๐ Daily Market Intelligence Report
Sunday, July 12, 2026
7:00 AM CST
๐ Top-Line Summary
On Sunday, July 12, 2026, the domestic spot market is navigating a typical Sunday volume contraction, with total available loads settling at 113,721, down 3.2% from yesterday's levels. Despite this weekend dip, the market average rate remains highly resilient at $2.76/mile, supported by a verified AAA national diesel average of $4.88/gallon, which continues to act as a firm floor for carrier operating costs. Severe regional flooding in the Midwest is actively disrupting key freight corridors, including I-44 in Missouri, trapping open-deck and dry van equipment and driving localized rate volatility. Meanwhile, extreme heat across the West, Mountain West, and Upper Midwest is slowing transit times along the I-84, I-15, I-70, and I-35 corridors. For freight brokers, the widening carrier premiums in the flatbed ($0.37/mile broker advantage on posted rates) and dry van ($0.42/mile broker advantage on posted rates) sectors present high-margin arbitrage opportunities, while the reefer sector has flipped to a carrier-favorable premium ($0.13/mile carrier advantage on paid rates) due to peak summer produce demand.
Insight
Dry weather will not quickly normalize Missouri capacity
The Missouri disruption is now more of a river-and-access problem than a same-day rain problem. Even with a mainly dry Sunday and Monday forecast, flooded secondary roads, yard entrances, and detour miles around the Meramec corridor can keep equipment out of cycle into Monday morning, with the sharpest pricing pressure on St. Louis-area van and open-deck reloads.
โฝ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Flood Warning (Missouri (MO, Franklin, Jefferson, Crawford, Washington counties)): Minor flooding is forecast for the Meramec River, which may disrupt local routes and delay freight transit along the I-44 corridor.
- Extreme Heat Warning (Utah (UT, Great Salt Lake Desert and Mountains, Tooele and Rush Valleys, Eastern Box Elder County, Northern Wasatch Front, Salt Lake Valley, Utah Valley, Cache Valley)): Dangerously hot conditions with temperatures up to 107 degrees may increase the risk of heat-related illnesses and vehicle breakdowns, potentially delaying transit along the I-84, I-15, and I-70 corridors.
- Extreme Heat Warning (Minnesota (MN, Hennepin, Anoka, Ramsey, Washington, Carver, Scott, Dakota counties)): Dangerously hot conditions with heat index values up to 101 degrees may increase the risk of heat-related illnesses and vehicle breakdowns, potentially delaying transit along the I-35, I-35E, and I-35W corridors.
- Extreme Heat Warning (Wyoming (WY, Cody Foothills, North Bighorn Basin, Southwest Bighorn Basin, Southeast Bighorn Basin, Northeast Johnson County, Southeast Johnson County, Jackson Hole, Upper Wind River Basin, Wind River Basin, Lander Foothills, Green Mountains and Rattlesnake Range, Natrona County Lower Elevations, Star Valley, Upper Green River Basin Foothills, Upper Green River Basin, South Lincoln County, Rock Springs and Green River, Flaming Gorge, East Sweetwater County)): Dangerously hot conditions may increase the risk of heat-related illnesses and vehicle breakdowns, potentially delaying transit along the I-25, I-80, and I-90 corridors.
- Extreme Heat Warning (Idaho (ID, Shoshone/Lava Beds, Arco/Mud Lake Desert, Upper Snake River Plain, Lower Snake River Plain, Eastern Magic Valley, Big Hole Mountains, Teton Valley)): Dangerously hot conditions may increase the risk of heat-related illnesses and vehicle breakdowns, potentially delaying transit along the I-84, I-86, and I-15 corridors.
- Flood Warning (Tennessee (TN, Dyer, Gibson, Obion counties)): Minor flooding is forecast for the Obion River, which may flood several secondary roads and large areas of farmland, potentially delaying transit along local routes.
Weather Insight
Meramec delays are likely to outlast the rainfall
Hydrology, not fresh storms, is the near-term driver in eastern Missouri.
- Major east-west traffic may keep moving, but first- and last-mile access around Franklin, Jefferson, Crawford, and Washington counties is where service failures are most likely.
- Carriers quoting Missouri freight Sunday night into Monday are likely to add detention and deadhead protection even if radar remains quiet.
