📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Friday, June 05, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The domestic spot market is demonstrating robust summer activity today, with total available loads holding at 186,907, representing a minor 6.0% contraction from yesterday's high-volume mark of 198,916. The national average spot rate remains firm at $2.98/mile, supported by a significant divergence in equipment-specific dynamics. Temperature-controlled reefer capacity is at a premium, commanding a strong $0.22/mile carrier premium ($3.25 paid vs $3.03 posted) as peak summer produce harvests collide with early maritime import surges. Conversely, dry van capacity has loosened slightly, shifting pricing leverage to brokers with a $0.09/mile broker advantage ($2.55 paid vs $2.64 posted). Meanwhile, localized river flooding in the Midwest and South continues to disrupt key corridors like I-35 and I-70, trapping open-deck flatbed capacity and maintaining elevated paid rates of $3.68/mile. High operating costs, anchored by AAA diesel at $5.378/gallon, continue to act as a rigid floor for carrier rate negotiations.
Insight
Weekend Capacity Lock
With severe weather forecast for the Midwest this weekend and reefer demand peaking, expect a significant number of owner-operators to secure high-paying loads today for early next week delivery. Brokers must act with urgency to pre-book critical Monday and Tuesday shipments, as available spot capacity will likely tighten considerably over the weekend.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe Flash Flooding in North-Central Missouri (Missouri (MO, Daviess, Gentry, and Harrison counties)): Heavy thunderstorms producing rapid rainfall have triggered flash flood warnings and forced the closure of MO 85 south of Albany. This localized flooding may disrupt local pick-ups and deliveries and could delay transit along the I-35 corridor, requiring brokers to plan alternative routing.
- Moderate River Flooding across the Central Plains (Midwest Region (KS, MO, NE, SD)): Active flood warnings along the Solomon River and other major basins are causing low-land flooding and road closures, including Arrowhead Road near Niles. These conditions are expected to create difficult transit conditions and potential detours for open-deck and heavy haul carriers navigating the I-70 and I-29 corridors.
- Minor River Flooding in the Southeast and South (Southern States (AR, GA)): Minor flooding along the Ohoopee River in Georgia and regional river basins in Arkansas is causing localized water accumulation near major routes. While main highway corridors remain open, local facilities and secondary roads may experience minor loading delays and access constraints.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Midwest Flood Risk to Intensify Over Weekend
The current river flooding in Missouri and Kansas is not a short-term event. Forecasts call for a significant heavy thunderstorm system to hit Missouri on Sunday, bringing up to an inch of additional rainfall. This will likely expand flood zones, prolong road closures, and push trapped flatbed capacity offline through early next week, severely impacting I-35 and I-70 transit.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Crude oil and diesel futures are showing minor fluctuations, but retail diesel prices at the pump remain high, maintaining a steep cost-per-mile baseline for owner-operators and small fleets.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small carriers and owner-operators are facing intense financial pressure due to high fuel costs and stricter broker vetting standards. This is accelerating market consolidation as smaller fleets seek shelter under larger carrier umbrellas or exit the market entirely.
- Economic Indicators: An early start to the maritime import peak season is driving container spot rates up, signaling a strong influx of retail and manufacturing inventory that will eventually transition to domestic over-the-road volume.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
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Navigating the Broker vs. Asset-Heavy Divide in Specialized Heavy Haul Sourcing 🔗:
With FMCSA maintaining strict financial security requirements, the choice between brokers and specialized heavy haulers highlights the critical need for precise carrier vetting. For brokers, this represents an opportunity to capture high-margin heavy haul freight by leveraging extensive carrier networks, provided they implement rigorous compliance checks. Brokers must ensure carriers possess the exact equipment, oversize permits, and liability insurance required for heavy machinery, protecting shippers from liability while justifying brokerage margins.
