๐ Daily Market Intelligence Report
Wednesday, May 06, 2026
7:00 AM CST
๐ Top-Line Summary
The spot market is experiencing a robust 8.8% volume surge today, pushing total available loads to 172,704 and driving the market average rate to $2.77/mile. This growth is heavily anchored by the industrial and open-deck sectors, with heavy haul volumes spiking 15.2% and flatbed jumping 12.1% overnight. Capacity is tightening across almost all equipment types, most notably in the temperature-controlled sector where carriers are commanding a massive $0.24/mile premium over posted rates. Compounding the capacity squeeze, national diesel prices have climbed to a verified $5.674/gallon, severely compressing carrier margins and forcing fleets to aggressively limit deadhead miles. Meanwhile, severe river flooding across the Midwest and Gulf Coast continues to fracture major transcontinental routing, trapping equipment and exacerbating regional capacity constraints.
โฝ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe Midwest River Flooding (Midwest (IN, IL, MI, WI)): Major river flooding is expected to severely disrupt freight operations along the I-65 and I-72 corridors. Minor to moderate flooding is actively inundating secondary roads and threatening agricultural routes, which will likely force detours, extend transit times, and trap open-deck capacity in the region.
- Gulf Coast River Flooding (Gulf Coast (LA, MS, TX)): Ongoing flooding along the Pearl River and surrounding waterways is threatening the I-10 and I-59 corridors. Secondary roads are inundated, which could delay local agricultural and industrial pickups, tightening regional capacity as drivers avoid flooded lowlands.
- Late-Season Freeze Warning (Central/West (CO, NM, NE)): Sub-freezing temperatures dropping into the 20s are driving urgent Protect From Freeze (PFF) requirements for sensitive freight. This is expected to further strain the already tight national reefer capacity pool, forcing carriers to balance PFF needs against southern produce demand.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Flood impacts outlast the rain in southern Indiana and Illinois
The weather trend turns quieter across Indiana and Illinois through Thursday, but freight recovery will lag well behind the skies. River flooding in southern Indiana will keep secondary roads, county connectors, and rural plant access unreliable even without new heavy rain, so carrier velocity is likely to stay impaired through Friday and improve more meaningfully only into Saturday. Any load touching smaller access roads south of the main interstate grid should be treated as a hydrology problem, not a precipitation problem.
Weather Insight
Gulf Coast routing risk rebuilds ahead of Fridayโs next rain wave
The Pearl River corridor gets only a narrow operating window before heavier rain returns Friday and lingers into the weekend. Freight tied to the I-10 and I-59 network can still move on disciplined schedules today and Thursday, but recovery capacity will tighten again once carriers start pricing in repeat washouts and missed appointments.
- Best pickup window: late Wednesday through Thursday morning.
- Highest risk per iod: Friday through Sunday for local industrial, agricultural, and short-haul regional moves.
๐ฐ Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Energy markets remain volatile with diesel futures pointing toward sustained elevation. The $5.674/gallon pump price is forcing carriers to demand higher baseline rates and implement stricter fuel surcharge pass-throughs, fundamentally altering lane economics.
- Carrier Financial Health: Carrier margins are under severe pressure from the dual impact of record fuel costs and localized weather delays. Smaller owner-operators are particularly vulnerable, leading to increased consolidation and a reliance on spot market premiums to maintain cash flow.
- Economic Indicators: Industrial and construction sectors continue to show robust activity, evidenced by the 12-15% surges in flatbed and heavy haul volumes. However, retail freight remains sensitive to consumer spending patterns and inflationary pressures.
๐ฐ Impactful News Analysis
-
FMCSA HOS Ruleset Enforcement Trends Highlight Compliance Risks ๐:
With HOS violations accounting for 39% of driver-related out-of-service orders, brokers must prioritize carrier vetting and track-and-trace capabilities. Strict enforcement of the 11-hour driving limit and 14-hour duty window means brokers must accurately calculate transit times, especially when routing through flood-delayed regions in the Midwest.
-
Ohio Driver Shortage Threatens Midwest Capacity ๐:
Reports of an accelerating driver shortage in Ohio signal long-term capacity constraints in a critical Midwest freight hub. Brokers should anticipate higher rate floors and tighter equipment availability for outbound Ohio lanes, requiring deeper carrier relationships and longer lead times to secure reliable coverage.
-
Minnesota Diesel Prices Near Record Highs at $5.44/Gallon ๐:
Regional fuel spikes in the Upper Midwest are directly impacting carrier behavior. Brokers moving freight into or out of Minnesota must account for carriers demanding higher rates to offset these localized fuel costs, and should expect increased resistance to deadheading into the state.
