📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Thursday, June 18, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
On Thursday, June 18, 2026, the domestic spot market shows stable overall volume with 167,975 available loads, while the national average rate holds firm at $3.03/mile. High operating costs persist as the national AAA diesel average drops slightly to $5.129/gallon, establishing a rigid cost floor that limits carrier deadhead and keeps capacity highly localized. Peak summer produce harvests in the Southeast and West Coast are driving intense temperature-controlled demand, while severe flash flooding in Louisiana, Mississippi, and the Ohio Valley disrupts major transit corridors like I-10, I-12, and I-64. For freight brokers, these regional capacity imbalances and the widening spread between posted and paid rates across flatbed, reefer, and heavy-haul sectors present high-margin arbitrage opportunities.
Insight
Gulf Coast disruption is likely to outlast today's storms
The Louisiana-Mississippi flood setup looks more like a rolling two- to three-day operating constraint than a same-day weather event. East-west freight moving across the Gulf on I-10 and I-12 should be quoted with extra transit protection through Saturday, with the tightest pressure on time-definite reefer and flatbed moves that cannot easily shift north.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Flash Flood Warning (Gulf Coast Region (LA, MS)): Heavy rainfall of 3 to 6 inches, with additional amounts of 1 to 3 inches possible, is causing life-threatening flash flooding in southeastern Louisiana and southern Mississippi. This weather pattern may disrupt major freight corridors including I-10, I-12, and I-59, potentially delaying transit times and tightening regional capacity as drivers avoid flooded underpasses and highways.
- Flash Flood Warning (Ohio Valley Region (IN, KY, OH)): Doppler radar indicates thunderstorms producing heavy rain, with 2 to 3.5 inches already fallen and additional accumulation expected. This flooding poses a significant risk to major north-south and east-west corridors, including I-64, I-65, and I-265, which could delay regional freight movements and force carriers to take lengthy detours.
- Flood Warning (Midwest River Basins (IL, IA, IN)): Ongoing river flooding, particularly along the Illinois River, is inundating bottomlands and local roads. While major interstate corridors remain open, local access roads to manufacturing and agricultural facilities are affected, which could delay loading and unloading operations and restrict open-deck equipment positioning.
- Extreme Heat Warning (South Texas (TX)): Dangerously hot conditions with heat index values up to 115-120 degrees are expected across southern and coastal Texas. This extreme heat poses severe safety risks for drivers during loading/unloading and increases the risk of equipment failures, particularly tire blowouts and reefer unit breakdowns along the I-35 and I-10 corridors.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Ohio Valley delays should ease faster than the Gulf Coast
Around southern Indiana and the Louisville market, the heaviest disruption is concentrated today, with better recovery potential Friday into Saturday as conditions improve. The bigger issue there is likely to be missed appointments and late reloads on I-64 and I-65 rather than a prolonged capacity seizure, which makes short-notice recovery freight a more realistic play by tomorrow.
Weather Insight
Illinois river flooding remains a first-mile risk for open-deck freight
Major interstate flow is still the easier part of the move; the real exposure is at plant, quarry, and farm access roads near the river basin.
- Confirm site access and crane readiness before dispatching flatbed or heavy-haul equipment.
- Sunday's forecast rain raises the odds of another round of loading-window slippage even if linehaul routing stays open.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Diesel futures show minor downward pressure following the recent reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, which has pulled crude prices below $80/barrel. However, retail diesel prices remain sticky, keeping carrier operating costs high in the near term.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small fleets and owner-operators continue to face severe financial pressure due to the combination of high fuel costs and flat spot rates over the past year. This is driving ongoing market consolidation, with many small carriers leasing onto larger fleets or exiting the market entirely.
