- Economic Indicators: Strong consumer spending and retail inventory replenishment ahead of the back-to-school season are driving robust freight volumes, supporting elevated spot rates.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
FMCSA ELD Revocation Deadline Approaches on July 20, 2026 🔗:
The FMCSA's revocation of 12 ELD models due to safety and security deficiencies is forcing affected carriers to transition to compliant devices by July 20, 2026. Brokers must proactively verify that their carrier partners are utilizing compliant ELDs to avoid transit disruptions and potential out-of-service violations at roadside inspections. This regulatory enforcement is expected to temporarily sideline non-compliant capacity, further tightening the market.
-
July 4 Freight Demand Drives Spot Rates Upward 🔗:
Pre-holiday shipping demand has pushed dry van and reefer spot rates up significantly, with dry van rates rising 5.3 cents and reefer rates jumping 8.3 cents. This seasonal surge is driven by shippers rushing to clear docks and secure capacity before the holiday weekend. Brokers should leverage this rate momentum to secure high-margin loads, while preparing for a sharp drop in carrier availability over the next 48 hours.
-
Transpacific Ocean Freight Rates Surge to Pandemic-Era Peaks 🔗:
Ocean container spot rates from Asia to the US have surged, with Far East to US West Coast rates up 14% week-over-week to $6,639/FEU. This surge is driven by importers frontloading cargo to preempt potential tariffs and peak season disruptions. This massive influx of import volumes is expected to flood West Coast ports, driving a significant surge in domestic drayage and truckload demand out of Southern California in the coming weeks.
News Insight
ELD disruption is more likely to hit next week than on the deadline itself
The capacity impact from revoked ELDs should begin showing up before July 20 as small fleets and owner-operators take trucks down for installs, testing, and roadside-risk avoidance. Lanes that rely on one- and two-truck carriers—especially short Southeast turns, produce, and partials—are the most exposed to sudden resequencing if device compliance is not confirmed in advance.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast remains the most strategically important region for freight brokers today, driven by a powerful combination of peak summer produce harvests and a massive surge in import volumes at regional ports. Reefer capacity is exceptionally tight as carriers prioritize high-paying agricultural loads, while dry van capacity is being absorbed by retail distribution networks. This intense demand has created significant rate volatility, offering excellent arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can secure reliable capacity.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA → Orlando, FL: This lane is experiencing intense pre-holiday demand as retail and beverage distributors rush shipments into the Florida tourism hub. Dry van and reefer capacity is highly constrained, with carriers prioritizing short-haul, high-paying runs. The rate environment is highly favorable for carriers, with paid rates commanding a significant premium over posted averages.
Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC: This port-to-distribution-hub lane is seeing a massive surge in volume as importers rush to move frontloaded containerized cargo inland. Dry van capacity is tight, and flatbed demand is also strong for industrial machinery. The high volume of freight has created a highly competitive bidding environment.
Regional Insight
Savannah inland freight should stay firmer than the usual post-holiday pattern
Frontloaded import volume is likely to keep Savannah-to-Charlotte and nearby inland turns active even if the broader truckload market softens early next week. The tighter constraint is operational, not directional: chassis turns, gate flow, and warehouse appointments will decide coverage, so carriers with clean chassis access or drop capability can still command a premium over headline lane averages.
- Bundle port loads into two-turn commitments where possible.
- Protect detention and appointment slippage in quotes, not after the fact.
Regional Insight
Atlanta to Orlando works best when the northbound reload is arranged first
Southbound holiday freight into Central Florida will remain expensive, but the sharper brokerage play is securing the return leg before booking the inbound truck. Carriers are far more flexible on Orlando pricing when a Monday or Tuesday reload is already tied to beverage, retail, or food freight moving back toward Georgia or the Southeast distribution belt.