Weather Insight
Western heat will push more transit into overnight hours
Extreme heat across Utah, Idaho, and Wyoming is likely to create a predictable midday slowdown through Monday, especially on desert and mountain corridors where breakdown exposure rises fastest for older reefers, heavy haul, and trucks with long idle per iods.
- Expect stronger carrier preference for pre-dawn pickups and night driving on I-15, I-84, I-80, and I-70.
- Afternoon appointment windows carry higher risk of soft breakdowns, fuel-stop dwell, and missed delivery times.
๐ฐ Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Diesel prices are holding firm at $4.88/gallon, which continues to act as a hard floor for spot rates and restricts deadhead.
- Carrier Financial Health: Carrier financial conditions remain under pressure due to high fuel costs and low spot rates, which is driving market consolidation.
- Economic Indicators: Relevant economic trends affecting freight demand include peak summer produce harvests and industrial construction activity.
๐ฐ Impactful News Analysis
-
FMCSA BASIC Scores and SMS Records to Become Key Gatekeeping Tools for Freight Brokers and Shippers ๐:
Freight brokers and shippers are under increasing pressure to justify the carriers they use, which will lead to more structured, documented, and defensible carrier selection processes. Safety metrics, including BASIC scores, SMS records, crash history, out of service percentages, and inspection trends, will become critical gatekeeping tools. Brokers must actively monitor and manage their carrier networks' safety profiles to avoid liability concerns and maintain access to freight.
-
SK hynix's $26.5B ADR Listing Boosts South Korean Won, Signaling Strong Tech Supply Chain Activity ๐:
SK hynix's massive US listing and subsequent dollar-to-won conversions are already impacting foreign exchange markets. As a key player in the AI hardware supply chain, this activity signals robust demand for semiconductor and technology-related freight, which could drive increased shipping volumes for high-value, specialized electronics components in domestic lanes.
News Insight
Safety screening is becoming a real-time capacity filter
As safety scores become a harder gate in carrier selection, the practical market effect is a smaller usable truck pool exactly when weather and produce are already narrowing options. The advantage will go to brokers with secondary carriers already approved in reefer and open-deck, since vetting a replacement truck after a tender falls off will increasingly cost both time and margin.
๐บ๏ธ Regional & Lane Analysis
๐ Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest is currently experiencing significant market volatility due to severe river flooding, which has inundated local staging areas and disrupted major corridors like I-44. This has trapped open-deck and dry van equipment, driving localized rate volatility and capacity constraints. Brokers must navigate these bottlenecks to secure capacity and protect margins.
๐ฃ๏ธ Key Lane Watch
St. Louis, MO โ Chicago, IL: The St. Louis to Chicago lane is experiencing significant disruption due to severe river flooding along the Meramec River, which has forced detours and delayed transit times. Dry van and flatbed capacity is highly constrained as carriers navigate these bottlenecks, driving localized rate volatility. Brokers must act quickly to secure capacity and protect margins.
Kansas City, MO โ Indianapolis, IN: The Kansas City to Indianapolis lane is experiencing increased demand and tight capacity due to the severe river flooding in Missouri, which has disrupted major corridors like I-44. Dry van and flatbed equipment is in high demand as shippers seek alternative routes to bypass the flooded areas, driving rate volatility.
Regional Insight
Flood spillover will tighten nearby Midwest relays
The spillover effect matters as much as the closure map. When carriers avoid central and eastern Missouri reloads, capacity tightens across the surrounding relays into Illinois and Indiana, so St. Louis-Chicago and Kansas City-Indianapolis can firm even when the direct route remains technically open. Short-notice Monday pickups are likely to price the highest as trucks sort out legal reloads after weekend detours.
๐ฐ Breaking Down: FMCSA BASIC Scores and SMS Records to Become Key Gatekeeping Tools
The recent shift in carrier vetting standards is forcing freight brokers and shippers to justify the carriers they use, leading to more structured, documented, and defensible carrier selection processes. Safety metrics, including BASIC scores, SMS records, crash history, out of service percentages, and inspection trends, are no longer just regulatory data points; they are becoming critical gatekeeping tools. This shift will directly impact motor carriers, as a basic alert or elevated out of service rate can become a reason to disqualify a carrier, limiting their opportunities and tightening the usable carrier pool.