- Economic Indicators: The latest economic data shows stable manufacturing output and resilient consumer spending, which is supporting steady freight volumes. However, rising tariff complexities and geopolitical uncertainties are prompting shippers to pull inventory forward, creating early peak season demand.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
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Logistics Market Undergoing a 'Structural Reset' as Volatility Becomes the Norm 🔗:
The 2026 State of Logistics Report highlights that supply chain managers must view disruption and volatility as permanent fixtures rather than temporary anomalies. For brokers, this 'structural reset' means that static pricing models are increasingly obsolete. Shippers will value rate stability and capacity guarantees over the lowest spot quote. Brokers should leverage real-time market intelligence to offer flexible, index-based pricing and position themselves as strategic partners capable of navigating constant market shifts.
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Standardized Fuel Surcharges Offer Shippers and Brokers a Path to Cost Predictability 🔗:
With geopolitical tensions driving volatile fuel surcharges and the introduction of Emergency Bunker Adjustment Factors (eBAFs), the lack of standardization is creating a massive administrative burden. Drewry's Standard BAF Policy demonstrates that a transparent, market-aligned mechanism can reduce fuel-related costs by up to 15% while simplifying carrier comparisons. Brokers should use this as a talking point with shippers, proposing standardized fuel surcharge programs to eliminate billing disputes and improve budget predictability.
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C.H. Robinson Named Defendant in Florida Broker Liability Case, Signaling Heightened Vetting Risks 🔗:
Following the landmark Montgomery v. Caribe Transport II ruling, this new Florida case targets a major freight broker for negligent hiring. This underscores the critical importance of rigorous carrier vetting. Brokers can no longer rely on basic FMCSA active status; they must implement automated, multi-layered compliance checks. Sourcing carriers with limited operating history or unrated safety profiles—even those with clean records like Tuscaloosa Tornado Shelters—poses a severe liability risk if a catastrophic accident occurs. Strict vetting is mandatory to protect the brokerage from devastating legal claims.
News Insight
Carrier vetting speed is becoming a commercial advantage
Heightened negligent-hiring exposure is not just a legal story; it is a near-term capacity story for flatbed, specialized, and heavy-haul. As more brokers narrow their approved carrier pools, the firms that can clear insurance, safety, authority, and identity checks in minutes will cover faster and buy less freight at the end of the day.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast remains the most strategically important region for freight brokers today. Peak summer produce harvests (peaches, blueberries, and watermelons) are driving intense reefer demand, while a surge in container imports at the Port of Savannah is keeping dry van and flatbed volumes highly active. However, severe weather is complicating operations, with flash flood warnings in Louisiana and Mississippi disrupting the I-10 and I-12 corridors. This combination of high seasonal demand, import volume, and weather-induced routing bottlenecks is creating localized capacity shortages and significant rate volatility.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA → Miami, FL: This high-volume lane is experiencing a significant seasonal shift. Outbound Atlanta volume is robust, driven by regional distribution and manufacturing, while Florida is traditionally a backhaul state. However, with the peak summer produce season in full swing, reefer and dry van equipment is in high demand to move consumer goods and groceries south, while carriers look to reposition for outbound Florida agricultural loads. This creates a highly dynamic rate environment with tight capacity on the southbound leg.
Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC: This short-haul corridor is highly active, driven by a surge in container imports at the Port of Savannah and strong industrial demand in Charlotte. Flatbed and dry van equipment are in high demand to move raw materials, construction supplies, and retail goods. The short distance makes it highly attractive to regional carriers and owner-operators, but high fuel costs are keeping local capacity tight and rates volatile.
Regional Insight
Atlanta-Miami is strongest when sold as a two-load cycle
Southbound margin is still workable because carriers want to reposition into Florida, but the sharper move is locking in the return while booking the outbound. A consumer-goods load into Florida paired with a committed northbound produce or grocery reload protects margin far better than treating Atlanta-Miami as a one-way cover, especially with weekend harvest loading set to harden reefer pricing.
Regional Insight
Savannah-Charlotte margin will be won or lost on wait time
On short port lanes, underestimating terminal and chassis delay is more dangerous than underestimating mileage. With diesel still above $5, regional carriers are less willing to absorb unpaid dwell, and that is pushing more all-in quoting behavior on port-outbound van and flatbed freight.