📊 Analyzing Today's Load Board Dynamics and Rate Spreads
Today's real-time load board data reveals a highly active spot market, with total available loads holding firm at 126,538. While this represents a slight decline from yesterday's pre-holiday rush, the market average rate has remained resilient at $3.03/mile. This rate stability indicates that carriers are successfully demanding premium pricing to cover remaining time-sensitive freight before the holiday weekend.
A closer look at the equipment-specific data reveals significant margin opportunities for brokers. In the dry van sector, the average paid rate of $2.96/mile is $0.21/mile higher than the average posted rate of $2.75/mile. This substantial spread suggests that shippers are willing to pay a premium to secure capacity, allowing brokers to negotiate favorable margins if they can source trucks efficiently. Similarly, the reefer sector shows a $0.22/mile carrier premium, with paid rates averaging $3.47/mile against posted rates of $3.25/mile, driven by the urgent demand for temperature-controlled equipment during peak produce season.
Conversely, the specialized sector is showing a rare broker advantage, with paid rates averaging $3.09/mile, which is $0.05/mile lower than the average posted rate of $3.14/mile. This anomaly suggests that specialized carriers are aggressively bidding on available loads to secure backhauls and position their equipment ahead of the holiday, offering brokers a unique opportunity to move specialized cargo at a discount.
🚛 Reefer Capacity: Peak Produce Collides with Pre-Holiday Demand
The temperature-controlled sector is currently the most volatile and high-demand segment of the freight market. With 7,474 available reefer loads on the board, capacity is at an extreme premium. This tightness is driven by the collision of the peak summer produce harvest—including watermelons from Georgia and Texas, and blueberries from Michigan—with the urgent pre-holiday demand for perishable food and beverage shipments.
This intense demand has pushed average paid reefer rates to $3.47/mile, representing a significant premium over the posted average of $3.25/mile. Carriers are highly selective, prioritizing short-haul, high-paying runs that allow drivers to return home for the holiday. Furthermore, extreme heat warnings across the Central Plains and Midwest are putting additional strain on reefer cooling units, increasing the risk of equipment failure and cargo spoilage.
Brokers must act decisively to secure reefer capacity. Utilizing backhaul opportunities for carriers returning to high-demand agricultural zones is a key strategy to negotiate competitive rates. Additionally, brokers should advise shippers to ensure cargo is pre-cooled to the correct temperature before loading to mitigate the risk of heat-related claims.
🌐 Import Frontloading Drives Domestic Freight Surge
The domestic freight market is experiencing a significant indirect boost from global ocean shipping dynamics. Transpacific ocean container rates have surged to pandemic-era peaks, with Far East to US West Coast rates jumping 14% week-over-week to $6,639/FEU. This surge is driven by importers aggressively frontloading cargo to preempt potential tariffs and ongoing disruptions near the Strait of Hormuz.
This massive influx of import volumes is already translating into increased domestic demand. As containers arrive at West Coast and East Coast ports, they are driving a surge in drayage and transloading activity, which in turn is fueling truckload demand out of major port cities like Savannah and Los Angeles. This early peak season volume is absorbing domestic capacity, keeping spot rates elevated and preventing the typical post-holiday rate collapse.
Brokers should prepare for sustained volume growth out of port regions through the summer. Sourcing capacity near major ports and distribution hubs will be critical to capitalizing on this import-driven freight wave.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Buy critical van and reefer capacity before midday; late-day tenders face a steeper risk of fallout than a larger rate move.
- In flooded markets, quote extra access time even when weather improves; local roads and facility approaches remain the weak link.
- Sell Southeast loads on roundtrip economics, especially Florida and Savannah freight, to improve acceptance and protect margin.
- Verify ELD compliance now on small-carrier coverage for next week’s freight to avoid avoidable resequencing.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a smaller board, not a cheaper market.
- Total available loads are 126,538, down 8.7% from 138,664.
- Yet the national average rate is still $3.03/mile, which tells you the freight still exposed is urgent, selective, and expensive to replace.
Paid-market reality is still above posted-market optimism.