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Federal Training Provider Registry Reshapes Entry-Level Driver Pipeline 🔗:
The FMCSA's Training Provider Registry (TPR) enforces standardized training for new CDL applicants, eliminating self-study routes. While this improves long-term safety and compliance, it adds administrative hurdles and costs for new entrants. Brokers should monitor this as it limits the immediate influx of new driver capacity, reinforcing the need to build strong relationships with established, compliant carriers who already meet all federal standards.
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Force Majeure and Supply Chain Disruption: Managing Contractual Risk in Volatile Markets 🔗:
As global supply chains face recurring disruptions from weather, labor, and geopolitical events, standard trade frameworks like Incoterms are reaching their limits. Brokers must proactively communicate with shippers regarding force majeure risks and transit delays. Developing robust contingency routing plans and maintaining transparent tracking data will allow brokers to act as strategic partners, helping shippers navigate disruptions without facing severe contractual penalties.
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Financial Markets Underestimating Cumulative Impact of Supply Chain Bottlenecks 🔗:
While commodity markets remain relatively stable, underlying operational strains, rising insurance costs, and maritime route bottlenecks are quietly eroding supply chain resilience. For domestic brokers, this suggests that spot market volatility could spike suddenly as cumulative inventory drawdowns force shippers to scramble for spot capacity. Brokers should advise clients to secure capacity early and prepare for sudden rate shifts as peak season pressures build.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast is currently the most lucrative region for freight brokers due to a perfect storm of peak summer produce harvests (peaches, blueberries, watermelons) and a surge in maritime imports driving container volumes. This has created a severe capacity imbalance, particularly for temperature-controlled equipment, allowing brokers to command high margins on outbound freight. Additionally, localized river flooding in Georgia and neighboring states has created routing disruptions, further tightening capacity and creating arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can quickly secure compliant carriers.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA → Miami, FL: Outbound Atlanta is experiencing high volume as regional produce and imported retail goods move south into Florida. Reefer capacity is at a premium, with carriers demanding high rates to cover the transit into the Florida peninsula, which traditionally acts as a consumption market with limited outbound freight. Van capacity is more balanced but remains firm due to the overall high level of regional activity.
Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC: The Savannah port is seeing a surge in container arrivals as peak season arrives early, flooding the regional market with dry van and flatbed freight bound for the Charlotte distribution hub. This surge has created localized capacity deficits at the port, driving up spot rates for immediate drayage and over-the-road transport. Flatbed demand is particularly strong for industrial imports.
Regional Insight
Inbound Reefer Arbitrage
While outbound Southeast reefer rates are at a premium, a secondary opportunity exists on inbound lanes. With Midwest corn harvests starting, many reefer carriers are being drawn to Missouri and Illinois. Brokers can attract capacity into the Southeast by offering competitive rates on loads originating from the Midwest, positioning carriers for the more lucrative outbound produce runs.
Regional Insight
Securing the Florida Backhaul
The key to profitability on the Atlanta to Miami lane is locking in the backhaul *before* the carrier accepts the headhaul. Target carriers based in Georgia or the Carolinas who need to return home. Frame the round trip as a single engagement, using the guaranteed, albeit low-paying, northbound load as the final incentive to secure capacity for the high-paying southbound leg.
Regional Insight
Port Drayage Ripple Effect
The capacity crunch at the Port of Savannah is not isolated. As drayage carriers are pulled into urgent port moves, their availability for regional hauls within a 150-mile radius is evaporating. This creates a vacuum, tightening van and flatbed capacity on secondary lanes like Savannah to Augusta or Charleston to Columbia, presenting margin opportunities on loads that others may overlook.
📊 Analyzing Today's Spot Market Dynamics: Rate Spreads and Volume Shifts
Today's real-time market data reveals a total of 186,907 available loads, representing a 6.0% decline from yesterday's volume of 198,916. Despite this slight contraction, the market average rate remains firm at $2.98/mile, indicating that capacity remains relatively tight and carriers are successfully maintaining their pricing leverage. A closer look at the equipment-specific data reveals significant anomalies and opportunities for freight brokers.