News Insight
Flood detours are turning routine HOS compliance into a pricing issue
The pressure point is not just long-haul mileage; it is short-haul unpredictability. Midwest loads that normally fit cleanly inside the 14-hour duty window are now losing productive time at flooded access roads, FCFS docks, and receiver delays, leaving little legal buffer to finish the move. Appointment discipline now matters as much as linehaul price, and carriers with hard scheduling and reliable check calls are materially more valuable than cheaper options operating on flexible clocks.
๐บ๏ธ Regional & Lane Analysis
๐ Primary Region Focus: Midwest (IL, IN, OH, MI)
The Midwest is currently the most volatile and strategically critical freight region, driven by a convergence of severe weather disruptions, massive open-deck volume surges, and localized driver shortages. Extensive river flooding across Indiana and Illinois is fracturing major transcontinental routes (I-65, I-70, I-72), trapping equipment and destroying carrier turnaround times. Simultaneously, the region is absorbing a massive portion of today's 12.1% national flatbed volume surge. Carriers navigating this region are demanding significant premiums to offset both the routing delays and the near-record regional diesel prices. Capacity is acutely tight, particularly for open-deck and heavy haul equipment, forcing brokers to aggressively manage margins and expectations.
๐ฃ๏ธ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL โ Columbus, OH: This critical Midwest corridor is experiencing intense capacity pressure due to regional flooding and the reported Ohio driver shortage. Flatbed and van volumes are elevated, but carriers are hesitant to commit without significant premiums due to routing uncertainties and high fuel costs. The lane is currently heavily favoring carriers who have equipment positioned near Chicago.
Indianapolis, IN โ St. Louis, MO: This lane is directly impacted by the severe East Fork White River flooding, which is disrupting standard routing and extending transit times. Industrial and agricultural freight volumes remain high, but capacity is trapped, leading to a highly volatile rate environment. Carriers are demanding hazard pay and fuel premiums to run this route.
Regional Insight
Chicago-Columbus capacity will price around route certainty
Eastbound freight can still move, but the cheapest capacity is increasingly off the table. Carriers willing to run northern routings through the Indiana Toll Road and Ohio Turnpike are better positioned to protect transit than fleets trying to avoid tolls and improvise around disrupted central corridors, which means stronger acceptance at a higher all-in cost. Early-day Chicago pickups will cover more cleanly than afternoon tenders sold on next-day delivery without route-specific vetting.
Regional Insight
Indianapolis-St. Louis is no longer a same-day assumption
What normally behaves like a quick Midwest turn is now vulnerable to detention, detours, and clock burn. With flood effects lingering into Friday, afternoon pickups on this lane carry outsized risk of sliding delivery or forcing a layover, especially for flatbed and specialized freight that cannot easily pivot around local road closures. The lane prices more accurately as controlled next-day service unless the truck is already positioned and loaded before midday.
๐ฐ Rate Spread Anomalies: Where Brokers Can Win Today
Today's real-time load board data reveals two extreme rate spread anomalies that brokers must immediately leverage. First, the LTL/Partial sector is showing a massive broker advantage, with paid rates ($1.62/mile) sitting 9 cents below posted rates ($1.71/mile). With diesel at $5.674/gallon, carriers are desperate to fill empty trailer space and are accepting heavily discounted partials to offset fuel costs. Brokers should aggressively pitch partial consolidation to flexible shippers. Conversely, the Reefer sector is experiencing a massive carrier premium, with paid rates ($2.94/mile) clearing 24 cents above posted rates ($2.70/mile). This spread is driven by the collision of southern produce season and late-season freezes in the West. Brokers quoting reefer freight must abandon historical averages and price at least $0.30/mile above load board baselines to avoid taking losses on capacity sourcing.
๐๏ธ Midwest Flooding Fractures Transcontinental Routing
Severe river flooding across Indiana and Illinois (Alert WX653E8A2E) is creating a compounding infrastructure crisis for freight mobility. The inundation of secondary roads and threats to major arteries like I-65 and I-72 are forcing carriers into lengthy detours. This is not just a localized issue; it is destroying carrier turnaround times and trapping equipment in the Midwest, which directly contributes to today's 12.1% surge in available flatbed loads (76,847 total). As transit times extend, drivers are burning through their 11-hour FMCSA HOS driving limits faster, effectively removing capacity from the national pool. Brokers must proactively communicate transit delays to receivers and factor in an additional day of transit for any open-deck freight moving through the IL/IN/OH triangle.
