Thursday, May 14, 2026
1:48 PM CST
A monumental shift in freight broker liability has occurred today following a unanimous Supreme Court decision removing the FAAAA preemption shield, fundamentally altering carrier vetting requirements just as the spot market experiences a massive volume surge. Total available loads have climbed 6.2% overnight to 216,253, driving the market average rate to $2.98/mile. The collision of CVSA Roadcheck week, punishing $5.639/gallon diesel prices, and severe regional flooding in the South and Midwest has created extreme capacity constraints. This is most visible in the reefer sector, where paid rates are commanding a massive $0.41/mile premium over posted rates, requiring brokers to aggressively adjust pricing strategies while implementing stricter compliance checks on all dispatched carriers.
Even as inspection activity fades after today, the market is unlikely to see a normal Friday loosening. Brokers are now contending with two separate capacity filters at once: Roadcheck-week attrition and a fast shift toward stricter carrier approval standards after the Supreme Court ruling. That means any late-week softening in van capacity is likely to be muted, while reefer and open-deck markets stay elevated into the weekend.
Dry weather across Louisiana and Mississippi today and Friday will improve driving conditions, but it will not quickly restore low-lying roads already impacted by river flooding. Open-deck carriers can move more cleanly during daytime hours through Friday, yet routing friction should per sist through the weekend, especially on secondary roads feeding the I-10 and I-59 corridors.
The wind event in North Dakota, Wyoming and Montana is most likely to interfere with repositioning rather than loaded linehaul alone. Empty reefers, dry vans and lightweight flatbeds moving west-to-east or north-to-south will face the greatest instability and slower average speeds, which can delay weekend capacity from reaching stronger Midwest and produce markets.
The immediate operational change is that broker liability will hinge on what can be documented about carrier selection, not merely whether the carrier had active authority. Same-day onboarding is likely to slow first, and the spot market will increasingly reward brokerages with deep incumbent carrier benches that already have recent safety reviews, insurance verification and monitoring history.
The Southeast and Gulf Coast region is currently the epicenter of freight volatility. The combination of accelerating produce harvests in Florida and Georgia, severe flooding along the I-10 and I-59 corridors in Louisiana and Mississippi, and Roadcheck week compliance sidelining has created extreme capacity shortages. Reefer rates are commanding massive premiums, while flatbed capacity is physically trapped by weather events. Brokers operating in this region must secure trucks early and expect to pay significantly above posted rates.
Atlanta, GA → Miami, FL: This lane is experiencing intense pressure as carriers demand premiums to head into South Florida, where outbound rates are currently highly lucrative due to produce season. Capacity is tight as drivers are highly selective about their backhauls during Roadcheck week.
New Orleans, LA → Houston, TX: Severe flooding along the I-10 corridor is disrupting this critical industrial lane. Flatbed and heavy haul capacity is trapped or forced into long detours, driving up transit times and rates.
On the Atlanta-to-Miami lane, the highest-probability margin play is not the headhaul itself but securing the truck before it reaches South Florida. Carriers are pricing inbound moves against expected produce reloads, so bundled roundtrip offers and firm reload timing will outperform one-off rate negotiations through the weekend.
On the New Orleans-to-Houston lane, the hidden cost is hours-of-service erosion from detours and slower secondary-road routing, not simply a higher linehaul ask. Flatbed and heavy-haul carriers will protect themselves by building in extra transit time, and tight delivery appointments will push the effective buy rate even higher than posted spot comps suggest.
