📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Tuesday, June 02, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The spot market is experiencing an accelerated post-holiday volume surge today, with real-time transactional data showing total available loads climbing 11.6% overnight to 200,588. Spot rates are averaging $3.00/mile, heavily supported by a structurally high national diesel average of $5.432/gallon, which continues to restrict carrier deadhead behavior and establish a firm floor for rate negotiations. Severe weather disruptions, including active river flooding in the Midwest, South, and West, are further constraining equipment availability along critical freight corridors like I-10, I-49, and I-90. With peak summer produce season driving intense reefer demand across the Southeast and West Coast, brokers must navigate sharp regional capacity imbalances and leverage significant rate spreads to protect margins.
Insight
Execution pricing is separating from board pricing
The most important market signal today is not just higher volume; it is the widening gap between posted and paid rates in reefer, flatbed, and heavy-haul freight. That spread means early load-board quotes are aging poorly as trucks commit elsewhere, especially where flood detours or produce loading windows cut daily truck turns. Dry van and partial still offer cleaner margin pockets, but on temperature-controlled and open-deck freight, rate validity should be measured in hours, not all day.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Midwest River Flooding (Midwest States (IL, IN, KS, KY, MO)): Minor flooding along the Little Osage River and other regional waterways is inundating low-lying areas and farmland. This may disrupt local freight movements and force open-deck and flatbed carriers to take extensive detours, particularly along the I-49 corridor in Missouri and local routes in Kansas and Indiana.
- Gulf Coast and Southern Flooding (Gulf Coast and South (AR, MS, TX)): Minor flooding along the Pascagoula River is cutting off river roads and property. High water could delay transit and tighten flatbed and dry van capacity along the critical I-10 corridor in Mississippi and regional routes in Arkansas and Texas.
- Pacific Northwest and Mountain West River Flooding (Northwest and Mountain West (MT, WA)): Minor flooding along the Stehekin River and Flathead River basins is inundating local roads and properties. This could delay regional freight movements and impact truck routing along the I-90 corridor in Montana and local Washington state routes.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Gulf Coast delays are most likely to worsen late today
Flooded corridors in southern Mississippi face a higher disruption window this afternoon and evening as rain redevelops near the Pascagoula basin, with the heaviest slowdown risk from roughly 4 p.m. through the overnight per iod. That keeps I-10-adjacent freight vulnerable to missed appointments and tighter same-day recovery options even if mainline interstate lanes stay technically open.
- Prioritize morning pickups and daylight transits on Mississippi crossings.
- Build extra transit time into east-west flatbed and dry van moves touching the Gulf Coast today.
Weather Insight
Midwest flood impacts shift from expansion risk to duration risk
Missouri, Indiana, and Kentucky turn relatively drier through Thursday, which lowers the odds of a fresh flood spike but does not quickly restore freight velocity. The bigger issue now is lingering water on secondary roads, farm approaches, and oversize routing alternatives, so open-deck and heavy-haul moves will keep absorbing detour miles and per mit friction even without new headline weather.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Elevated global energy prices and geopolitical tensions in the Middle East are keeping diesel futures volatile, maintaining a high floor for carrier fuel surcharges.
- Carrier Financial Health: High operating costs, driven by $5.432/gallon diesel, are squeezing margins for small fleets and owner-operators, accelerating industry consolidation and capacity exits.
- Economic Indicators: Peak summer produce demand and steady construction activity are driving strong spot market volumes, offsetting broader macroeconomic cooling.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
FMCSA Launches Motus Registration System, Retiring Legacy Compliance Portals 🔗:
The permanent retirement of legacy systems like the URS, L&I public filing, and FMCSA Portal in favor of the new Motus platform represents a massive shift in carrier compliance workflows. Brokers must immediately update their internal carrier onboarding and vetting processes to align with the new Motus system. Ensure compliance teams are trained on navigating Motus to verify carrier authority and insurance, preventing onboarding delays. This transition could temporarily disrupt carrier registrations, making proactive verification critical to maintaining a fluid capacity pool.