The reefer segment stands out as the most volatile and lucrative today. With 8,748 available loads (a 2.0% increase from yesterday), reefers are the only major equipment type to show positive volume growth. More importantly, the average paid rate for reefers sits at $3.25/mile, while the average posted rate is $3.03/mile. This substantial $0.22/mile carrier premium indicates that shippers and brokers are actively bidding up rates to secure temperature-controlled equipment for time-sensitive summer produce. Conversely, the dry van market has shifted in favor of brokers, with available loads down 3.9% to 26,461 and paid rates averaging $2.55/mile against a posted average of $2.64/mile. This $0.09/mile broker advantage suggests that general freight capacity has loosened, allowing brokers to recover margins on dry van shipments.
🔧 Carrier Capacity Constraints: Fuel Costs and Regulatory Vetting Pressures
The financial health of small carriers and owner-operators remains highly fragile, primarily driven by the rigid cost floor established by AAA diesel prices at $5.378/gallon. In an environment with elevated fuel costs, carriers are extremely resistant to deadheading or accepting low-paying backhaul runs. This behavior keeps equipment highly localized and intensifies capacity shortages in agricultural and port regions where outbound demand is high but inbound flows are imbalanced.
Adding to these operational pressures are the cumulative effects of stricter regulatory compliance and broker vetting standards. In the wake of the Montgomery v. Caribe Transport II ruling, enterprise brokerages have aggressively tightened their carrier qualification protocols to mitigate negligent hiring liability. This has effectively shrunk the usable carrier pool, as brokers reject carriers with marginal safety ratings or incomplete insurance histories. Furthermore, the FMCSA's Training Provider Registry (TPR) has standardized and restricted the entry-level driver pipeline, slowing the influx of new capacity into the market. For brokers, these combined factors mean that securing high-quality, compliant capacity requires building deeper relationships with established fleets and offering fast-pay incentives to offset their high operating costs.
💰 Exploiting Rate Spreads: Tactical Margin Opportunities for Brokers
Today's spot market data highlights clear arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can strategically navigate the spreads between posted and paid rates. The flatbed sector, despite a 6.7% drop in available loads to 79,319, continues to command a $0.12/mile carrier premium, with paid rates averaging $3.68/mile against a posted average of $3.56/mile. This premium is heavily concentrated in regions affected by Midwest and Southern river flooding, where routing disruptions have trapped open-deck capacity. Brokers who can identify carriers willing to navigate these challenging areas can secure high-paying industrial loads and pass on reasonable rates to desperate shippers.
In contrast, the LTL and partial load segment presents an excellent margin-recovery opportunity. LTL available loads dropped 9.3% today to 12,584, and paid rates averaged $1.62/mile against a posted $1.74/mile—a solid $0.12/mile broker advantage. By actively consolidating partial shipments into full truckloads or utilizing co-loading strategies, brokers can capitalize on this loose capacity to offer competitive pricing to shippers while pocketing significant margins. Similarly, the specialized freight sector shows a $0.10/mile broker advantage ($3.04 paid vs $3.14 posted), suggesting that brokers who focus on specialized equipment repositioning can negotiate highly favorable rates with carriers looking to return to high-demand zones.
👥 Agricultural and Industrial Sectors Drive Peak Summer Demand
The domestic freight market is currently being anchored by intense seasonal demand from the agricultural and industrial manufacturing sectors. The full summer produce harvest is underway, with high-value, perishable commodities like blueberries, peaches, and watermelons moving in high volumes out of California, Georgia, South Carolina, and Texas. Because these crops require precise temperature control and rapid transit to prevent spoilage, shippers in this sector are highly rate-insensitive, prioritizing capacity security above all else. This provides a prime opportunity for brokers to secure premium reefer loads.