For freight brokers, this means that carrier selection must become more structured and documented. Brokers must actively monitor and manage their carrier networks' safety profiles to avoid liability concerns and maintain access to freight. This will require brokers to invest in technology and processes that enable real-time monitoring of carrier safety metrics, as well as establishing clear criteria for carrier approval and disqualification. Brokers who fail to adapt to this shifting landscape risk facing legal liabilities and losing access to key shipper accounts.
๐ Reefer: Peak Summer Produce Season Drives Intense Competition
Temperature-controlled capacity is at an absolute premium as the peak summer produce season drives intense competition for pre-cooled equipment, leaving 6,152 available loads on the board, down 9.4% from yesterday. Reefer rates are highly resilient and have flipped to a carrier-favorable premium, with an average posted rate of $3.20/mile and average paid rates at $3.33/mile, yielding a $0.13/mile carrier advantage. This tight pricing pressure is driven by the urgent transportation of highly perishable peak summer commodities, including watermelons from Texas and Georgia, corn from Illinois, and blueberries from Michigan.
Capacity is exceptionally tight in the Midwest and Southeast, where active flood warnings are forcing lengthy detours. Brokers must act aggressively to secure equipment, utilizing backhaul opportunities to negotiate with carriers returning to high-demand agricultural zones. The combination of peak produce demand and weather-related disruptions is creating a highly volatile rate environment, and brokers who can successfully navigate these challenges will be well-positioned to capture high-margin opportunities.
๐ Macro Freight Pulse: Peak Summer Produce Harvests and Industrial Construction Activity
The domestic spot market is currently being driven by peak summer produce harvests and robust industrial construction activity, which are keeping demand strong and capacity tight across key regions. The peak summer produce season is driving intense competition for temperature-controlled equipment, particularly in the Southeast and Midwest, where commodities like watermelons, corn, and blueberries are in transit. This is keeping reefer rates highly resilient and driving carrier-favorable premiums.
At the same time, robust industrial construction activity is keeping open-deck and flatbed capacity in high demand, particularly in the Midwest and South. Despite severe river flooding in the Midwest, flatbed rates show a notable $0.37/mile broker advantage, indicating that carriers are successfully demanding higher rates to cover increased operational risks and tight capacity. Brokers who can successfully navigate these seasonal demand shifts and weather-related disruptions will be well-positioned to capture high-margin opportunities.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Book Monday Midwest van and flatbed coverage on Sunday whenever possible; the first post-weekend reload wave is likely to price firmer than later in the day.
- Shift western pickup and transit plans toward overnight and early morning hours to reduce heat-related dwell and breakdown risk.
- Use inbound freight into Texas, Georgia, and California to create reefer backhaul leverage instead of chasing same-day spot trucks.
- Pre-approve backup carriers now; usable capacity is tightening faster than posted capacity on weather- and produce-sensitive freight.
๐ Executive Signal Summary
This is a selective-capacity market, not a cheap-capacity market.
- Total available loads are 113,721, down 3.2% from 117,492, which is a normal Sunday contraction.
- The more important signal is that diesel remains high at $4.88/gallon, so carriers still cannot casually absorb deadhead, detours, or bad appointments.
The best broker margin today is in modes where the board shows spread, but execution still decides whether that spread is real.
- Dry van: $2.71 posted / $2.29 paid = $0.42/mile broker advantage
- Flatbed: $3.35 posted / $2.98 paid = $0.37/mile broker advantage
- Heavy haul: $3.49 posted / $3.12 paid = $0.37/mile broker advantage
- Specialized: $3.28 posted / $2.16 paid = $1.12/mile broker advantage
- LTL (Less Than Truckload)/Partial: $1.81 posted / $1.45 paid = $0.36/mile broker advantage
- Reefer: $3.20 posted / $3.33 paid = $0.13/mile carrier advantage
Reefer has flipped from negotiable to defensive.
- With only 6,152 reefer loads on the board and paid rates above posted rates, this is now a service-first buying environment, not a bargain hunt.
Missouri is a Monday cycle-time problem more than a Sunday rainfall problem.
- The market risk is first-mile access, yard entry, trailer recovery, detention, and missed reloads, especially around the Meramec/I-44 corridor and St. Louis-area reloads.