-
Ohio Ends Non-Domiciled CDL Program, Tightening Regional Driver Pool 🔗:
Ohio's formal end to its non-domiciled CDL program, following the FMCSA's updated rules, permanently closes a licensing pathway for non-US resident drivers. This regulatory shift could contract the regional driver pool, particularly for carriers operating in the Midwest. Brokers should expect localized capacity tightening in Ohio and neighboring states. When quoting freight in this region, account for potential driver shortages and communicate with shippers that carrier vetting must remain strict to avoid non-compliant operators.
-
Carrier Vetting Alert: Extreme Power Unit to Driver Imbalances Signal High Fraud Risk 🔗:
The FMCSA registration of A+ Towing LLC, showing 2,021 power units but only 4 drivers, highlights a critical compliance red flag for freight brokers. This extreme imbalance is a classic indicator of potential chameleon carrier activity, double-brokering schemes, or fraudulent registration. Brokers must enforce strict vetting protocols, cross-referencing power unit counts with driver numbers and safety inspections. Do not rely solely on basic active authority status; deep-dive into carrier profiles to protect shippers from cargo theft and liability.
News Insight
Motus cutover increases hot-load onboarding friction
The immediate brokerage risk in the Motus transition is not just slower setup; it is false confidence around newly active, recently reinstated, or recently updated authorities that may not synchronize cleanly across data sources on the same day. For urgent spot freight, the safest capacity pool is carriers already verified before the cutover, while any brand-new profile or sudden insurance change deserves manual confirmation before dispatch.
- Expect more last-minute swaps when a carrier appears active in one system but cannot be cleared in another.
- Fraud exposure rises during platform transitions because bad actors exploit verification lag and rushed coverage.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast US is currently the most lucrative region for freight brokers, driven by the convergence of peak summer produce harvests and localized flooding. Outbound capacity is highly volatile, with reefers commanding significant premiums as blueberries, peaches, and watermelons flood the market from Georgia and South Carolina. Meanwhile, flatbed capacity is constrained by regional flooding along the Gulf Coast and Mississippi, forcing carriers to seek detours and demand higher rates. Brokers who can secure capacity early and leverage the wide rate spreads can capture substantial margins.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA → Miami, FL: This lane is experiencing high volume as outbound Georgia produce (peaches and blueberries) competes for refrigerated equipment. Dry van volume is also strong, driven by retail replenishment ahead of the summer peak. Outbound Atlanta capacity is tightening, while Miami remains a challenging destination for backhauls, creating a directional rate imbalance.
Jacksonville, FL → Nashville, TN: This lane serves as a critical conduit for freight moving out of the Florida peninsula toward the Midwest. Outbound Jacksonville volume is rising as imports and regional produce (tomatoes and watermelons) ramp up. Capacity is moderately tight, with flatbeds and reefers seeing the highest demand.
Regional Insight
Florida pricing hinges more on reload certainty than linehaul miles
On Atlanta-to-Miami and other peninsula moves, carriers are charging for the risk of getting stuck south, not just for the outbound leg. The best pricing leverage is coming from brokers that can pair a southbound produce or retail move with a committed reload out of Jacksonville, north Florida, or coastal Georgia within 24 hours of delivery.
- Use Jacksonville as the reset point for reefer and van capacity exiting South Florida.
- Flexible delivery windows in Miami often buy more rate relief than pushing harder on linehaul.
📰 Breaking Down: FMCSA Motus Registration System Launch
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration's (FMCSA) official launch of the Motus registration system marks the permanent retirement of legacy compliance portals, including the Unified Registration System (URS) and the Licensing and Insurance (L&I) public filing system. This is not merely an administrative update; it is a fundamental restructuring of how carrier authority, insurance, and safety data are recorded and verified. For freight brokers, this transition represents both an operational risk and a strategic opportunity.