๐ Fuel Economics Forcing Structural Capacity Shifts
The verified AAA diesel price of $5.674/gallon is fundamentally altering carrier behavior and capacity availability. As highlighted by regional news showing Minnesota diesel nearing record highs of $5.44/gallon, the fuel burden is no longer sustainable for small fleets without aggressive rate adjustments. Real-time data shows van rates flipping to a carrier premium ($2.49 paid vs $2.46 posted) despite flat volumes, indicating that carriers are simply refusing to move trucks for cheap freight. The immediate operational impact for brokers is the death of the long deadhead. Carriers are shrinking their acceptable empty miles to near zero. To secure trucks, brokers must utilize hyper-local sourcing strategies and expect to pay significant premiums if a pickup requires more than 50 miles of deadhead.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Sell appointment integrity and route validation first on Midwest open-deck and short-haul freight; rate comes second.
- For Chicago-Columbus, pre-source trucks already in metro Chicago and budget for toll and fuel pass-throughs on northern routings.
- Treat Indianapolis-St. Louis as next-day service unless loading is secured before midday.
- Use Wednesday and Thursday as the cleaner Gulf Coast pickup window before Friday through Sunday storms reset local delays.
๐ Executive Signal Summary
This is not a broad-based truckload boom. It is an industrial/open-deck and reefer squeeze.
- Total visible loads are 172,704, up 8.8% from 158,800.
- The national average is $2.77/mile, but that average is operationally misleading if you use it to quote live freight.
Open-deck freight is setting the market tone.
- Flatbed: 76,847
- Heavy Haul: 37,288
- Specialized: 19,488
- Combined, those three categories represent 133,623 loads, or about 77.4% of visible market volume.
- Even desks that do not move much open-deck freight will feel this through carrier selectivity, slower cover times, and tougher negotiations.
Paid-vs-posted spreads show where brokers are buying and where brokers are chasing.
- Van: $2.49 paid vs $2.46 posted = carrier advantage
- Reefer: $2.94 paid vs $2.70 posted = strong carrier advantage
- Flatbed: $3.38 paid vs $3.30 posted = carrier advantage
- Heavy Haul: $3.43 paid vs $3.36 posted = carrier advantage
- Specialized: $2.92 paid vs $2.92 posted = temporary balance
- LTL/Partial: $1.62 paid vs $1.71 posted = best broker edge on the board
Diesel at $5.674/gallon is the hard floor under carrier behavior.
- Cheap trucks that require empty miles are becoming non-competitive in real life, even if they look cheap on paper.
- Today, origin proximity, turn time, and reload potential matter more than headline lane averages.
Weather is not just a delay issue today; it is a capacity distortion issue.
- Midwest flooding is trapping equipment and destroying normal turn times.
- Gulf Coast flooding is compressing the near-term pickup window.
- Late-season freeze risk is stealing reefer capacity through PFF (Protect From Freeze) demand.
๐ง What the market is really saying
Carriers are pricing unpredictability, not just miles.
- In flood-affected and industrial lanes, the core carrier question is no longer:
- โWhat does this load pay?โ
- It is:
- โWill this load burn my clock, wreck my reload, or trap my trailer?โ
The market is rewarding carriers who are already in position.
- With diesel at $5.674/gallon, repositioning costs hurt more.
- That means local trucks near shipper locations are worth materially more than remote trucks quoting low and hoping to make the math work.
Execution activity confirms where urgency is concentrated.
- Of the loads moved today, flatbed + heavy haul + specialized account for 48,900 out of 59,695.
- That is about 81.9% of moved volume.
- Translation: industrial freight is getting the fastest carrier attention, and everything else must compete with that reality.
Posted rates are now lagging reality in the wrong modes.
- Reefer is the clearest example: $2.70 posted but $2.94 paid.
- If you are still quoting from board baselines in reefer, you are likely selling stale math.
Specialized looks calm, but it is not loose.
- $2.92 posted and $2.92 paid means balance on paper.
- In practice, it means the market is temporarily clearing at the current price, not that equipment is abundant.
- One project surge, routing disruption, or dimension-specific trailer requirement can snap that balance fast.
๐ธ Best money-making moves today
Why it works:
- $1.62 paid vs $1.71 posted gives brokers a real pricing pocket.
- Carriers are more willing to take partials because filling otherwise empty space helps offset fuel pain.
How to execute:
- Offer shippers two options:
- Full Truckload (FTL, Full Truckload) for speed and control
- LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload / partial truckload) for savings and wider service windows
- Target:
- 4โ18 pallet shipments
- Non-urgent replenishment freight
- Customers resisting full-truckload increases
What to watch:
- Do not oversell speed.