Western and Mountain West heat will change operating behavior before it changes headline capacity.
- Trucks will prefer pre-dawn pickup windows, overnight transit, and lower-idle operating plans across I-84, I-15, I-70, I-80, and I-35 corridors touched by heat warnings.
๐งญ What the market is really saying
The board is quieter, but usable truck capacity is tighter than the raw load count suggests.
- A Sunday board showing 113,721 loads can look manageable on paper.
- In practice, weather friction, fuel cost, produce demand, and tighter carrier safety screening shrink the number of trucks that can actually execute cleanly.
Do not let the $2.76 all-mode average distort van buying.
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized total 80,228 of 113,721 loads, or roughly 70.5% of the board.
- That means the blended average is still being held up by industrial and project freight, not by soft dry van conditions.
- Van decisions should be anchored to van conditions, not the blended national average.
Industrial freight is still driving the market tone.
- Todayโs moved-load activity reinforces that:
- Flatbed moved: 3,245
- Heavy haul moved: 722
- Specialized moved: 836
- Combined, those three modes account for 4,803 of 6,682 loads moved today, about 71.9% of execution activity.
- Translation: open-deck and industrial freight are still setting the rhythm of the market, even on a Sunday.
Carrier psychology is disciplined right now.
- At $4.88 diesel, carriers care less about a flashy rate and more about:
- clean pickup access
- short empty miles
- fast decision-making
- reload visibility
- confidence that the load will not cost them a day
๐ฐ Where todayโs margin is actually bankable
๐ Dry Van: strongest broad-based negotiating leverage
Why it matters
- 19,826 available loads
- $2.71 posted / $2.29 paid
- $0.42/mile broker advantage
Best use today
- Pre-cover Monday Midwest van freight today
- Focus on freight with:
- verified dock hours
- clean interstate and local access
- tight appointment communication
- short deadhead to pickup
Where margin is real
- Loads outside the worst flood-friction pockets
- Freight with flexible delivery windows
- Carriers already positioned in Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Iowa, and non-flood-sensitive Missouri areas
Where brokers get hurt
- Leaving quotes open too long
- Assuming โinterstate openโ means โpickup executableโ
- Buying cheap trucks into uncertain first-mile access
๐ง Reefer: defend service, do not chase cheap coverage
๐ชต Flatbed: attractive spread, but only with accessorial discipline
Why it matters
- 44,926 available loads
- $3.35 posted / $2.98 paid
- $0.37/mile broker advantage
Best use today
- Target loads with:
- clear securement requirements
- known yard conditions
- non-flooded staging access
- limited same-day turn dependency
Margin reality
- Flatbed profit will be won or lost on:
- detention
- tarp time
- reroute miles
- yard wait
- missed reload risk
Broker rule
- Separate linehaul from friction costs.
- The cheapest flatbed truck is often the most expensive load if access conditions are muddy, delayed, or poorly communicated.
๐๏ธ Heavy Haul: coverable, but scope matters more than spread
Why it matters
- 22,062 available loads
- $3.49 posted / $3.12 paid
- $0.37/mile broker advantage
Correct interpretation
- This looks attractive on paper, but heavy haul mistakes are expensive.
- Route feasibility, permits, escorts, and local access can erase margin quickly.
Best use today
- Only quote after confirming:
- exact dimensions
- weight
- permit status
- escort needs
- flood/heat-aware route plan
โ๏ธ Specialized: biggest paper spread, biggest self-deception risk
Why it matters
- 7,515 available loads
- $1.81 posted / $1.45 paid
- $0.36/mile broker advantage
Best use today
- Convert flexible freight before truckload rescue pricing appears on Monday.
- Ideal for shipments that are:
- palletized
- time-flexible
- not appointment-fragile
- moving through weather-affected regions
Strategic value
- LTL/Partial is not just a fallback.
- It is a margin and relationship protection tool when truckload timing becomes unstable.
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather playbook for the next 24โ72 hours
๐ Missouri flooding: price access risk, not just map risk
What matters most
- Flooding in the Meramec corridor is less about whether rain is falling now and more about whether trucks can:
- enter yards
- recover trailers
- execute local turns
- make reloads on time
Broker response
- Add explicit coverage for:
- detention
- reroute miles
- layover
- recovery attempts
- driver assist if required
- Do not promise normal cycle times for St. Louis-area van or open-deck freight.