In the short term, the retirement of legacy databases is highly likely to cause technical friction and data synchronization delays between the FMCSA and third-party vetting platforms. Brokers who rely solely on automated vetting software may experience false positives or delayed approvals as these platforms adjust to the Motus API. To mitigate this, brokerage compliance teams must establish manual verification protocols within the Motus system to ensure legitimate carriers are not turned away, and to prevent fraudulent actors from exploiting transition gaps.
Furthermore, the consolidation of registration workflows into Motus is designed to enhance transparency and crack down on 'chameleon' carriers—fraudulent operators who shut down and re-register under new names to escape poor safety records. Brokers who master the Motus interface early will gain a competitive advantage, enabling faster, more secure carrier onboarding while protecting their shippers from cargo theft and negligent hiring liabilities.
🚛 Reefer: Peak Produce and Flooding Collide
The refrigerated transport sector is currently experiencing extreme volatility, driven by the simultaneous convergence of peak summer produce harvests and severe regional flooding. Real-time load board data reveals 8,463 available reefer loads, representing a 7.4% increase from yesterday. More importantly, the average paid rate for reefers has surged to $3.43/mile, commanding a massive $0.26/mile premium over the posted average of $3.17/mile. This wide spread indicates that carriers hold significant negotiating leverage in key agricultural corridors.
The primary driver of this capacity squeeze is the peak harvest of high-value, temperature-sensitive commodities, including blueberries, peaches, tomatoes, and watermelons across California, Georgia, and South Carolina. These commodities require rapid, pre-cooled transit, leaving no room for operational delays. At the same time, active river flooding along the Gulf Coast and Midwest is forcing extensive detours, increasing transit times and reducing the velocity of refrigerated equipment.
For brokers, this environment requires a highly proactive capacity sourcing strategy. Relying on posted rates will result in missed loads and service failures. Instead, brokers must analyze historical lane data and real-time carrier positioning to identify backhaul opportunities. For instance, reefers delivering into major consumption hubs should be pre-booked for immediate return trips to agricultural zones, securing reliable capacity before it hits the open spot market.
📅 June Produce Transitions and Summer Capacity Squeeze
As we enter the first week of June 2026, the freight market is transitioning into the heart of the summer shipping season. Over the next 7 to 14 days, brokers must prepare for a significant shift in regional capacity dynamics as agricultural harvests expand northward. The current peak in Southeast produce (Georgia peaches and blueberries) will begin to merge with mid-Atlantic harvests, while California's Central Valley continues to operate at maximum outbound reefer demand.
This seasonal transition will place immense pressure on dry van capacity as well. As reefers are swallowed up by high-paying produce loads, shippers of non-perishable food and beverage products will be forced to compete for dry van equipment, driving up van spot rates. Real-time data already shows dry van volumes trending upward, with 27,938 available loads today, a 9.9% overnight increase.
Additionally, the end-of-quarter push in late June will collide with these seasonal agricultural volumes, creating a perfect storm for capacity tightness. Brokers should advise their contract shippers to secure capacity now for late-June shipments, as spot market rates are highly likely to spike. Sourcing carriers with dedicated regional networks will be critical to insulating clients from the impending capacity squeeze.
🌐 Global Disruptions and Domestic Fuel Surcharges
The domestic truckload market does not operate in a vacuum, and current global macroeconomic and geopolitical events are exerting direct pressure on US freight rates. Ongoing conflicts in the Middle East and persistent congestion at the Panama Canal continue to disrupt global maritime supply chains, driving up ocean freight rates and triggering early peak-season import surges at US West Coast and East Coast ports. This influx of containerized cargo is translating into robust domestic drayage and dry van demand, keeping spot volumes elevated.
