📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Friday, May 22, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The spot market is exhibiting severe structural tightening as we close out the week, with the market average rate holding at an elevated $2.96/mile despite an 8.4% overnight drop in total available loads to 194,659. This volume contraction is typical for a Friday, but the persistence of massive paid-over-posted spreads—most notably a $0.42/mile premium in the reefer sector and $0.18/mile in dry van—indicates that capacity is fundamentally constrained rather than just cyclically tight. Punishing diesel prices at $5.647/gallon are acting as a hard floor for carrier negotiations, while heightened compliance vetting following the Montgomery v. Caribe liability ruling is actively sidelining marginal capacity. Brokers must prepare for a highly competitive booking environment where carriers hold significant pricing power, particularly on routes affected by ongoing severe flooding in the Midwest and Gulf Coast.
Insight
Friday softness is mostly optical
The drop in board volume does not signal meaningful relief. Drier conditions are beginning to return in parts of Missouri and Illinois, but floodwater, detours, and continued rain in Indiana through Saturday will keep equipment out of normal rotation, setting up a firm Monday reopening for flatbed, specialized, and eastbound freight tied to the I-70 and I-64 network.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe River Flooding (Midwest (MO, IL, IN)): Ongoing major flooding along the Missouri River and other waterways is causing significant route closures and detours along the I-70 and I-64 corridors. This is severely trapping open-deck and heavy haul capacity, forcing extended transit times and driving regional rate premiums.
- River Flooding (Gulf Coast (LA, MS)): Persistent flooding along the Calcasieu and Pearl Rivers continues to disrupt the I-10 corridor. Capacity positioning is constrained as drivers avoid low-lying routes, adding friction to southern transcontinental freight flows.
- Late-Season Freeze Warning (Mountain West (WY, CO)): Sub-freezing temperatures between 25 and 32 degrees are sustaining urgent Protect From Freeze (PFF) requirements for temperature-sensitive freight traversing the I-80 corridor, further straining national reefer capacity.
- Flash Flooding (Southeast Oklahoma (OK)): Active thunderstorms producing 1 to 4 inches of rain are causing immediate flash flooding. This poses a high risk of sudden route closures and localized delays for freight moving through the region.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Midwest flooding will outlast the rain
Rain is easing faster on the Missouri side than on the Indiana side, but the operational hangover remains. Washed-out access roads, bridge restrictions, and slower driver turns on the eastern half of the St. Louis-to-Indianapolis corridor are likely to per sist after the heaviest rain ends.
- Sunday should improve linehaul conditions, but appointment reliability is more likely to normalize Monday.
- Trucks already positioned east of central Missouri will command a premium over west-to-east rescue coverage.
Weather Insight
The Gulf Coast is not a clean bypass
Thunderstorms from southwest Louisiana into Mississippi today through Sunday, with a heavier round Saturday, keep the Lake Charles-to-Gulfport stretch vulnerable to rolling slowdowns and low-lying route problems on the I-10 corridor. Freight rerouted south to avoid the Midwest should still be sold with schedule cushion, not as a guaranteed recovery lane.
- Weekend transcons moving through coastal Louisiana and Mississippi need extra transit time baked in.
- Reefer and expedite freight will pay up for certainty if appointments cannot flex.
Weather Insight
Reefer pressure stays elevated through at least Saturday
Protect-from freeze demand still has another cycle. Cold, wind, and light snow in Colorado today followed by another chilly start Saturday keep temperature-protection requirements active across Mountain West crossings, limiting any near-term reefer reset and prolonging the current premium on northern transcontinental freight.
- Multi-stop food and beverage loads are especially exposed because door openings increase temperature risk.
- Carriers are more likely to break out heated service, continuous run time, and fuel as separate charges instead of absorbing them into linehaul.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Global crude volatility and domestic supply constraints suggest diesel prices will remain elevated near the $5.65 mark in the near term, ensuring fuel costs remain the primary driver of spot rate floors.
- Carrier Financial Health: The combination of record-high operating costs and increased insurance liability concerns following the Montgomery ruling is accelerating a shakeout of marginal, undercapitalized carriers, structurally tightening the supply base.
- Economic Indicators: Despite high costs, shipper demand remains robust as evidenced by the 16.29% tender rejection rate. Industrial project pipelines and seasonal agricultural yields are providing strong baseline freight volumes.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
Spot Rates Hit Record Highs as Tender Rejections Surge to 16.29% 🔗:
With tender rejections hitting a cycle high, routing guides are failing at an unprecedented rate. Brokers have a massive opportunity to capture spot volume, but must recognize that carriers are fully aware of their leverage. Quoting must reflect the reality of a $3.69/mile ceiling in certain markets, and brokers should prioritize securing trucks immediately upon load award rather than hoping for rates to soften late in the day.
-
Enterprise Brokers Anticipate Industry Consolidation Following Liability Ruling 🔗:
Major brokerages are signaling that the Montgomery v. Caribe ruling will force smaller brokers out of the market due to rising insurance costs and shipper liability fears. For ETA, this means carrier vetting must be flawless to maintain shipper trust. Brokers should use our strict compliance standards as a selling point to shippers who are increasingly nervous about negligent selection lawsuits.