- Dry van: $2.75 posted / $2.96 paid = +$0.21/mile
- Reefer: $3.25 posted / $3.47 paid = +$0.22/mile
- Flatbed: $3.35 posted / $3.55 paid = +$0.20/mile
- Heavy haul: $3.49 posted / $3.62 paid = +$0.13/mile
- LTL (Less Than Truckload) / partial: $1.78 posted / $1.88 paid = +$0.10/mile
- Specialized: $3.14 posted / $3.09 paid = -$0.05/mile broker edge
Do not use the $3.03 all-mode average to buy dry vans.
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized account for 91,302 of 126,538 loads, or 72.2% of total volume.
- That means the national average is being pulled upward by higher-rated open-deck and specialty freight.
The real risk this afternoon is trip quality, not just linehaul price.
- Carriers are choosing freight based on:
- home time
- reload visibility
- dock speed
- deadhead
- weekend position
Weather is turning normal loads into margin-leak loads.
- The flood issue in Iowa, Illinois, Louisiana, and Mississippi is mostly an access and routing problem.
- The heat issue across the Great Lakes, Northeast, Central Plains, and Ohio Valley is mostly a productivity and equipment-stress problem.
Today’s cleanest tactical edge is still specialized freight with exact scope.
- A -$0.05/mile broker advantage is unusual in a holiday-tight market.
- It is real only when you provide precise dimensions, handling needs, and tight appointment design.
🧠 What the market is really saying
Carriers are pricing the whole weekend outcome.
- A truck ending in Atlanta, Savannah, Charlotte, Dallas, or another reload-rich market is worth materially more than a truck ending in a weak one-way destination.
- That is why reload story beats small rate bumps right now.
Shippers who waited are no longer buying transportation; they are buying certainty.
- When load count falls but paid rates hold, the remaining freight is usually:
- late-booked
- time-sensitive
- weather-touched
- operationally messy
- harder to recover if it slips
Rising OTRI (Outbound Tender Rejection Index) is reinforcing the spot market.
- Contract carriers are rejecting more tendered freight to chase better spot opportunities.
- For brokers, that means replacement cost is rising faster than posted boards suggest.
Diesel at $4.811/gallon keeps locality valuable.
- High fuel cost punishes unpaid deadhead.
- The trucks you want most today are:
- already close
- already pointed the right direction
- already comfortable with the shipper
- already able to see the next move
💰 Margin Map by Equipment Type
🚚 Dry Van
- Market read: Tight execution despite softer volume
- Data: 18,964 loads, $2.75 posted, $2.96 paid
- What matters:
- Volume is down 8.9%, but the paid market is still $0.21/mile above posted.
- That usually means the easy trucks are gone and the remaining capacity wants better trip design.
- Best broker plays:
- Cover must-move freight before midday
- Sell the load on Monday reload visibility
- Use local or network-fit carriers instead of bargain out-of-position trucks
- Convert flexible truckload freight to LTL/partial early
- Big mistake:
- Quoting from load-board fiction instead of replacement-cost reality
🥬 Reefer
- Market read: Most time-sensitive and most failure-sensitive segment
- Data: 7,474 loads, $3.25 posted, $3.47 paid
- What matters:
- Reefer volume only slipped 5.2%, much less than the broader market.
- That is a sign of persistent tightness, not relief.
- Peak produce plus heat means equipment integrity matters as much as rate.
- Best broker plays:
- Verify pre-cool before dispatch
- Confirm setpoint, reefer fuel level, and continuous-run instructions
- Target carriers who want return freight into Texas, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, or California
- Favor carriers with proven produce discipline over the cheapest option
- Big mistake:
- Buying a cheap reefer with weak temperature-control habits and hoping claims do not follow
🏗️ Flatbed
- Market read: High volume, high hidden-cost risk
- Data: 50,285 loads, $3.35 posted, $3.55 paid
- What matters:
- Flatbed is still the largest bucket.
- 20,208 flatbed loads have already moved, so the decline in posted volume is not inactivity.