Simultaneously, these global tensions are keeping energy markets highly volatile. While the domestic AAA diesel price has ticked down slightly to $5.432/gallon, it remains structurally high. This elevated fuel cost represents a massive operational burden for carriers, particularly owner-operators and small fleets. To survive, carriers are enforcing strict fuel surcharge programs and minimizing deadhead miles, refusing to position equipment without guaranteed, high-paying outbound freight.
Brokers must understand that high diesel prices establish a hard floor for spot rates. Even if volume softens temporarily, carriers cannot afford to cut rates below their operating costs. When negotiating with shippers, brokers must use this fuel context to justify current rate levels and advocate for realistic pricing that ensures carrier participation and service reliability.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Lock Southeast reefer capacity early; produce lanes are tightening faster than posted prices imply.
- Quote flatbed and reefer freight with short validity windows and explicit detention or reroute assumptions.
- Only buy deep-peninsula Florida coverage when the northbound reload is identified first.
- Manually verify new or recently changed carrier authorities during the Motus transition before releasing freight.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a speed-and-precision market, not a cheap market.
- Total available loads are 200,588, up 11.6% from 179,811.
- When volume jumps this fast, posted rates lag reality, especially in freight that loses turns to weather, produce loading, or permit friction.
Execution pricing is now clearly separating from screen pricing.
- Dry van still shows a $0.10/mile broker edge.
- LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload/Partial) shows a $0.12/mile broker edge.
- Reefer is already $0.26/mile above posted.
- Flatbed is $0.07/mile above posted.
- Heavy haul is $0.10/mile above posted.
- Specialized is basically tight-neutral at $0.02/mile above posted.
Diesel at $5.432/gallon is still the market’s behavioral floor.
- Carriers are not pricing off miles alone.
- They are pricing off deadhead pain, dwell risk, detours, and reload certainty.
Weather is reducing truck productivity more than it is creating headline shutdowns.
- The real damage is in secondary roads, farm access, oversize routing, appointment misses, and fewer turns per day.
- That matters most in reefer, flatbed, and heavy haul.
The Southeast remains the best revenue region and the easiest place to get underpriced.
- Produce is pulling reefers hard.
- Florida freight still prices off reload logic, not linehaul logic.
The Motus compliance transition changes same-day coverage strategy.
- For hot freight, pre-vetted carriers are now more valuable than newly found cheap carriers.
- During system cutovers, fraud and false-clear situations rise together.
📊 What the market tape is actually saying
The market is broad-based stronger, but not evenly strong.
- National average spot rate is $3.00/mile, with a range of $1.59 to $3.74/mile.
- That average hides a very segmented market:
- Van is still negotiable.
- Reefer is carrier-led.
- Flatbed and heavy haul are operationally tight.
- Specialized is firm.
- LTL/Partial is the best relief valve.
Industrial and open-deck freight are still controlling truck positioning.
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized total 151,479 loads, or about 75.5% of all available loads.
- That means even brokers covering vans are competing against a market where industrial freight is soaking up positioning decisions, fuel spend, and driver hours.
The key spread story today is simple:
- Broker-favorable pockets
- Van: Posted $2.70, paid $2.60
- LTL/Partial: Posted $1.71, paid $1.59
- Carrier-favorable execution markets
- Reefer: Posted $3.17, paid $3.43
- Flatbed: Posted $3.57, paid $3.64
- Heavy Haul: Posted $3.64, paid $3.74
- Specialized: Posted $3.12, paid $3.14
Volume growth is confirming urgency, not easing it.
- Van loads: 27,938, up 9.9%
- Reefer loads: 8,463, up 7.4%
- Flatbed loads: 87,861, up 8.2%
- Heavy haul loads: 41,985, up 19.6%
- Specialized loads: 21,633, up 11.9%
- LTL/Partial loads: 12,708, up 16.7%
- When heavy haul and specialized accelerate this hard, the message is that productivity-sensitive freight is tightening first.