๐ฅ Western heat: move the operating day
๐ง What shippers and carriers are likely to do next
Shippers will try to read Sunday softness as buying leverage.
- Your response should be operational, not emotional:
- โThe issue is not whether a truck exists. The issue is whether that truck can execute through weather, access, and reload risk without losing a day.โ
Carriers will reward certainty over small rate improvements.
- The loads that cover fastest today will be the ones with:
- clear pickup numbers
- accurate access details
- commodity transparency
- firm appointment windows
- credible reload potential
Safety screening is now a real-time capacity filter.
- FMCSA (Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration) BASIC (Behavior Analysis and Safety Improvement Categories) and SMS (Safety Measurement System) scrutiny means posted trucks are not the same as usable trucks.
- Brokers with secondary carriers already approved will win more Monday freight than brokers who start vetting after a primary truck falls off.
๐บ๏ธ Regional and lane priorities
๐ St. Louis, MO โ Chicago, IL
- Best read
- This lane will feel tighter than the board suggests because flood spillover affects reload timing and local access.
- Broker move
- Cover early
- Offer shippers a premium service option with realistic delivery timing
- Protect for detention and detour risk
๐ Kansas City, MO โ Indianapolis, IN
- Best read
- Alternative routing pressure and Missouri spillover will likely firm pricing for short-notice pickups.
- Broker move
- Buy capacity before the Monday morning quote wave
- Use carriers with Midwest reload visibility, not one-off opportunistic trucks
๐ Reefer into produce regions
- Best read
- Freight moving into Texas, Georgia, California, Illinois, and Indiana is useful because it helps carriers reposition into strong produce demand.
- Broker move
- Sell the reload story, not just the linehaul rate
- That is your best shot at moderating reefer cost
โ
Desk priorities for today
Pre-book Monday Midwest freight now
- Start with dry van and flatbed
- Prioritize St. Louis-linked, Kansas City-linked, and other Missouri-adjacent reload chains
Shorten quote validity
- Use same-day validity on flood-sensitive and produce-sensitive freight
- Re-quote quickly if pickup timing changes
Convert flexible shipments to LTL/Partial early
- Do this before truckload pricing becomes a rescue buy tomorrow
Shift western appointments to cooler operating windows
- Avoid pricing afternoon appointments like they are normal-production pickups
Tighten carrier approval discipline
- Verify:
- safety profile
- dispatch communication
- true truck location
- empty miles
- route willingness through heat and detours
Track the right metrics today
- quote-to-cover time
- carrier falloff rate
- re-quote frequency
- first-mile delay rate
- percentage of Monday freight covered before tonight
๐ Probability map for the next 72 hours
Most likely outcome
- Dry van stays negotiable nationally
- Reefer stays tight and service-sensitive
- Flatbed and heavy haul remain margin-positive where scope is clean
- Missouri spillover tightens nearby Illinois and Indiana relays into Monday
Higher-risk outcome
- Access recovery in eastern Missouri lags, and local delays become worse than carriers expected
- Result: more missed reloads, more re-quotes, and tighter Monday morning truck supply
Best opportunity outcome
- Brokers who cover tonight, route conservatively, and sell appointment certainty preserve both margin and service while competitors wait for the board to tell them the market tightened
๐ Bottom line
- Todayโs edge is not finding the cheapest truck.
- Todayโs edge is locking the truck that can actually execute.
- Dry van, flatbed, heavy haul, specialized, and LTL/Partial all show usable broker spread.
- Reefer should be treated as a premium-service mode until produce pressure eases.
- Missouri flooding and western heat are operational multipliers, not background noise.
- The winning play is simple: buy early, price friction honestly, vet carriers harder, and sell certainty as the product.
๐ก 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.
๐
This Day in History
1790: The Civil Constitution of the Clergy is passed in France by the National Constituent Assembly.
1862: The Medal of Honor is authorized by the United States Congress.
1913: The Second Revolution breaks out against the Beiyang government, as Li Liejun proclaims Jiangxi independent from the Republic of China.
๐ญ Quote of the Day
"You are what you believe yourself to be."
โ Paulo Coelho