Simultaneously, the industrial and construction sectors are driving robust flatbed and heavy haul demand, despite localized weather setbacks. Early peak season maritime imports are flooding major ports, bringing in heavy machinery, steel, and raw materials that must be transported to inland distribution hubs and manufacturing facilities. While severe flooding in Missouri (WX7458B6EC) and Kansas (WXB452F606) has disrupted key corridors like I-35 and I-70, the underlying demand for open-deck equipment remains strong. Brokers who specialize in these sectors must maintain close contact with shippers to manage delivery expectations and adjust pricing to reflect the increased transit times caused by regional detours.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Focus sales efforts on securing high-margin Southeast reefer freight; the combination of produce and imports creates the market's most profitable opportunities.
- Proactively warn flatbed and heavy haul customers of extended transit times and rising rates out of the Midwest due to worsening flood conditions expected through the weekend.
- Leverage the broker advantage in the van and LTL sectors to build margin, offsetting the high buy-rates required to secure tight reefer and flatbed capacity.
- Prioritize pre-booking Monday and Tuesday freight today, as weekend weather and market dynamics will significantly reduce available spot capacity.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a two-speed market, not a uniform tightening story.
- Total available loads are 186,907, down 6.0% from 198,916 yesterday.
- National average spot rate is $2.98/mile.
- The real story is mode divergence: reefer, flatbed, and heavy haul are still carrier-led, while van, specialized, and LTL (Less Than Truckload)/partial are giving brokers margin room.
Reefer is the day’s highest-urgency buy.
- 8,748 reefer loads
- $3.03/mile posted
- $3.25/mile paid
- +$0.22/mile carrier premium
- With June produce moving hard and weekend weather risk building, Monday/Tuesday reefer coverage should be treated like same-day freight.
Dry van is your cleanest margin recovery tool today.
- 26,461 van loads
- $2.64/mile posted
- $2.55/mile paid
- -$0.09/mile broker advantage
- That is usable room to repair margin on contract overflow, import support, and routine replenishment freight.
Open-deck is still steering network behavior.
- Flatbed + heavy haul + specialized = 139,114 of 186,907 available loads, about 74.4% of the board.
- Those same segments account for 49,582 of 61,022 loads moved today, about 81.3% of execution.
- When open-deck is this dominant, truck positioning, deadhead behavior, and regional availability get distorted for everybody else.
Flooding is now a productivity problem more than a headline problem.
- Missouri and Kansas warnings around I-35, I-70, and I-29 matter because they reduce turns, extend detours, and trap specialized/open-deck equipment.
- Transit time risk is rising faster than many customers realize.
Diesel at $5.378/gallon remains a hard negotiation floor.
- Carriers will continue to price around:
- shorter deadhead
- better pickup certainty
- faster unloads
- clear reload potential
- In this environment, the nearest qualified truck beats the cheapest distant truck.
📈 What the tape is really saying
The headline pullback in loads does not equal broad weakness.
- Total loads fell to 186,907, but reefer loads rose to 8,748 while the other major categories softened.
- That mix says seasonal freight is still pulling hard, even as some general freight loosens around the edges.
The market is cooling at the top line, but not where time sensitivity lives.
- National average rate is $2.98/mile, below yesterday’s $3.04/mile.
- That softer average is being pulled down by broker-favorable van, specialized, and LTL/partial pricing.
- It does not mean produce, flood-affected open-deck, or urgent industrial freight got easier.
The most important behavioral shift today is carrier selectivity.
- Carriers are not just asking, “What’s the rate?”
- They are asking:
- How much deadhead?
- Will I get stuck in weather or detention?
- Is there a clean reload?
- Is this broker organized enough to get me loaded and paid without drama?
- In a high-cost market, clarity closes trucks.
The board remains structurally stronger than a month ago.
- One month ago: 172,704 loads and $2.77/mile
- Today: 186,907 loads and $2.98/mile
- That is still a firmer revenue environment than early May, even if today feels mixed.
🚛 Mode-by-mode broker playbook
❄️ Reefer
🚚 Dry Van
🪵 Flatbed
Market read
- 79,319 loads
- $3.56/mile posted
- $3.68/mile paid
- +$0.12/mile carrier premium
What it means
- Flatbed still carries real pricing strength despite the volume dip.
