📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The national spot freight market experienced a massive 15.3% volume surge today, pushing total available loads to 168,277 as the spring freight season accelerates. This influx is heavily concentrated in the open-deck and heavy haul sectors, which saw volume increases of 17.9% and 15.8% respectively, driven by robust infrastructure projects and seasonal construction. While the market average rate sits at $2.74/mile, severe pricing divergence is occurring across equipment types. Brokers have strong pricing power in the dry van sector where paid rates are averaging slightly below posted rates, but face intense margin pressure in reefer and flatbed markets where carriers are commanding significant premiums. Severe, ongoing river flooding across the Midwest continues to fracture transcontinental routing along the I-70 and I-80 corridors, trapping capacity and forcing brokers to pay steep premiums to secure reliable equipment in the affected zones.
Insight
Detour premiums will outlast the rainfall
Cooler, drier conditions settling into much of Illinois and Iowa after today do not translate into an immediate capacity reset. River-stage impacts and road restrictions typically lag the weather by several days, so Midwest transit penalties and open-deck spot premiums are likely to stay embedded through the back half of the week even as radar looks quieter.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe River Flooding (Midwest (IL, MO, IA)): Extensive river flooding is occurring along the Mississippi and Rock Rivers, severely disrupting the I-70, I-80, and I-72 corridors. This is expected to create difficult conditions for transcontinental routing, extending transit times, trapping regional capacity, and driving rate premiums for carriers willing to navigate the extensive detours.
- Sub-Freezing Temperatures (Intermountain West (ID, UT)): Sub-freezing temperatures of 25 to 32 degrees are persisting across the Snake River Plain and surrounding basins. This poses a significant risk to sensitive agricultural freight and is driving urgent protect-from-freeze (PFF) demands, further tightening temperature-controlled capacity in the region.
- Sabine River Flooding (East Texas (TX, Wood, Smith counties)): Minor flooding is forecast along the Sabine River, which may disrupt secondary roadways and local distribution routes. While major interstates remain clear, localized capacity could tighten as drivers avoid the immediate flood zones.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Wind becomes the next Midwest friction point
As the heavier precipitation threat eases, northwest winds strengthen across Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin, and Michigan through Wednesday and Thursday, creating a second-order drag on open-deck productivity.
- Flatbed and step-deck moves should expect slower tarping, more securement stops, and weaker carrier interest in cheap empty repositioning.
- High-profile freight and appointment-sensitive construction loads will clear more reliably with daylight loading windows and extra ETA cushion.
Weather Insight
Intermountain freeze pressure starts to loosen late week
Protect-from freeze demand in Idaho and Utah remains acute for Tuesday and early Wednesday, but the temperature recovery into the 40s by Thursday and near 50 by Friday should gradually release some reefer capacity back into standard produce and dairy freight. The premium is still justified on immediate loads; late-week reloads are where brokers can start testing lower PFF add-ons.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Energy markets project Brent crude to remain elevated through Q2 2026, suggesting that while short-term diesel prices have eased slightly, the broader outlook points to sustained high fuel costs that will continue to pressure carrier operating margins.
- Carrier Financial Health: Elevated operating costs and aggressive regulatory enforcement are accelerating market consolidation, pushing marginal owner-operators out of the market and concentrating capacity among larger fleets that can better absorb compliance and fuel expenses.
- Economic Indicators: Robust infrastructure spending continues to drive massive open-deck freight volumes, while consumer retail replenishment remains steady, providing a solid demand floor across multiple equipment types despite broader inflationary pressures.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
FMCSA Revokes HERO ELD: Immediate Compliance Risks for Carriers 🔗:
The FMCSA's removal of the HERO ELD from its registered list creates an immediate compliance gap for carriers using the device. Brokers must urgently audit their carrier networks, as drivers continuing to use the revoked device face out-of-service orders starting June 2. This regulatory crackdown elevates broker liability and could temporarily sideline capacity as carriers scramble to install compliant systems.