- Flood detours and heat reduce daily productivity more than brokers often price for.
- Best broker plays:
- Price tarping, detention, route deviation, and layover risk upfront
- Confirm yard access, loading method, and securement scope
- Move flood-exposed freight early in the day
- Big mistake:
- Quoting ideal route miles while ignoring real turn-time loss
🏭 Heavy Haul
- Market read: Permit and routing discipline matter more than spread
- Data: 25,022 loads, $3.49 posted, $3.62 paid
- What matters:
- This segment is down 10.6%, the sharpest decline among the major modes.
- That is less about weak demand and more about shrinking usable execution windows around the holiday.
- Best broker plays:
- Lock dimensions, axle details, escort needs, and route assumptions immediately
- Build extra time into any flood-affected route
- Warn customers early when permits and closures threaten timing
- Big mistake:
- Promising standard transit on a holiday-week permitted move
⚙️ Specialized
- Market read: Best pure broker leverage on the board
- Data: 15,995 loads, $3.14 posted, $3.09 paid
- What matters:
- This -$0.05/mile spread means some carriers are accepting less to position equipment advantageously.
- It is the rare spot today where the broker can press a rate edge.
- Best broker plays:
- Target favorable destination markets and homebound positioning
- Post exact dimensions and handling details
- Use this for quick-turn, clean-scope wins
- Big mistake:
- Leaving load details vague and letting a small buy-side edge turn into a big service failure
📦 LTL / Partial
- Market read: Useful overflow valve, not a discount lane
- Data: 8,798 loads, $1.78 posted, $1.88 paid
- What matters:
- LTL/partial is down only 2.5%, making it one of the more stable escape valves.
- That matters when truckload gets too expensive or too fragile.
- Best broker plays:
- Offer partials early on palletized, flexible freight
- Use consolidation to clear dock pressure
- Frame it as a planning choice, not a service downgrade
- Big mistake:
- Waiting until truckload fails before suggesting partial
🌦️ Weather-Adjusted Strategy
Midwest flooding: Price access risk, not just highway risk
- The problem is not simply interstate movement.
- The bigger issue is:
- industrial park access
- secondary roads
- facility entrances
- appointment recovery
- Broker move: add time and accessorial protection even if skies improve.
Pearl River / Gulf Coast flooding: Loaded linehaul is more dependable than live-load improvisation
- I-10 and I-59 mainline movement is more workable than the headlines imply.
- The weak point is local facility access.
- Broker move: favor drop-and-hook, preloaded trailers, or known-access shippers.
Extreme heat across Midwest, Northeast, Central Plains, and Ohio Valley: Productivity drag is real
- Expect:
- slower live loads
- more driver resistance to ugly appointments
- higher reefer strain
- more tire and cooling-system issues
- Broker move: load earlier, pad appointment windows, and avoid stacking unrealistic same-day turns.
🗺️ Best Regional and Lane Plays
🍊 Atlanta, GA → Orlando, FL
- Market truth: This is a round-trip lane, not a one-way lane
- What wins:
- Secure the northbound reload first
- Sell unload speed and receiver reliability
- Use carriers already comfortable with Florida turns
- Why:
- Carriers do not fear the southbound move as much as they fear getting stranded in weak reload territory
- Broker posture:
- Quote the lane as a two-move economic package whenever possible
🚢 Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC
- Market truth: This is a turn-time market, not a cents-per-mile market
- What wins:
- Bundle port loads into two-turn commitments
- Protect detention and appointment slippage in the quote
- Use carriers with clean chassis access and fast gate familiarity
- Why:
- Inland port turns should stay firmer than the typical post-holiday pattern because import frontloading is supporting inland demand.