🚚 Mode-by-mode broker playbook
🚛 Dry Van
Market read
- 27,938 loads
- Posted $2.70/mile
- Paid $2.60/mile
- Van is still the cleanest truckload buying pocket, but it is not loose.
- The $0.10/mile spread is enough to work with only if the truck is local, the appointment is real, and the backhaul is decent.
Best moves today
- Cover hard-appointment freight early.
- Cheap late-day van capacity usually turns out to be farther away, less certain, or poorly positioned for reload.
- Target backhaul and reset lanes.
- Margin is strongest where the carrier already wants to go next.
- Shorten quote validity.
- In this market, van quotes should age in hours, not all day.
Where brokers get hurt
- Treating all empty trucks as equal.
- A truck 90 miles away under $5.432 diesel is not the same as a truck already near the shipper.
- Quoting tomorrow off this morning’s board.
- Rising volume makes that dangerous fast.
❄️ Reefer
Market read
- 8,463 loads
- Posted $3.17/mile
- Paid $3.43/mile
- Reefer is the most obvious execution-above-screen market on the board.
- A $0.26/mile carrier premium during peak produce means the posted rate is now more of a conversation starter than a closing number.
Best moves today
- Price produce-adjacent freight defensively.
- Blueberries, peaches, tomatoes, watermelons, and other summer perishables are pulling capacity toward the Southeast, California, Texas, and Midwest produce zones.
- Secure morning coverage first.
- Reefers lose value fast as loading windows tighten and better produce reloads appear.
- Confirm all operational details before final buy rate.
- Commodity
- Temperature setpoint
- Pre-cool requirement
- Washout status
- Pallet count
- Seal expectations
- Appointment firmness
- Sell reload logic, not just linehaul.
- On Florida and Southeast freight, the return plan often determines the outbound rate.
Where brokers get hurt
- Assuming an empty reefer is truly available.
- In June, many “available” reefers are really just shopping for the best produce sequence.
- Leaving detention and reconsignment vague.
- In a carrier-led reefer market, vagueness becomes a surcharge.
🪵 Flatbed
Market read
- 87,861 loads
- Posted $3.57/mile
- Paid $3.64/mile
- Flatbed is no longer a cheap board market.
- The spread is only $0.07/mile, but the true problem is turn loss from weather, construction demand, tarping time, and muddy jobsite access.
Best moves today
- Quote by total job complexity, not by linehaul.
- Include tarping, securement time, crane delays, site conditions, and detour exposure.
- Pre-book before the afternoon.
- Open-deck carriers get more selective as the day progresses and reload quality becomes clearer.
- Treat Gulf and Midwest flood exposure as a productivity surcharge.
- Even when the interstate is open, the job still may not run cleanly.
Where brokers get hurt
- Buying flatbeds like dry vans.
- Ignoring shipper and receiver surface conditions.
- Soft yards and wet jobsites create real service failures.
🏗️ Heavy Haul
Market read
- 41,985 loads
- Posted $3.64/mile
- Paid $3.74/mile
- Heavy haul volume is up 19.6%, which is the strongest growth signal on the board.
- This is a route-feasibility market first, rate market second.
Best moves today
- Check route viability before quoting.
- Flooded approaches, bridge restrictions, and alternate oversize paths matter more than the headline lane.
- Use proven carriers only.
- This is not the environment to experiment with a new heavy-haul partner unless compliance and operating history are solid.
- Build permit and layover language into the rate.
- Weather plus rerouting is extending permit friction.
Where brokers get hurt
- Leading with price before engineering the move.
- Believing the cheapest compliant option is the safest option.
⚙️ Specialized
Market read
- 21,633 loads
- Posted $3.12/mile
- Paid $3.14/mile
- Specialized is not exploding, but it is firm enough that stale margin assumptions will hurt you.
Best moves today
- Use relationship carriers where possible.
- Be selective on vague freight.
- Unclear loading methods, site constraints, or reload weakness will erase a thin spread quickly.
- Watch manufacturing and project hubs for same-day tightening.