-
Diesel Prices Ease Slightly, But Long-Term Outlook Remains Elevated 🔗:
While the national diesel average has seen a minor drop, the broader energy outlook for 2026 points to sustained high costs. Brokers should use this temporary relief to negotiate more favorable spot rates in the dry van sector, but must prepare customers for continued high fuel surcharges on contract freight as global supply constraints persist.
-
Ocean Carriers Implement Emergency Fuel Surcharges 🔗:
Major ocean networks are updating Emergency Fuel Surcharges across global trade lanes effective May 1. This upstream cost increase will inevitably bleed into domestic supply chains, likely driving drayage and transloading rate hikes at major ports. Brokers handling import freight should proactively communicate these rising landed costs to their customers.
News Insight
ELD enforcement will erode spot reliability before June
The operational impact of the HERO ELD removal starts well before the out-of-service date. Smaller fleets that frequently cover overflow reefer, flatbed, and rescue freight are likely to get screened out over the next month as compliance checks tighten, creating a quiet capacity drain in the very segments already pricing above posted levels.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest is currently the most volatile and strategically critical freight region, driven by the collision of severe weather disruptions and massive open-deck volume surges. Extensive river flooding along the Mississippi and Rock Rivers is fracturing major transcontinental arteries including I-70 and I-80, forcing extensive detours and severely extending transit times. Simultaneously, the region is absorbing a massive influx of flatbed and heavy haul demand for spring construction projects. This combination of trapped capacity and surging demand is creating intense pricing pressure, allowing carriers to command significant premiums to operate in the region. While dry van capacity remains relatively accessible, specialized and open-deck equipment is critically scarce.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL → St. Louis, MO: This critical I-55 corridor is facing significant operational friction due to regional flooding and heavy construction traffic. Flatbed demand is surging as materials move south, while reefer capacity is tightening as carriers reposition for agricultural loads. The rate environment is highly volatile, with carriers demanding premiums to navigate weather-impacted zones.
Indianapolis, IN → Kansas City, MO: The I-70 transcontinental route is heavily impacted by the ongoing Midwest flooding, creating severe bottlenecks for freight moving east-west. Demand for heavy haul and specialized equipment is spiking, while dry van volumes remain steady. Carriers are leveraging the difficult routing conditions to push paid rates significantly above posted averages.
Regional Insight
Outbound Midwest lanes will stay firmer than the return
Chicago to St. Louis and Indianapolis to Kansas City are not just weather lanes right now; they are imbalanced lanes. Carriers moving into the disrupted Missouri and Illinois corridor are pricing the detour, the slower reload cycle, and the uncertainty around the next leg, which means outbound commitments will keep clearing above market while inbound and return freight stays comparatively softer.
- Multi-load awards and visible backhauls will often outperform one-off spot quotes on total cost.
- Same-day coverage into Missouri is likely to remain the most expensive buy through the week.
📊 Analyzing the 15.3% Volume Surge: Flatbed Dominance and Rate Spreads
Today's real-time data reveals a massive 15.3% overnight surge in total available loads, pushing the market to 168,277. This influx is not evenly distributed; it is overwhelmingly driven by the open-deck sector. Flatbed volumes spiked 17.9% to over 75,000 loads, while heavy haul jumped 15.8%. The rate spread dynamics are highly revealing: in the flatbed sector, carriers are successfully commanding $3.30/mile paid against a $3.19/mile posted rate, an 11-cent premium that underscores severe capacity scarcity. Similarly, the reefer market shows a 14-cent carrier premium ($2.90 paid vs $2.76 posted). Conversely, the dry van sector saw only a 0.7% volume increase, and brokers are successfully covering loads at $2.38/mile against a $2.40/mile posted rate. This divergence dictates a bifurcated broker strategy: aggressive margin capture in van, and strategic, relationship-based coverage in flatbed and reefer where spot market exposure is highly expensive.