- Build detention and pickup-window cushions into port quotes instead of relying on a clean same-day turn.
- Afternoon discharge bunching at Savannah can tighten next-morning truck supply into Charlotte faster than posted rates suggest.
📰 Breaking Down: C.H. Robinson Named Defendant in Post-Montgomery Broker Liability Case
The recent filing of a broker liability lawsuit in Florida naming C.H. Robinson as a defendant marks a critical turning point for the freight brokerage industry. Coming on the heels of the landmark Montgomery v. Caribe Transport II ruling, this case signals that the legal system is actively targeting freight brokers for negligent hiring practices. The core of the legal argument is that brokers have a duty of care to ensure that the carriers they contract with are safe, compliant, and properly insured. Failing to perform adequate due diligence is no longer just an operational risk; it is a catastrophic legal liability.
For freight brokers, this development necessitates an immediate and thorough overhaul of carrier vetting protocols. Relying solely on basic FMCSA active status is no longer sufficient to establish a defense against negligent hiring claims. Brokers must implement automated, multi-layered compliance checks that continuously monitor carrier safety ratings, out-of-service rates, crash histories, and insurance validity. Sourcing carriers with limited operating history, unrated safety profiles, or high out-of-service rates—even if they have active authority—poses a severe risk.
This heightened legal scrutiny will inevitably shrink the usable carrier pool, as brokers must disqualify carriers that fail to meet strict safety thresholds. This capacity contraction will be particularly acute in highly fragmented sectors like flatbed and specialized transport, where owner-operators and small fleets dominate. Brokers must balance the urgent need to cover loads with the absolute necessity of protecting their business from devastating legal claims, making robust, automated vetting tools a mandatory operational requirement.
🚛 Reefer: Peak Produce Season Collides with Gulf Coast Flooding
The temperature-controlled sector is currently experiencing its most volatile period of the year. Available reefer loads rose 3.5% overnight to 7,972, defying the general spot market dip and highlighting the intense demand driven by the peak summer produce season. Paid reefer rates are averaging $3.24/mile, commanding a strong $0.19/mile carrier premium over posted rates. This premium is heavily concentrated in primary agricultural shipping origins across California, Georgia, and South Carolina, where shippers are competing fiercely for pre-cooled equipment to move time-sensitive commodities like blueberries, peaches, and tomatoes.
However, this seasonal demand is colliding with severe weather disruptions. Flash flood warnings in Louisiana and Mississippi (WX73B84310) are causing significant delays along the I-10 and I-12 corridors, trapping reefer equipment and disrupting transit schedules. This has created a localized capacity squeeze, as drivers avoid flooded areas or face lengthy detours, further driving up spot rates. Brokers must prepare for extended transit times and factor these weather-induced bottlenecks into their pricing.
Conversely, this regional imbalance creates a unique opportunity for brokers. Carriers delivering produce inbound to major metropolitan areas are eager to secure return loads to high-demand agricultural zones. By targeting these inbound lanes, brokers can negotiate highly favorable backhaul rates with carriers looking to quickly reposition their equipment, maximizing margins while helping carriers return to lucrative produce-origin markets.
📅 Mid-June Produce Transitions and the Approaching End-of-Quarter Surge
As we cross the midpoint of June, the freight market is entering a critical transitional phase. Over the next 7 to 14 days, several major seasonal factors will converge, creating a highly volatile capacity environment. First, the peak Southeast peach and blueberry harvests are beginning to transition northward, with Georgia and South Carolina volumes starting to wind down while North Carolina and New Jersey prepare to ramp up. Simultaneously, California's Central Valley is reaching maximum reefer demand for tomatoes and melons, shifting the national capacity balance westward.