Today's unanimous 9-0 Supreme Court decision in Montgomery v. Caribe Transport II fundamentally rewrites the risk landscape for freight brokerages. By ruling that negligent hiring claims against brokers fall under the safety exception of the FAAAA, the Court has effectively stripped brokers of their primary federal preemption defense. This means brokers can now be sued in state courts if a carrier they hire is involved in an accident, and the plaintiff alleges the broker failed to exercise 'ordinary care' in the selection process. The immediate implication is that relying solely on a carrier's active FMCSA operating authority is no longer sufficient to shield a brokerage from liability. Operationally, this will force an immediate, industry-wide contraction in usable capacity. Brokerages will be forced by their contingent auto liability insurance providers to implement draconian carrier vetting standards. Carriers with marginal safety scores, recent conditional ratings, or a history of specific violations will likely be purged from broker routing guides. In a market where spot volumes just surged 6.2% to over 216,000 loads, artificially shrinking the pool of approved carriers will act as a massive inflationary catalyst on spot rates. Brokers must prepare for longer coverage times and higher carrier costs as the flight to 'safe' capacity accelerates.
Today's load board data reveals a market in acute distress, characterized by massive spreads between posted and paid rates. The most glaring anomaly is in the reefer sector, where the average paid rate of $3.34/mile is a staggering $0.41 higher than the posted rate of $2.93/mile. This indicates that brokers are systematically underpricing their initial load posts and being forced to negotiate heavily upward to secure trucks. This dynamic is being driven by the convergence of CVSA Roadcheck week sidelining marginal equipment and accelerating produce harvests demanding immediate capacity. Similarly, the van sector is seeing a $0.17/mile spread ($2.87 paid vs $2.70 posted), and flatbed is showing an $0.11/mile spread ($3.51 paid vs $3.40 posted). The flatbed spread is particularly notable given the massive 95,489 available loads (up 6.1% overnight). The ongoing flooding in Louisiana and Mississippi is trapping open-deck capacity, forcing carriers to demand hazard pay and detour compensation. Across all equipment types, the data signals that carriers hold absolute pricing power today. Brokers quoting freight based on historical averages or even yesterday's posted rates will find themselves taking significant losses at the time of coverage.
Severe and ongoing river flooding across Louisiana and Mississippi (NWS Alert WXEB6B732E) is creating a localized capacity crisis for the flatbed and heavy haul sectors. With minor to moderate flooding inundating the Vermilion River and surrounding low-lying areas, critical rural arteries and secondary highways connecting to the I-10 and I-59 corridors are compromised. This is forcing carriers to execute lengthy detours, burning through hours of service and expensive $5.639/gallon diesel. The infrastructure strain is directly reflected in today's flatbed load board numbers, which saw available volumes surge to nearly 95,500 loads. Carriers are actively avoiding the flooded zones unless compensated with significant rate premiums. Furthermore, specialized trailers required for heavy haul and construction materials are getting trapped in the region due to routing restrictions on oversized loads. Brokers moving freight through the Gulf Coast must proactively verify carrier routing plans, build additional transit days into customer expectations, and secure capacity well in advance of pickup times.
This is now a two-filter market, not just a tight market: Total available loads are 216,253, up 6.2% from 203,559, and the national average rate is $2.98/mile. But the real story is that usable capacity is being reduced at the same time by CVSA (Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance) Roadcheck behavior and by stricter broker carrier-selection standards after the Supreme Court ruling.
Reefer is still the cleanest place to lose money fast: 10,232 reefer loads are showing $2.93/mile posted and $3.34/mile paid, a +$0.41/mile spread. That is not normal negotiation drift. That is posted pricing materially behind executable buy cost.
Dry van has crossed from “firm” into “timing-sensitive”: 27,978 van loads at $2.70/mile posted and $2.87/mile paid mean late-day coverage is now a margin leak, especially on next-day appointments and anything requiring deadhead.
Open-deck freight is still setting the emotional tone of the market: Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized total 165,553 loads, roughly 76.6% of visible volume. That matters because industrial freight psychology bleeds into all negotiations. When open-deck carriers are winning, everyone prices with more confidence.
Execution is getting harder even while the board is getting bigger: Loads moved are 77,951, down from 80,159 at the comparable capture despite the jump in available freight. That means freight is growing faster than it is being cleanly executed, which usually shows up first as slower coverage, more re-opened loads, and higher afternoon buy rates.