- Be explicit on:
- delivery windows
- handling expectations
- cross-dock or consolidation risk
2) Treat reefer as truck-first, quote-second
Why it works:
- Reefer has the largest live spread on the board: +$0.24/mile paid over posted.
- Southern produce and western/central PFF (Protect From Freeze) needs are colliding at the same time.
How to execute:
- Quote reefer freight above board baselines immediately.
- On high-risk lanes, build in at least a meaningful buffer above posted rather than assuming the board will clear the load.
- Convert any freight that is truly van-compatible out of reefer today.
What to watch:
- Confirm in writing:
- setpoint
- continuous vs start-stop temp
- PFF need
- pre-cool expectations
- dwell time at produce or agricultural facilities
3) Buy flatbed and heavy haul early, before the afternoon scramble
Why it works:
- Flatbed: $3.38 paid vs $3.30 posted
- Heavy Haul: $3.43 paid vs $3.36 posted
- In both categories, waiting rarely improves price when flooding is slowing turns.
How to execute:
- Cover premium-risk freight before lunch where possible.
- Call known carriers first, especially those already staged near shipper clusters.
- Sell the rate as project protection, not just truck cost.
What to watch:
- Tarp requirements
- securement details
- loading surface condition
- crane/forklift readiness
- escort and permit feasibility on oversized freight
4) Use van only where the freight is operationally clean
Why it works:
- Van is not loose today. It is simply less chaotic than reefer and open-deck.
- $2.49 paid vs $2.46 posted shows carriers still have slight leverage.
How to execute:
- Prioritize van loads with:
- same-day ready pickup
- tight appointment discipline
- dense origin markets
- strong reload markets on destination
- Shorten quote validity on all weather-sensitive freight.
What to watch:
- FCFS (First Come, First Served) facilities in flood-affected areas
- deadhead-heavy coverage plans
- late-afternoon โmust coverโ tenders
๐ Mode-by-mode trading plan
๐ Dry Van
Market read:
- 21,431 loads
- $2.46 posted
- $2.49 paid
- This is a selective carrier-led van market, not a broker-friendly one.
Best play:
- Focus on short-to-mid haul freight with clean facility execution.
- Use carriers already near origin.
- Push shippers toward appointment compliance and realistic transit expectations.
Avoid:
- relying on long deadhead coverage
- underpricing retail freight assuming easy replacement capacity
- open-ended detention risk without written terms
๐ง Reefer
Market read:
- 7,770 loads
- $2.70 posted
- $2.94 paid
- This is the tightest mainstream truckload mode on todayโs board.
Best play:
- Pre-book equipment.
- Convert van-eligible freight immediately.
- Protect margin with truck-first procurement.
Avoid:
- quoting off historical lane averages
- using reefer as a backup option for van freight
- weak temp instructions or vague shipper specs
๐ง Flatbed
Market read:
- 76,847 loads
- $3.30 posted
- $3.38 paid
- The biggest issue is not just price. It is turn-time destruction.
Best play:
- Price by exact origin radius and route certainty.
- Vet site conditions before dispatch.
- Push non-critical project freight into cleaner appointment windows where possible.
Avoid:
- assuming short-haul equals easy
- quoting before checking route risk
- treating flood-fractured corridors like normal regional turns
๐๏ธ Heavy Haul
Market read:
- 37,288 loads
- $3.36 posted
- $3.43 paid
- This remains an execution-first market.
Best play:
- Route before quoting.
- Recheck permits and practical detours.
- Add transit cushion before promising delivery timing.
Avoid:
- mileage-only pricing
- assuming permit-friendly alternates exist
- booking unfamiliar carriers without deep equipment verification
๐ช Specialized
Market read:
- 19,488 loads
- $2.92 posted
- $2.92 paid
- Balanced spread, but structurally tight equipment.
Best play:
- Use this temporary equilibrium when you know exact trailer specs.
- Lock equipment quickly on clean freight before conditions shift.
Avoid:
- vague dimensioning
- โclose enoughโ trailer assumptions
- last-minute swaps on complex freight
๐ฆ LTL/Partial
Market read:
- 9,880 loads
- $1.71 posted
- $1.62 paid
- This is the best broker-controlled margin pocket today.
Best play:
- Use partials to defend price-sensitive accounts.
- Consolidate where delivery windows allow.
- Turn small truckload quotes into savings conversations.
Avoid:
- mixing incompatible freight for margin
- overpromising truckload-like control
- failing to set service expectations clearly
๐ Midwest and Gulf playbook for today
๐ Midwest: price route certainty, not lane averages
Why:
- Flooding across Indiana and Illinois is hurting secondary-road access and turn times more than the headline weather map suggests.