This agricultural transition will collide directly with the traditional end-of-quarter shipping surge. As shippers push to clear inventories and meet Q2 financial targets by June 30, retail and manufacturing volumes will spike. This surge will place immense pressure on dry van and LTL capacity, which is already showing signs of tightening as dry van spot rates flip to a carrier premium. The combination of peak produce demand and the end-of-quarter push will create a severe capacity squeeze, particularly in major freight hubs like Atlanta, Chicago, and Los Angeles.
Brokers must act proactively to protect their margins. This is the time to secure committed or dedicated capacity for late-June shipments, rather than relying on the highly volatile spot market. Shippers should be advised of the upcoming capacity squeeze, and brokers should use this opportunity to secure rate increases on spot freight while offering guaranteed capacity to high-value clients.
💰 Capitalizing on the Posted-vs-Paid Rate Spread
An analysis of today's real-time load board data reveals significant rate spreads across equipment types, offering high-margin arbitrage opportunities for savvy brokers. Flatbed rates show a substantial $0.19/mile carrier premium ($3.69 paid vs $3.50 posted), while Heavy Haul commands a $0.23/mile premium ($3.84 paid vs $3.61 posted). In contrast, dry van rates show a tight $0.03/mile carrier premium ($2.71 paid vs $2.68 posted). This wide variation indicates that open-deck and specialized capacity are highly mispriced on load boards, with carriers successfully demanding higher rates at the negotiating table due to tight capacity and weather disruptions.
Brokers who post flatbed or heavy-haul loads at average market rates will struggle to cover them, leading to service failures and lost revenue. Instead, brokers should use real-time paid rate data to quote shippers accurately, factoring in the necessary carrier premiums to secure reliable equipment. By quoting shippers based on actual paid rates and negotiating aggressively with carriers, brokers can protect their margins while ensuring high service levels.
Furthermore, the tight spread in the dry van sector suggests that van capacity remains relatively accessible, despite the minor volume contraction. Brokers should focus on high-volume van lanes where they can leverage the tight posted-vs-paid spread to secure consistent margins, while reserving their negotiating energy and premium pricing for the highly volatile flatbed and reefer sectors where capacity is genuinely constrained.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Treat Gulf Coast east-west freight as a multi-day exception market through Saturday, not a one-day weather delay.
- Use southbound freight into Florida and Georgia to set up northbound produce reloads; one-way reefer pricing will get squeezed.
- Protect short-haul port margins with detention, chassis, and appointment buffers rather than mileage-only quotes.
- In flatbed and specialized, faster compliance approval is now directly tied to coverage quality and buy-rate control.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
The market is not loose; it is just deceptively calm at the top line.
Total available loads sit at 167,975, down 1.8% from 171,007, while the national average rate is $3.03/mile.
Every tracked mode is paying above posted today.
That matters more than the headline average:
- Van: $2.68 posted / $2.71 paid
- Reefer: $3.05 posted / $3.24 paid
- Flatbed: $3.50 posted / $3.69 paid
- Heavy haul: $3.61 posted / $3.84 paid
- Specialized: $3.12 posted / $3.33 paid
- LTL (Less Than Truckload)/Partial: $1.77 posted / $1.82 paid
There is no clean national buy-side pocket this morning.
Yesterday’s easy assumptions are gone. Even dry van and LTL/partial have flipped to a carrier premium.
Open-deck still controls the day.
Flatbed + heavy haul + specialized = 125,170 loads, or roughly 74.5% of all available freight. Those same segments account for 43,103 moved loads, about 81.8% of all freight moved so far. If you misread open-deck, you misread the market.
Diesel at $5.129/gallon is still a behavioral floor.
Carriers will not chase cheap freight far. Reload certainty, dwell risk, and route reliability are still more important than posted rate averages.
Weather is reducing productivity more than truck count.
The Gulf Coast issue is a multi-day service problem. The Ohio Valley looks more like a same-day disruption with recovery freight behind it. Illinois river flooding remains a first-mile access problem for open-deck freight.