🔧 Regulatory Crackdowns and Cost Pressures Squeezing Fleet Margins
Carrier operations are currently caught in a vice between elevated operating costs and tightening regulatory enforcement. The national diesel average at $5.461/gallon continues to act as an absolute floor on rate negotiations, preventing spot rates from softening even in looser markets like dry van. Compounding this financial pressure is the FMCSA's aggressive revocation of non-compliant ELDs, such as the HERO ELD highlighted in today's news. This regulatory action forces carriers to incur unexpected hardware replacement costs and risks sudden out-of-service orders for drivers caught using revoked devices after the June deadline. For brokers, this means carrier vetting must go beyond standard safety scores to include verification of compliant ELD hardware, as sudden capacity drop-offs from out-of-service orders could leave critical loads stranded.
🏗️ Midwest Flooding Fractures Transcontinental Routing
The severe river flooding across Illinois, Missouri, and Iowa (Alert WX498ED3C6) is creating a massive infrastructure bottleneck that is rippling across the national spot market. The disruption of the I-70, I-80, and I-72 corridors is forcing carriers into extensive, low-speed detours on secondary roadways. This physical constraint is artificially tightening capacity by extending equipment turnaround times by 24 to 48 hours. The impact is most severe in the heavy haul and specialized sectors, where bridge weight limits and oversized routing permits are invalidated by the detours, trapping freight and forcing brokers to source highly specialized local capacity at massive premiums. Until the floodwaters recede, brokers must price Midwest transcontinental freight with significant hazard buffers and extended transit expectations.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Treat the national surge as an open-deck story, not a broad tightening signal; dry van still offers negotiating room.
- Quote Midwest transit with flood-lag assumptions through at least Friday, even if precipitation fades sooner.
- Start pushing back on protect-from freeze premiums on reefer reloads loading late Thursday into Friday in the Intermountain West.
- Pre-screen spot and overflow carriers for compliant ELD hardware now to reduce late-May recoverage risk.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is an open-deck surge, not a universal tightening event.
- Total available loads are 168,277, up 15.3%.
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized combine for 129,196 loads, or roughly 76.8% of visible spot volume.
- Translation: if your desk treats today like a broad-based truck shortage, you will overpay in van and underquote in open-deck.
Dry van is the best margin market on the board today.
- Vans: 21,286 loads, $2.40 posted, $2.38 paid.
- That -$0.02/mile paid-below-posted spread means brokers still have buying leverage on clean, predictable freight.
- Translation: pursue van aggressively, but only where pickup, transit, and delivery are simple.
Reefer, flatbed, and heavy haul are live replacement-cost markets.
- Reefer: $2.76 posted vs. $2.90 paid = +$0.14/mile
- Flatbed: $3.19 posted vs. $3.30 paid = +$0.11/mile
- Heavy haul: $3.26 posted vs. $3.34 paid = +$0.08/mile
- Translation: if you quote from posted numbers alone, you are likely donating margin.
Midwest flood friction will outlast the rain.
- River flooding across Illinois, Missouri, and Iowa is still damaging truck productivity along I-70, I-80, and I-72.
- Detours, bridge restrictions, slower reload cycles, and access uncertainty matter more than radar improvement.
- Translation: price Midwest freight for turn-time loss, not just extra miles.
Compliance is now part of procurement.
- The HERO ELD (Electronic Logging Device) revocation creates a pre-June capacity leak, especially among smaller overflow carriers.
- Translation: carrier setup is no longer enough; ELD hardware verification should become a dispatch gate on premium freight.
🧠 What the market is really saying
Headline volume is strong, but pricing power is selective.
- The national average rate is $2.74/mile, but that average hides a major split:
- Van favors brokers
- Reefer and open-deck favor carriers
- Specialized is near parity, but fragmented
- Key lesson: the market is not “hot” everywhere; it is uneven and equipment-specific.
Today’s volume surge is a productivity problem disguised as demand growth.
- Yes, demand is real, especially in construction and infrastructure.
- But the bigger issue is that flooding and detours reduce how many profitable turns a truck can make.
- Carriers are charging for:
- uncertain routing
- longer cycle times
- weaker reload confidence
- higher deadhead risk after delivery
Carriers are pricing uncertainty, not just miles.