- Flooding in Missouri and Kansas is trapping capacity and lengthening turns.
- A lot of brokers will underquote by pricing miles instead of turn time.
Best broker moves
- Price full-turn economics:
- tarp time
- securement time
- yard delay
- detour miles
- crane/crew misses
- Call existing flatbed relationships before posting broadly.
- Warn customers now that Monday delivery assumptions out of the Midwest may not hold if weekend rainfall expands closures.
Best margin pockets
- Freight where competitors ignore:
- weather exposure
- specialized securement
- wet-yard productivity loss
- You win by being more realistic, not cheaper.
🏗️ Heavy Haul
Market read
- 37,374 loads
- $3.67/mile posted
- $3.78/mile paid
- +$0.11/mile carrier premium
What it means
- Heavy haul remains route-feasibility freight first, rate freight second.
- Flooded corridors and permit sensitivity mean small mistakes become expensive quickly.
Best broker moves
- Confirm route logic before final pricing.
- Document permit assumptions and reroute responsibilities.
- Use only proven heavy-haul carriers with exact equipment fit.
- Build extra time into customer expectations now, not after the first bridge or county-road issue.
Where brokers lose money
- On “looks fine on the map” freight.
- Heavy haul margins vanish when escort timing, permits, or local access are not nailed down up front.
⚙️ Specialized
Market read
- 22,421 loads
- $3.14/mile posted
- $3.04/mile paid
- -$0.10/mile broker advantage
What it means
- This is a quieter opportunity bucket today.
- There is real room to buy smart from carriers repositioning equipment, especially if you give them a logical next market.
Best broker moves
- Target repositioning freight out of softer regions.
- Tighten dimensions, loading method, and accessorial scope before posting.
- Bundle related project loads when possible, so the carrier sees continuity, not a one-off headache.
📦 LTL / Partial
Market read
- 12,584 loads
- $1.74/mile posted
- $1.62/mile paid
- -$0.12/mile broker advantage
What it means
- This is the best defensive margin lever for today and early next week.
- Flexible shippers can avoid expensive truckload buys by consolidating palletized freight.
Best broker moves
- Convert dock-high, palletized, flexible freight out of full truckload where possible.
- Sell LTL/partial as a cost-control tool to customers spooked by reefer and flatbed pricing.
- Tighten accessorial language:
- appointment windows
- liftgate needs
- residential exposure
- sort/segregation expectations
Best use case
- When the shipper is price-sensitive but not time-critical.
- LTL/partial is your pressure-release valve today.
🌦️ Weather-driven execution risks for the next 24–72 hours
🗺️ Southeast positioning: where the best money is today
- The Southeast remains the highest-value hunting ground.
- Produce plus maritime imports is creating the strongest mix of:
- urgency
- imbalance
- reload complexity
- customer rate tolerance
- The region is especially attractive for reefer and selectively attractive for port-adjacent van and flatbed.
🍑 Atlanta, GA → Miami, FL
Best read
- This is still a premium southbound lane, especially for reefer.
- Florida remains a headhaul market with backhaul risk, so the rate only works if the return is planned first.
Best broker move
- Sell the round trip, not the outbound leg.
- Target carriers based in:
- Georgia
- South Carolina
- North Carolina
- Present the move as:
- strong southbound revenue
- preplanned northbound recovery
- reduced uncertainty
- Carriers say yes faster when the reload story is already solved.
🚢 Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC
Best read
- Port-driven volume is tightening local support capacity.
- The hidden opportunity is not just the main lane; it is the 150-mile ripple market around Savannah.
Best broker move
- Watch short-haul and regional freight that gets ignored when drayage surges.
- As port carriers get pulled into urgent container work, secondary van and flatbed coverage gets thinner.
- That creates opportunity on freight others think should be easy.
❄️ Inbound reefer arbitrage into the Southeast
Best read
- Reefers are also being pulled toward Missouri and Illinois with corn and other summer food freight.
- That creates an opening to buy inbound Southeast capacity intelligently, then monetize the outbound produce leg.