Compliance speed is now a commercial edge.
In flatbed, specialized, and heavy haul, the broker who can clear authority, insurance, safety, identity, and equipment fastest will cover earlier and buy cheaper.
🧠 What the market is really saying
Top-line stability is masking execution pressure.
Available loads are only modestly lower, but loads moved are 52,668 versus 54,449 yesterday. That is a strong sign that truck productivity is slipping. Fewer completed turns means replacement cost rises faster later in the day.
The drop in the national average rate to $3.03 is not a “cheap freight” signal.
When the blended market average softens while every mode still shows paid above posted, the usual explanation is mix shift and productivity distortion, not easy capacity. In plain English: the board looks tradable, but real coverage is lane-specific and time-sensitive.
Carrier psychology is still hyper-local.
At $5.129 diesel, carriers are asking:
- Where is my next load?
- Will weather wreck my turn?
- Will I sit unpaid at the shipper or receiver?
- Will this lane trap me in a weak reload market?
Shipper psychology will be the trap today.
Some customers will hear “stable volume” and expect flat pricing. That is the wrong read in reefer, flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized, and it is becoming the wrong read even in van on the wrong lane.
OTRI (Outbound Tender Rejection Index) staying elevated in the Southeast and Midwest matters.
It tells you contract carriers are still walking away from some contracted freight to pursue better spot opportunities. That keeps the spot market firmer than board counts alone suggest.
💵 Where the best margin decisions are today
🚚 Dry Van: Usable, but no longer a gift
What the numbers say
- 23,933 loads
- $2.68 posted / $2.71 paid
- $0.03/mile carrier premium
What it means
- Van is still the least dangerous full-truckload mode to quote, but it is not a broker-advantage market nationally.
- The win condition is buying early on clean freight, especially regional lanes with believable reloads.
What to do
- Pre-cover port-adjacent and Southeast outbound freight early
- Tighten quote validity
- Avoid selling same-day “normal transit” through weather-exposed lanes
- Favor carriers already positioned near the freight over cheaper out-of-market options
Margin reality
- On a 500-mile van load, the spread between posted and paid is only about $15.
- That means one hour of unplanned dwell can wipe out the edge.
🧊 Reefer: Still premium-first, but more strategic than panicked
What the numbers say
- 7,972 loads
- $3.05 posted / $3.24 paid
- $0.19/mile carrier premium
What it means
- Produce is still driving the market, but the premium is less explosive than last week’s environment.
- That is not weakness. It is a sign the market is still tight, but selectively tradeable if you control roundtrip economics.
What to do
- Quote replacement cost, not posted-rate hope
- Require commodity, temperature, pre-cool status, shipper load time, and receiver appointment tolerance before posting
- Sell two-load cycles into Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, California, Texas, and New Jersey
- Target inbound freight into produce regions so you can buy the backhaul leg cheaper
Margin reality
- On a 500-mile reefer load, the average paid premium is about $95 before detention, layover, or claims risk.
- That is why the cheapest reefer is often the most expensive outcome.
🪵 Flatbed: Large market, low forgiveness
What the numbers say
- 72,868 loads
- $3.50 posted / $3.69 paid
- $0.19/mile carrier premium
What it means
- Flatbed is still the market’s center of gravity.
- The biggest mistake today is treating open-deck freight like mileage-only freight. It is turn-time freight, site-access freight, and weather-risk freight.
What to do
- Quote routed miles, not ideal map miles
- Confirm tarp requirements, securement needs, crane/forklift readiness, and site accessibility before tender
- Build first-mile risk into Illinois river basin shipments
- Add delay language on Gulf-linked east-west freight
Margin reality
- On a 500-mile flatbed move, underestimating the spread costs about $95 before accessorials.
- Under-scoping loading conditions will hurt more than rate negotiation will save.
What the numbers say
- 32,779 loads
- $3.61 posted / $3.84 paid
- $0.23/mile carrier premium
What it means
- This is the most clearly carrier-led pricing market on the board.