- Broker posture:
- Sell reliability and velocity, not just headline rate
🌽 Midwest produce and industrial corridors
- Market truth: Reefer and flatbed overlap is amplifying stress
- What wins:
- Keep reefer backhauls tied to produce states
- Price flood detours on open deck before booking
- Avoid tight appointment promises into flood-adjacent receivers
- Broker posture:
- Treat these as productivity-risk lanes, not simple mileage lanes
⚠️ Risk Controls That Protect Margin Today
Receiver-hours control
- Call and verify holiday hours directly
- Do not rely on yesterday’s assumptions.
ELD (Electronic Logging Device) compliance control
- With the July 20 FMCSA (Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration) revocation deadline approaching, some small fleets will start taking trucks down before the deadline.
- Verify device compliance now, especially on:
- small-carrier spot buys
- produce
- partials
- short Southeast turns
Reefer claim control
- Confirm pre-cool
- Confirm setpoint
- Confirm product temperature responsibility
- Confirm continuous run if required
- Confirm tracking and reefer fuel
Fraud and double-broker control
- Holiday rescue freight attracts bad actors.
- Release pickup numbers only after identity and authority are fully verified.
Accessorial recovery control
- In this market, brokers often book the margin and lose it later.
- Document detention, layover, reroute, and limited-access issues in writing before problems occur.
📞 Best Conversation Angles for Today
With shippers:
- “The posted market is not the executable market.”
- “The loads still uncovered are the hardest loads, not the cheapest loads.”
- “If this freight is flexible, partial today is cheaper than a rescue truck later.”
- “Weather risk is mostly dwell and access risk, so we need approval for time protection now.”
With carriers:
- Lead with trip quality first
- ready freight
- real appointment
- fast unload
- reload path
- limited deadhead
- For reefer, show operational credibility
- setpoint known
- pre-cool known
- commodity known
- return lane known
- For Florida and holiday freight, lead with the next move
- the reload story often closes the truck faster than the linehaul number
🛠️ Desk Plan for the Next 6 Hours
First priority bucket
- Buy now:
- reefer
- flood-exposed flatbed
- permit-sensitive heavy haul
- Florida-bound freight
- Reprice now:
- any dry van still quoted near posted-market assumptions
- Convert now:
- flexible palletized shipments to LTL/partial
Midday actions
- Call every holiday receiver
- Tighten accessorial language on weather-touched freight
- Shift coverage to vetted local carriers
- Push shippers to approve realistic service windows
Late-day actions
- Assume capacity gets more selective, not cheaper
- Avoid rescue buys from unfamiliar carriers unless compliance is clean
- Walk away from one-way freight into weak reload markets unless margin justifies the risk
🎯 24–72 Hour Probability Map
Base case — most likely
- Spot rates stay firm through the final holiday window
- Reload-rich Southeast freight holds better than isolated one-way freight
- Reefer and open-deck remain the hardest clean covers
Stress case
- Late-day uncovered freight pays a sharp service premium
- Heat creates more dwell, more reefer exceptions, and more appointment misses
- Flood markets create margin erosion through accessorial disputes, not full shutdowns
Opportunity case
- Specialized remains a selective broker edge
- Savannah inland turns outperform a normal post-holiday slowdown
- Early LTL/partial conversions protect both margin and customer trust
🏁 Bottom Line
- The board is smaller, but the freight left is better for carriers and harder for brokers.
- Dry van and reefer should be bought from paid-market logic, not posted-market hope.
- Flatbed and heavy haul need productivity pricing, not mileage-only pricing.
- Specialized is the best tactical broker edge, but only with exact scope.
- The best brokers today will reduce uncertainty before lunch: receiver hours, access, reload story, compliance, and documentation.
💡 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
1767: Norway's oldest newspaper still in print, Adresseavisen, is founded and the first edition is published.
1778: American Revolutionary War: The Iroquois, allied with Britain, massacre 360 Patriot soldiers during the Battle of Wyoming.
1952: The SS United States sets sail on her maiden voyage to Southampton. During the voyage, the ship takes the Blue Riband away from the RMS Queen Mary.
💭 Quote of the Day
"Life is like riding a bicycle. To keep your balance you must keep moving."
— Albert Einstein