- In reefer and open-deck, the paid-over-posted spreads tell you the same story:
- the screen gives an anchor
- the live market gives the replacement cost
- This is classic carrier psychology in disrupted markets:
- a carrier would rather decline a cheap risky load
- than accept it and get trapped in a bad next position
Shippers will be anchored to board pricing unless you reframe the conversation.
- Many customers will see $3.19 flatbed posted or $2.76 reefer posted and think that is the market.
- Your job today is to explain that the real premium is tied to:
- flood-driven detours
- produce and protect-from-freeze (PFF) demand
- appointment risk
- equipment scarcity by corridor
- The winning message: “You are not paying extra for transportation alone; you are paying for execution certainty.”
💸 Best money on the board today
1) Dry van margin capture
- Why it works: $2.38 paid vs. $2.40 posted is still a buyer-friendly spread.
- Best freight profile:
- packaged goods
- retail replenishment
- drop-friendly or low-dwell freight
- lanes that avoid the worst flood-affected Midwest corridors
- Best tactic: quote tight validity windows and secure trucks with strong reload destinations, not just the cheapest rate.
2) LTL (Less Than Truckload) / partial conversion
- LTL/Partial: 10,325 loads, $1.75 posted, $1.77 paid.
- Why it works: customers who resist reefer or flatbed truckload pricing will often accept a flexible consolidation option.
- Best use case:
- budget-sensitive shippers
- non-urgent industrial components
- overflow freight that does not require exclusive use
- Broker advantage: partials help you protect accounts without forcing a bad truckload buy.
3) Specialized spec-audit opportunities
- Specialized: 19,633 loads, $2.93 posted, $2.92 paid.
- The spread is basically flat, which tells you the market is more balanced than yesterday’s narrative in many brokers’ heads.
- Opportunity: some freight being called “specialized” may be movable on:
- standard flatbed
- step deck
- legal heavy haul without full specialty premium
- Best tactic: verify:
- dimensions
- weight
- loading method
- securement needs
- permit status
- A fast spec audit can produce an immediate same-day margin improvement.
4) Multi-load Midwest awards
- Why it works: outbound Midwest lanes are pricing firmer than return freight.
- If you can offer a carrier:
- two or more loads
- a visible backhaul
- honest appointment windows
- you will often beat one-off spot quotes on total landed cost, even if your first linehaul rate looks higher.
⚠️ Biggest traps for brokers today
1) Quoting reefer from the screen
- Reefer paid is $2.90 against $2.76 posted.
- That +$0.14/mile gap is the market telling you that the board is lagging real execution cost.
- Trap behavior: quoting first, trying to find a truck later.
- Correct behavior: source a likely truck first, then finalize sell if the lane is sensitive.
2) Treating flatbed as easy because volume is huge
- Flatbed has 75,267 loads and still clears at $3.30 paid vs. $3.19 posted.
- Big volume does not mean easy buying; it means the equipment is being absorbed quickly by real project freight.
- Trap behavior: assuming high volume equals broad capacity.
- Correct behavior: assume linehaul is only part of the cost; build in:
- tarp
- detention
- route deviation
- jobsite wait
- wind-related productivity drag
3) Selling Midwest transit like normal freight
- The mistake is not just missing the rate.
- The bigger mistake is missing the time risk:
- longer turns
- missed appointments
- same-day coverage failures
- late recovery freight
- Trap behavior: standard transit promises on flood-touched lanes.
- Correct behavior: quote a realistic ETA and sell service tiers.
4) Assuming specialized is either “cheap” or “easy” because the spread is flat
- Near parity in specialized does not mean broad availability.
- It means the market is fragmented and relationship-driven.
- Trap behavior: blasting the board.
- Correct behavior: call known operators first and lead with exact scope.
🚚 Mode-by-mode broker playbook
🚐 Dry Van
- Market read: Best broad margin market
- Action plan:
- Prioritize clean freight with low dwell and firm appointment windows.
- Use short quote validity on Midwest-touching loads.
- Build a backup truck list for any load involving Illinois, Missouri, or Iowa.
- What matters most: destination quality and reload confidence.
- Best broker script: “This is a clean turn with realistic timing and good next-position value.”