- Flooded or restricted routing in Illinois, Indiana, and Missouri exposure areas increases permit and transit uncertainty.
What to do
- Do not quote from dimensions alone
- Validate axle count, route, permit lead time, escort exposure, and delivery-site constraints
- Use pre-approved heavy-haul carriers first
- Add time cushion before promising appointment compliance
Margin reality
- On a 500-mile heavy-haul load, the spread is about $115 before permits and escorts.
- One bad assumption turns a “good margin” into a loss.
⚙️ Specialized: Firm, relationship-driven, and increasingly compliance-sensitive
What the numbers say
- 19,523 loads
- $3.12 posted / $3.33 paid
- $0.21/mile carrier premium
What it means
- Specialized capacity is not broad-market capacity. It is approved-carrier capacity.
- The legal climate is making brokers more selective, which means approved trucks clear the market faster and hold rate better.
What to do
- Use known carriers before load-board experiments
- Require full scope: dimensions, weight, load method, unload method, and any route sensitivities
- Treat setup speed as margin protection
📦 LTL/Partial: Still useful, but no longer a buy-side escape hatch
What the numbers say
- 10,900 loads
- $1.77 posted / $1.82 paid
- $0.05/mile carrier premium
What it means
- The 8.9% jump in available loads is telling you shippers are using partials to avoid truckload pain.
- But unlike earlier this week, this is not a national broker-advantage mode today.
What to do
- Use partials as a capacity valve, not a cheap-capacity assumption
- Consolidate flexible freight where appointment windows allow
- Convert marginal full truckload shipments into partial programs if service tolerance exists
- Move fast on dense metro freight where quote speed wins
🗺️ Regional battlegrounds for the next 24–72 hours
🌴 Southeast: Still the best urgency market
Why it matters
- Produce from Georgia, South Carolina, Texas, California, and New Jersey is keeping reefer demand elevated.
- Port activity around Savannah is helping van and short-haul demand.
- Elevated OTRI (Outbound Tender Rejection Index) means contract leakage is still feeding spot opportunities.
Broker posture
- Buy capacity before lunch
- Sell certainty, not cheapness
- Use inbound freight to secure better outbound coverage into produce markets
🌧️ Gulf Coast east-west: Quote it as a weekend problem, not a morning problem
Why it matters
- Flooding in Louisiana and Mississippi is disrupting I-10, I-12, and related connections.
- This is not just an ETA issue. It is a turn destruction issue.
Broker posture
- Add transit protection through Saturday
- Avoid promising same-day normal movement across the corridor
- Use alternate routing only if the carrier explicitly agrees and the customer accepts timing risk
- Prioritize reefer and flatbed loads that cannot easily route north
🏙️ Ohio Valley / Louisville region: Recovery freight likely shows up fast
Why it matters
- Today is the harder operating day on I-64, I-65, and local connectors.
- The better play is not overreacting on long-term pricing; it is preparing for missed appointments, late reloads, and next-day cleanup freight.
Broker posture
- Keep capacity warm for Friday recovery loads
- Target carriers who missed a reload and need a productive save
- Pitch short-notice recovery service to shippers this afternoon
🌊 Illinois river basin: First-mile risk is the real risk
Why it matters
- Interstates may be passable, but local plant, quarry, and farm access is where flatbed and heavy-haul turns fail.
- This is where inexperienced brokers burn margin by dispatching blind.
Broker posture
- Verify exact access roads
- Confirm crane, forklift, and loading-window readiness
- Do not assume “plant is open” means “truck can load on time”
🌴 Atlanta → Miami: Best sold as a two-load cycle
Why it matters
- Southbound freight into Florida is still workable because trucks want the right reload.
- One-way buying is where margin gets squeezed.