The Supreme Court ruling changes the job immediately: Same-day carrier onboarding is no longer just an operations issue; it is now a liability issue. The market will increasingly reward brokers with deep incumbent carrier benches, recent safety reviews, and documented monitoring history.
Diesel at $5.639/gallon is amplifying every bad decision: High fuel is shrinking acceptable deadhead, increasing the price of detours, and punishing loose pickup windows. A truck that is “available” but 80 miles wrong is often not really available in this market.
The market did not just get tighter; it got more selective: The Supreme Court’s removal of the FAAAA (Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act) preemption shield means broker liability can now be argued through state-law negligent hiring theories. Operationally, that means your carrier file is part of the load strategy.
The hidden market effect is capacity subtraction: A meaningful slice of the truck market was always technically bookable but not high-confidence capacity. Today, more brokerages will stop using:
That makes urgent freight more expensive than the averages suggest: When vetting time shrinks, carrier premiums widen, because your broker choices narrow to:
The practical takeaway for today: Do not let a coverage rep “solve” a service problem by creating a liability problem. Cheap same-day capacity is now more dangerous than it was yesterday, especially on:
Visible freight is expanding, but execution quality is tightening:
The board is larger, but fewer loads are moving through cleanly at the same point in the day. That usually means:
Reefer is the strongest paid-vs-posted signal on the board:
This is the clearest sign that brokers are underquoting in the initial customer conversation and then fixing it at coverage.
Dry van is firm enough that waiting is becoming a tactic error:
Van is not in panic territory, but it is in discipline territory. Brokers who wait for late-day softness are increasingly buying the wrong end of the day.
Flatbed strength is more operational than numerical:
That spread alone understates the risk. The real problem is turn-time damage from flooding, detours, daylight access issues, and securement/compliance sensitivity during inspection week.
Heavy haul and specialized are strong but more orderly:
These markets are not “cheap,” but they are more rational than reefer. If your team is strong on trailer/spec matching, there is still edge here.
LTL (Less Than Truckload) / Partial remains useful, but not soft:
This is still an account-defense tool, but not a bargain bin. Under $5.639 diesel, consolidation only works when you control timing and density well.
Dry Van — Cover earlier, tighter, and more locally
Reefer — Price from paid reality, not posted optimism
Flatbed — Quote the delay, not just the miles
Heavy Haul — Planning discipline beats rate haggling
Specialized — Precision market, not panic market
LTL / Partial — Use as a sales save, not a backup after the customer resists
Southeast and Florida — Carriers are pricing the reload, not just the headhaul
Gulf Coast — Flooding is still a routing problem even when the sky clears
Northern Plains and Mountain corridors — Wind matters most on repositioning
Indiana and Illinois — Local access matters more than linehaul
Stop quoting off posted averages in reefer and time-sensitive van
Use a two-tier quote structure
This helps you monetize what the market is actually rewarding: certainty.
Add a compliance premium without calling it a compliance premium
Shorten quote validity
Price accessorial exposure before dispatch
Carriers are not just selling trucks; they are protecting option value
Shippers are still anchored to visible board numbers
The strongest carrier pitch today is not money alone
1) Tighten first-use carrier release standards immediately
2) Prioritize incumbent carriers on urgent freight
3) Reconfirm physical access on flood-affected loads
4) Build transit cushion into appointment freight
5) Separate linehaul from operational exposure
Base case — 55%
Tightening case — 30%
Relief case — 15%
Requote all open reefer immediately using paid-rate logic
Move van coverage earlier in the day
Use incumbent carriers first on anything urgent
Bundle Florida freight whenever possible
Treat Gulf Coast open-deck freight as delay-sensitive, not just rate-sensitive
Offer LTL / Partial before the shipper pushes back
Shorten quote validity across the board
Have a management checkpoint on first-use carrier approvals
"Progress comes to those who train and train; reliance on secret techniques will get you nowhere."
— Morihei Ueshiba