📦 LTL/Partial
Market read
- 12,708 loads
- Posted $1.71/mile
- Paid $1.59/mile
- This remains the best tactical pressure-release option for the desk.
- The $0.12/mile broker edge is real, but only if the freight is operationally clean.
Best moves today
- Screen every flexible shipment for consolidation.
- Non-urgent
- Dock-to-dock
- Palletized
- Low-claim-risk freight
- Use partials to protect truckload margin.
- Save full truckload capacity for freight where service failure is expensive.
- Price accessorials tightly.
- Appointment, limited access, liftgate, reweigh, and cubic adjustments can erase linehaul wins.
🌦️ Weather and regional tactics that matter today
🌴 Southeast: highest-value region on the board
Why it matters
- Peak produce is pulling reefer equipment aggressively.
- High diesel discourages speculative repositioning.
- Southbound freight still prices off reload certainty, especially into Florida.
Broker posture
- Buy inbound Southeast coverage early.
- Sell outbound Southeast freight with replacement-cost language.
- Do not let a shipper anchor you to the morning reefer post when paid execution is already $3.43/mile.
🚚 Atlanta, GA → Miami, FL
Best read
- This is a reload lane disguised as a linehaul lane.
- Carriers are charging for the risk of being trapped in a weak south-Florida recovery.
Best tactics
- Identify the northbound reload before awarding the southbound move.
- Offer delivery flexibility where possible.
- Flexible delivery often buys more rate relief than pushing harder on linehaul.
- Use Jacksonville or north Florida as the reset plan.
🚛 Jacksonville, FL → Nashville, TN
Best read
- This is a valuable reset lane because it helps carriers recover out of the peninsula.
- Reefers and flatbeds should stay relatively firm here because the lane helps reposition equipment toward stronger inland demand.
Best tactics
- Prioritize carriers finishing southbound work in Florida.
- Sell the lane as a recovery move, not just a load.
- Keep appointment details extremely clean.
🌊 Gulf Coast / I-10 exposure
Best read
- Mississippi flood risk is more dangerous later in the day.
- Same-day recovery options shrink fast once afternoon weather and local access delays pile up.
Best tactics
- Prioritize morning pickups and daylight transit.
- Add buffer to east-west loads touching I-10.
- Write reroute and detention assumptions before dispatch.
🌧️ Midwest flood belt / I-49 and Indiana access routes
Best read
- The biggest issue now is duration risk, not necessarily a new flood spike.
- Water on secondary roads, farm approaches, and alternate oversize paths will keep reducing truck turns.
Best tactics
- Pad appointments on flatbed, heavy haul, and produce-adjacent freight.
- Verify local access, not just interstate status.
- Warn shippers that “open highway” does not mean “normal service.”
🧠 Shipper and carrier psychology: how to win the conversation
What shippers are thinking
- They see rising load count and assume the market is simply “available.”
- They often anchor to posted numbers, especially if they are not living in execution data every hour.
How to frame the market
- “Capacity exists, but executable capacity is tightening by mode and region. If we lock now, we are buying service. If we wait, we are buying replacement cost.”
- That language is commercially strong because it is true, specific, and defensible.
What carriers are thinking
- Under $5.432 diesel, carriers are maximizing net revenue per day, not just rate per mile.
- Their silent checklist is:
- How far is the deadhead?
- Will I load on time?
- How bad is the receiver?
- Can I reload quickly?
- Will weather or permitting ruin my turn?
How to get better carrier response
- Lead with precision.
- Exact pickup time
- Exact delivery time
- Commodity
- Weight
- Access conditions
- Detention policy
- Reload logic
- In a firmer market, precision wins faster than optimism.
⚠️ Risk controls that protect margin today
For Motus-related compliance risk
- Use pre-approved carriers first on hot loads.
- Manually verify any new authority, recent reinstatement, insurance change, or profile mismatch.