Best broker move
- Offer fair inbound rates from the Midwest into Georgia and the Carolinas, then sell carriers on the stronger outbound produce reload.
- This is one of the few places today where rate strategy and truck psychology align cleanly.
🧠 Shipper and carrier psychology: how to win conversations today
What shippers are likely thinking
- “The board is down. Why are some of my rates still high?”
Best answer
- “Because general freight softened, but produce and weather-affected capacity did not. The market is cheaper in van and consolidation, but still expensive in reefer and open-deck.”
What carriers are really evaluating
- Reload certainty
- Fuel burn
- Weekend risk
- Detention exposure
- Broker organization
- Weather corridor exposure
How to pitch carriers today
- Lead with:
- exact pickup time
- exact delivery window
- commodity
- weight
- appointment type
- weather note
- detention policy
- reload market
- In this market, precision beats persuasion.
💰 Margin strategy for today
⚖️ Risk controls that matter today
Compliance control
- Use pre-vetted carriers first on reefer, same-day, flood-exposed, and heavy-haul freight.
- Keep time-stamped authority, insurance, and safety documentation in file.
Routing control
- On Missouri/Kansas touches, require:
- carrier route acknowledgment
- ETA revision logic
- detour acceptance
- layover/detention understanding
Commercial control
- Shorten quote validity windows on reefer and open-deck.
- Do not let customers anchor you to posted rates where paid reality is clearly higher.
Operational control
- Escalate pickup readiness before dispatch, especially on Friday freight.
- A missed Friday pickup in this market often becomes a Monday replacement problem at a worse rate.
📋 24-hour execution plan
Before 10 AM
- Cover all priority reefer freight first.
- Pre-book Monday and Tuesday weather-exposed shipments.
- Call core flatbed and heavy-haul carriers before broad posting.
Late morning
- Reprice van opportunities and recover margin on contract overflow.
- Offer LTL/partial alternatives to flexible truckload customers.
- Audit every Missouri/Kansas shipment for route assumptions.
Midday
- Target inbound reefers to Southeast origins.
- Push port-adjacent Savannah freight while local capacity is still executable.
- Close any Florida loads only after the backhaul path is discussed.
Afternoon
- Lock weekend-sensitive freight before owner-operators commit to early-week premium reloads.
- Send proactive transit-risk updates to open-deck customers.
- Stop quoting flood-exposed freight as if it were a normal-turn load.
End of day
- Have Monday morning’s critical freight already covered.
- Clean up all documentation on weather and compliance-sensitive files.
- Identify which customers can be moved from truckload to LTL/partial next week.
🎯 Best broker moves right now
- Buy reefer early and sell it as replacement-cost capacity.
- Use van as today’s margin-repair mode.
- Convert flexible freight into LTL/partial before next-week tightening.
- Price flatbed and heavy haul on turn time, not just miles.
- Treat Missouri/Kansas freight as a productivity-risk issue, not a simple weather note.
- Use Southeast inbound positioning to win outbound produce freight.
- Do not sell Florida without a recovery plan.
- Go home today with Monday and Tuesday priority freight already covered.
🏁 Bottom line
- The market is softer on the surface and tighter underneath.
- Van, specialized, and LTL/partial are your margin tools.
- Reefer is still the urgency market.
- Flatbed and heavy haul remain vulnerable to flood-driven turn loss.
- Diesel at $5.378/gallon keeps deadhead discipline strict.
- The brokers who win today will separate “cheap” from “usable,” cover early, and sell certainty while others are still quoting the board.
💡 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
1288: The Battle of Worringen ends the War of the Limburg Succession, with John I, Duke of Brabant, being one of the more important victors.
1849: Denmark becomes a constitutional monarchy by the signing of a new constitution.
1941: World War II: Four thousand Chongqing residents are asphyxiated in a bomb shelter during the Bombing of Chongqing.
💭 Quote of the Day
"Why change? Everyone has his own style. When you have found it, you should stick to it."
— Audrey Hepburn