- This is a hydrology problem and a clock problem, not just a rain problem.
What to do:
- Add extra transit cushion on loads touching the IL/IN/OH triangle.
- Call shipper and receiver before assigning a truck to confirm:
- site accessibility
- loading surface
- appointment realism
- dock or labor readiness
- On Midwest open-deck freight, sell certainty and scheduling discipline before price.
๐ฃ๏ธ Chicago, IL โ Columbus, OH
Read:
- This lane will increasingly clear around route reliability, not cheapest truck price.
- Carriers with northern routings and disciplined scheduling will outperform improvised route plans.
Play:
- Source trucks already in metro Chicago.
- Budget for toll and fuel pass-throughs where necessary.
- Favor morning pickups over late-day tenders with next-day expectations.
๐ฃ๏ธ Indianapolis, IN โ St. Louis, MO
Read:
- This is not a same-day assumption lane right now.
- Flood effects, detention, and HOS (Hours of Service) clock burn can turn a simple move into a layover problem.
Play:
- Sell this as controlled next-day service unless the truck is already positioned and loaded early.
- Put delay, detention, and reroute language in writing before dispatch.
๐ง๏ธ Gulf Coast: move what you can before the next disruption cycle
Why:
- The operating window is cleaner now than it will be once repeat rainfall tightens local recovery capacity again.
What to do:
- Pull forward local industrial and agricultural pickups where possible.
- Use Wednesday through Thursday morning as the cleaner pickup window.
- Expect Friday through Sunday to carry higher disruption risk.
๐ฃ๏ธ How to negotiate in this market
๐ค With carriers
๐งพ With shippers
Carrier vetting must get stricter on urgent freight.
- HOS (Hours of Service) enforcement pressure means cheap capacity can become failed capacity.
- Verify:
- operating authority
- insurance
- driver identity
- actual truck/trailer type
- safety profile
Watch for rebrokering and equipment substitution.
- Highest-risk setups today:
- hotshot
- specialized
- urgent partial
- heavy haul replacements
- Confirm the actual operating carrier before release.
Put accessorials in writing before pickup.
- Especially:
- detention
- layover
- tarp
- stop-off
- reroute
- delay-related premium charges
Reconfirm every flood-exposed facility.
- A live appointment in a TMS (Transportation Management System) is not proof of live site access.
Keep backup coverage on exception freight.
- Priority list:
- reefer with hard delivery times
- heavy haul
- specialized
- Midwest flatbed
๐ 24โ72 hour probability map
Base case โ 60%
- Reefer stays elevated
- Open-deck remains tight
- Van stays selectively firmer
- Midwest service recovery improves slower than weather headlines imply
Risk case โ 25%
- Additional route friction and delayed recovery keep equipment trapped longer
- Friday and weekend Gulf disruption resets local capacity again
- Brokers who underquoted today will be buying expensive replacements tomorrow
Opportunity case โ 15%
- Thursday becomes a usable catch-up day on selected Midwest freight
- Brokers who secured flexible appointments and pre-positioned local carriers gain both service wins and margin protection
- Cover reefer, flatbed, and heavy haul before you finalize customer certainty
- Use LTL/Partial to protect margins and retain price-sensitive accounts
- Price Midwest freight by origin radius and route certainty, not national averages
- Treat IndianapolisโSt. Louis as next-day unless loaded early
- Move Gulf Coast pickups forward into the cleaner window
- Shorten quote validity on weather-sensitive and fuel-sensitive freight
- Tighten carrier identity checks on all urgent or specialized loads
- Track live desk metrics
- time to cover
- carrier fallout rate
- paid-vs-posted spread by mode
- accessorial recovery
- on-time pickup rate
- quote revision count
๐งพ Bottom line
- The headline strength is real, but it is concentrated.
- Industrial/open-deck freight is dominating carrier attention and shaping market psychology.
- Reefer is the most dangerous mode to underquote.
- LTL/Partial is the cleanest margin opportunity on the board.
- Van is workable, but only on clean, local, appointment-disciplined freight.
- Diesel at $5.674/gallon is killing loose planning and rewarding local sourcing.
- The brokers who win today will buy earlier, verify harder, and sell certainty as a product.
๐
This Day in History
1104: King Baldwin I of Jerusalem begins the siege of Acre, then held by the Fatimids.
1782: Construction begins on the Grand Palace, the royal residence of the King of Siam in Bangkok, at the command of King Buddha Yodfa Chulaloke.
1994: Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and French President Franรงois Mitterrand officiate at the opening of the Channel Tunnel.
๐ญ Quote of the Day
"Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try Again. Fail again. Fail better."
โ Samuel Beckett