Broker posture
- Sell the outbound only if you can see or help create the northbound reload
- Use produce, grocery, or consumer replenishment freight to structure the return
- Protect weekend appointment compliance aggressively
🚢 Savannah → Charlotte: Short-haul margin lives and dies on dwell
Why it matters
- The linehaul is short enough that terminal delay, chassis delay, appointment miss, and detention matter more than mileage.
Broker posture
- Quote all-in, not mileage-only
- Add buffers for pickup timing and discharge bunching
- Use regional carriers who know the port rhythm rather than the cheapest truck on the board
🤝 How to negotiate today without giving away margin
With shippers
- Separate linehaul from disruption cost
Weather exposure, appointment rigidity, port delay, and site-access risk should not be buried in one flat number.
- Use paid-rate reality to defend quotes
Posted rates are not clearing freight in premium modes today.
- Shorten quote validity
Replacement cost is moving faster than customers think.
- Offer capacity assurance as the premium product
In this market, reliability is often more valuable than shaving a few cents per mile.
With carriers
- Lead with reload visibility
A truck with a believable next move will often beat a truck that just wants a bigger linehaul number.
- Sell turn quality
Clean docks, realistic appointments, confirmed site access, and honest transit plans matter at $5.129 diesel.
- Do not negotiate like crude already lowered pump prices
Futures may soften, but today’s retail diesel still drives truck behavior.
- Use pre-vetted carriers in premium modes
Setup delay late in the day is a hidden buy-rate increase.
🛡️ Risk controls that matter most today
📈 24–72 hour probability map
Base case — 55%
- Van stays tradable but tighter
- Reefer remains premium into the weekend
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized stay carrier-led
- Gulf Coast continues to reduce turn efficiency through Saturday
Stress case — 30%
- Flooding lingers longer in Gulf lanes
- More missed appointments create replacement freight
- Reefer and flatbed reprice upward fastest on urgent loads
- Carrier selection narrows further because brokers tighten vetting
Opportunity case — 15%
- Ohio Valley improves fast enough to create profitable recovery freight
- Savannah short-haul port execution produces strong all-in margins
- Brokers who pair Florida/Georgia southbounds with northbound reloads outperform the board
✅ Today’s priority stack
Stop using posted rates as your working buy number in every mode
- Paid exceeds posted across the board today.
Buy Southeast and port-adjacent capacity early
- Especially reefer, regional van, and short-haul Savannah freight.
Treat Gulf Coast freight as a service exception market through Saturday
- Quote wider windows and protect ETAs (estimated times of arrival).
Use two-load economics on Florida freight
- The reload is where the margin protection lives.
Scope every flatbed, heavy-haul, and specialized load before posting
- Route, access, equipment, and loading method first; rate second.
Prepare for Ohio Valley cleanup freight
- Missed appointments often become tomorrow’s best margin.
Use LTL/partial as a pressure-release tool, not a cheap-capacity assumption
- Consolidation can still protect truckload buying power.
Make compliance speed part of operations, not legal overhead
- Faster vetted coverage is directly tied to better service and lower replacement cost.
🏁 Bottom line
The headline market is stable, but the executable market is firmer than it looks.
- Loads are stable
- Moved freight is slower
- Every mode shows paid above posted
- Diesel still suppresses deadhead
- Weather is breaking turns
- Compliance speed is now pricing power
The brokers who win today will not be the ones who quote the lowest.
They will be the ones who:
- buy early,
- sell reload logic,
- price premium modes honestly,
- and remove operational surprises before the truck is dispatched.
💡 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
860: Byzantine–Rus' War: A fleet of about 200 Rus' vessels sails into the Bosphorus and starts pillaging the suburbs of the Byzantine capital Constantinople.
1873: Susan B. Anthony is fined $100 for attempting to vote in the 1872 presidential election.
1983: Mona Mahmudnizhad, together with nine other women of the Baháʼí Faith, is sentenced to death and hanged in Shiraz, Iran, over her religious beliefs.
💭 Quote of the Day
"Wisdom is doing now what you are going to be happy with later on."
— Joyce Meyer