- Treat same-day contact or banking changes as a fresh fraud review.
For weather-exposed freight
- Put detention, layover, reroute, redelivery, and TONU (Truck Ordered Not Used) terms in writing.
- Do not leave “weather delays handled as needed” vague.
For reefer
- Verify washout, pre-cool, setpoint, seal process, and commodity details before rate confirmation.
- Assume produce-adjacent freight will reprice faster than non-perishable food freight.
For flatbed and heavy haul
- Confirm site conditions and path feasibility before final quote.
- Ask about loading equipment, tarp expectations, chain/securement requirements, and daylight restrictions.
For fraud prevention
- Watch for extreme power-unit-to-driver imbalances, rushed onboarding pressure, and authority-change anomalies.
- Do not confuse “active” with “safe to load.”
⏱️ Today’s highest-return operating cadence
Before mid-morning
- Cover reefer, flatbed, and heavy-haul loads with hard appointments first.
- Call pre-vetted core carriers before going broad to the board.
- Reprice Southeast produce and Florida freight immediately.
Midday
- Audit all Gulf and Midwest flood-exposed loads for appointment and route risk.
- Convert flexible freight into LTL/partial where possible.
- Review tomorrow’s uncovered freight and shorten quote validity now.
Afternoon
- Stop selling off stale morning posts.
- Expect same-day flatbed and reefer coverage to worsen as reload quality improves for carriers.
- Push customers toward flexibility instead of chasing linehaul discounts.
End of day
- Secure tomorrow’s Florida and Southeast reload chains.
- Clean up all new carrier setups created during the day under the Motus workflow.
- Revisit any heavy-haul load where rate was discussed before route review.
📈 Probability-weighted 24–72 hour outlook
50% — Van and flatbed get firmer by replacement cost, not by posted board shock
- Rising total volume and high diesel keep local executable capacity valuable.
- Visible broker edge in van can compress quickly.
35% — Reefer tightens another step
- Produce season deepens.
- Southeast, California, Texas, and Midwest produce-origin competition keeps paid rates above posts.
15% — Consolidation remains the cleanest margin protection tool
- LTL/partial continues to absorb flexible freight.
- This will not loosen truckload broadly, but it can improve desk mix.
✅ Best broker moves right now
Cover premium-service freight early.
- Reefer, flatbed, and heavy haul should be treated as short-validity markets today.
Sell replacement cost, not posted-rate optimism.
- Especially where paid is already above posted.
Use local trucks and known carriers over distant cheap capacity.
- Diesel at $5.432 makes deadhead mistakes expensive.
Price Florida with reload logic first.
- If the return is weak, the outbound rate is wrong.
Turn flexible shipments into LTL/partial aggressively.
- Protect truckload margin where exclusivity is not required.
Tighten compliance during the Motus transition.
- Fast onboarding is not worth a fraud loss or negligent-hiring exposure.
Quote weather-affected loads with written assumptions.
- Detour miles, detention, layover, and redelivery need to be visible before dispatch.
🏁 Bottom line
- The market is stronger than the boards make it look.
- Dry van and LTL/partial still offer tactical margin pockets.
- Reefer is already a premium execution market.
- Flatbed and heavy haul are being tightened by productivity loss, not just demand.
- High diesel and flood detours are making local certainty worth more than distant cheapness.
- The brokers who win today will cover earlier, verify harder, and sell the next move in the truck’s sequence—not just the first one.
💡 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
260: Sima Zhao's regicide of Cao Mao: The figurehead Wei emperor Cao Mao personally leads an attempt to oust his regent, Sima Zhao; the attempted coup is crushed and the emperor killed.
1848: The Slavic Congress opens in Prague.
1966: Surveyor program: Surveyor 1 lands in Oceanus Procellarum on the Moon, becoming the first U.S. spacecraft to soft-land on another world.
💭 Quote of the Day
"All know the way; few actually walk it."
— Bodhidharma