🧊 Reefer
- Market read: Carrier-favored now, slightly softer late week in the Intermountain West
- Action plan:
- Cover first-call loads early, especially same-day or next-day pickups.
- Write temperature instructions precisely:
- setpoint
- continuous run or start/stop
- protect-from-freeze requirements
- appointment consequences
- Test lower PFF (Protect From Freeze) add-ons on reloads loading late Thursday into Friday in Idaho and Utah.
- What matters most: service certainty beats bargain price.
- Best broker script: “We are buying temperature execution and appointment reliability, not just a trailer.”
🟧 Flatbed
- Market read: High-volume, high-risk, carrier-favored
- Action plan:
- Separate linehaul from execution costs in every quote.
- Favor daylight loading windows because wind becomes the next friction point in the Upper Midwest.
- Use carriers with proven securement discipline, not just the cheapest truck.
- What matters most: lost productivity is the real premium.
- Best broker script: “We have honest site conditions and identified extras up front.”
🏗️ Heavy Haul
- Market read: Scope-sensitive and still tight
- Action plan:
- Route before quoting.
- Verify:
- dimensions
- axle setup
- permit path
- alternate routing around flood zones
- Put reroute and permit-delay language in writing before dispatch.
- What matters most: route assumptions can kill margin faster than rate.
- Best broker script: “Before I price this, I need to confirm the legal path, not just the miles.”
🟪 Specialized
- Market read: Balanced pricing, fragmented execution
- Action plan:
- Audit whether the load truly requires specialized equipment.
- Lean on relationship carriers first, not mass-market posting.
- Ask for photos when scope is unclear.
- What matters most: right trailer selection.
- Best broker script: “Let’s confirm what this actually needs so you don’t pay a specialty premium unnecessarily.”
📦 LTL / Partial
- Market read: Strong account-defense tool
- Action plan:
- Offer partial options proactively to customers objecting to truckload pricing.
- Bundle compatible freight early in the day.
- Use flexible delivery windows to protect margin.
- What matters most: framing partial as a solution, not a downgrade.
- Best broker script: “If timing allows, I can lower your transportation cost by moving this as a controlled partial instead of a full truck.”
🌧️ Regional playbook for the next 24–72 hours
🌊 Midwest flood zone
- Core reality: this is now a network distortion problem, not just a weather headline.
- What to assume through the back half of the week:
- outbound Midwest freight stays firmer than inbound
- same-day coverage into Missouri remains expensive
- detour pricing survives after rainfall fades
- Best broker moves:
- Add ETA cushion now, not after the first service miss.
- Quote with hazard buffers on any lane touching flood-affected corridors.
- Show carriers the reload story if you want better buy-side cooperation.
- Push multi-load awards where possible.
🛣️ Chicago, IL → St. Louis, MO
- What’s happening: flood friction, construction traffic, and lane imbalance are working together.
- Best tactics:
- Price outbound firmer than return.
- Use known regional carriers who understand corridor workarounds.
- Avoid promising strict same-day rescue coverage unless the sell rate reflects reality.
🛣️ Indianapolis, IN → Kansas City, MO
- What’s happening: east-west routing is vulnerable to detours and heavy haul disruption.
- Best tactics:
- Cover appointment freight earlier than normal.
- Use backhaul visibility as a rate lever.
- Be careful with “cheap” open-deck offers that do not reflect reroute risk.
❄️ Idaho / Utah reefer lanes
- What’s happening: immediate protect-from-freeze demand is still real, but the late-week release valve is visible.
- Best tactics:
- Pay up on immediate loads.
- Start negotiating lower PFF add-ons on late-week reloads.
- Watch for reefer capacity rotating back toward produce and dairy freight by late week.
💬 Negotiation tactics that work today
🤝 With carriers
- Lead with certainty, not just rate.
- Carriers today care most about:
- pickup readiness
- site access
- detention clarity
- reload potential
- route honesty
- Best framing by equipment:
- Van: “Clean turn, realistic timing, strong reload.”
- Reefer: “Exact temp instructions, no surprises, committed service.”
- Flatbed/Heavy Haul: “Specs and route reviewed; risk items identified.”
- Psychology to remember: in disrupted markets, a carrier fears a bad load more than a missed load.
💼 With shippers
- Sell risk control, not just transportation.
- Use the numbers:
- Van clears below posted
- Reefer, flatbed, and heavy haul clear above posted
- Diesel is $5.461/gallon
- That gives you a credible explanation for why some quotes must move up while others can stay competitive.
- Use a two-option quote structure:
- Option 1: Flexible service
- wider pickup or delivery tolerance
- lower sell rate
- Option 2: Priority service
- tighter appointment commitment
- higher rate tied to earlier coverage
- Psychology to remember: customers accept a premium more easily when they feel they are choosing certainty, not just paying more.
🛡️ Risk controls to tighten today
1) ELD compliance check
- Ask overflow and spot carriers what ELD hardware they are using.
- Flag any carrier that cannot answer clearly or quickly.
- This matters most on:
- reefer
- flatbed
- rescue freight
- appointment-critical loads
2) Fraud prevention on premium freight
- Weather-disrupted, high-paying loads attract bad actors.
- Re-verify:
- MC (Motor Carrier) identity
- dispatch contact
- insurance
- equipment type
- driver contact consistency
3) Accessorial discipline
- Put likely extras in writing before pickup:
- detention
- tarp
- layover
- reroute
- permit delay
- PFF handling
4) Backup coverage
- Maintain a second-call option on:
- reefer
- flatbed into the Midwest
- heavy haul
- specialized
5) Facility-level access check
- Do not rely on ZIP-code assumptions in flood zones.
- Confirm:
- gate access
- yard condition
- loading hours
- local road restrictions
📈 Probability-weighted outlook
Base case — 60%
- Dry van stays workable for broker margin
- Reefer and open-deck remain premium buys
- Midwest detour pricing persists through Friday
- Specialized stays balanced on paper but relationship-dependent in practice
Stress case — 25%
- River-stage impacts linger longer than expected
- Wind slows flatbed productivity further
- Late-day recoveries get expensive
- More carriers reject uncertain Midwest freight
Opportunity case — 15%
- Intermountain freeze premium eases late week
- PFF add-ons soften on Thursday-Friday reloads
- Spec audits downgrade some specialized loads
- Partials preserve margin where truckload gets rejected
Cover reefer, flatbed, and heavy haul touching the Midwest first
- Those markets are where underquoting turns into recoveries.
Push dry van hard on clean freight
- This is still the best broad-margin buy of the day.
Offer partials before customers push back
- Use LTL/partial as a proactive save, not a last resort.
Audit specialized and heavy-haul specs before quoting
- Scope mistakes are more expensive than rate mistakes.
Pre-screen ELD compliance on overflow carriers
- Quiet compliance failures will create hidden fallout before June.
Watch execution metrics by close
- First-call cover rate
- Quote-to-book spread by mode
- Carrier fallout on Midwest freight
- Accessorial recovery percentage
- Partial conversion count
🧾 Bottom line
- The market is not broadly tightening; it is fragmenting by equipment and geography.
- Van is your margin market.
- Reefer, flatbed, and heavy haul must be priced off live replacement cost.
- Specialized is no longer the broad premium outlier, but it still demands tighter scoping and relationship coverage.
- Midwest flooding is a truck-productivity problem first and a weather story second.
- The brokers who win today will separate linehaul from execution risk, sell certainty to shippers, reduce uncertainty for carriers, and audit compliance before the market forces them to.
📅 This Day in History
357: Emperor Constantius II enters Rome for the first time to celebrate his victory over Magnus Magnentius.
1796: The Armistice of Cherasco is signed by Napoleon Bonaparte and Vittorio Amedeo III, King of Sardinia, expanding French territory along the Mediterranean coast.
1887: A week after being arrested by the Prussian Secret Police, French police inspector Guillaume Schnaebelé is released on order of William I, German Emperor, defusing a possible war.
💭 Quote of the Day
"The biggest and only critic lives in your perception of people's perception of you rather than people's perception of you."
— Criss Jami