-
FMCSA Introduces New USDOT Number Suffixes for Entity Identification 🔗:
The rollout of new USDOT suffixes in the Motus system will change how carrier authority is displayed and verified. Brokerage operations and compliance teams must immediately familiarize themselves with these suffixes to ensure no delays in carrier onboarding and to prevent fraudulent entities from slipping through the vetting process during this tight capacity market.
News Insight
Compliance speed is now a coverage tool
In a market this tight, delays tied to entity-name mismatches, insurance gaps, or confusion around the new USDOT identifiers function like real capacity loss. The biggest execution failures will show up after hours and over the weekend, when a load needs to be recovered quickly and the backup carrier cannot be cleared fast enough.
- Pre-cleared alternates matter most on flood-affected freight where late swaps are more likely.
- Known compliant carriers are worth a rate premium when they can be dispatched immediately.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest is currently the most volatile and opportunity-rich region for freight brokers. Severe, ongoing flooding across Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana has fractured key east-west corridors (I-70, I-64), trapping massive amounts of open-deck and heavy haul capacity. While total national load volumes dipped 8.4% today, the Midwest continues to see intense competition for the few available compliant trucks. The combination of weather-induced detours, high diesel prices, and strict carrier vetting is creating massive rate spreads, allowing brokers who can source reliable regional capacity to command significant premiums from desperate shippers.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
St. Louis, MO → Indianapolis, IN: This lane is directly in the crosshairs of the current Midwest flooding crisis. I-70 routing is highly compromised, forcing carriers into extensive detours. Capacity is extremely tight as drivers avoid the congestion and weather risks.
Chicago, IL → Nashville, TN: A critical north-south artery that is absorbing diverted freight from the flooded western corridors. Demand is surging as shippers bypass St. Louis entirely to move goods into the Southeast.
Regional Insight
Chicago to Nashville is the cleaner hedge, not the cheap lane
Chicago-to-Nashville remains a practical way to move freight away from the worst Midwest disruption, but its relative value is attracting more diverted volume. Any short-term rate concession on the southbound move can disappear quickly once trucks hit Tennessee and compete for Southeast reloads.
- Use the lane to reposition committed carriers and secure service, not to chase one-off cheap coverage.
- If a carrier discounts the headhaul, lock reload visibility before the truck leaves Chicago.
📰 Breaking Down: Enterprise Brokers Anticipate Industry Consolidation
Today's commentary from C.H. Robinson regarding the Montgomery v. Caribe ruling signals a fundamental shift in the brokerage landscape. While enterprise brokers are downplaying the direct financial hit of increased insurance premiums—noting it remains a fraction of a percent of gross revenue—the real story is the weaponization of compliance. The ruling effectively dismantles the traditional broker liability shield, meaning shippers are now highly exposed to negligent selection lawsuits if their broker hires an unsafe carrier.
This is actively driving a 'flight to quality' among shippers. Tender rejections hitting 16.29% isn't just about a lack of trucks; it's about a lack of *compliant* trucks that meet the new, hyper-strict vetting standards required by corporate legal departments. Smaller brokerages lacking automated, continuous monitoring tools will struggle to clear carriers fast enough to cover spot freight, or worse, will lose shipper routing guide positions entirely. For ETA, this data confirms that our carrier compliance team is no longer just a back-office function—it is our primary sales asset. Brokers must actively communicate to customers that our vetting protocols insulate them from the liability risks that smaller competitors are currently ignoring.
🚛 Reefer: The $0.42 Spread and the Dual-Front Squeeze
The temperature-controlled sector is currently exhibiting the most extreme pricing dislocation in the market, highlighted by a staggering $0.42/mile spread between posted ($3.
- and paid ($3
- rates. This is not a standard seasonal tightening; it is a structural squeeze driven by three colliding factors. First, the late-season freeze warnings (Alert WXAD4113BE) in the Mountain West are sustaining an unusually late demand for Protect From Freeze (PFF) services on northern transcontinental routes.
Second, the southern produce harvest is accelerating, pulling available capacity toward the Sunbelt. Finally, the $5.647/gallon diesel price is devastating reefer margins. Running a cooling unit continuously requires significant fuel, and carriers are flatly refusing to move without massive premiums to cover this operational cost. The 1.5% overnight drop in available loads to 8,719 masks the true severity of the capacity shortage. Brokers quoting reefer freight today cannot rely on historical pricing models; if a load must move, you are paying the carrier's asking price, and quotes to shippers must reflect a minimum $3.50/mile floor in active markets
📈 Volume Drops, But the Rate Floor Hardens
Today's real-time load board data presents a fascinating divergence: total available loads dropped a significant 8.4% overnight to 194,659, yet the market average rate held firm at an exceptionally high $2.96/mile. In a traditional market, an 8% drop in volume going into the weekend would signal softening rates as carriers scramble for remaining freight. Instead, we are seeing massive paid-over-posted spreads across the board: $0.18 in Van, $0.42 in Reefer, and $0.11 in Flatbed.
This indicates that the current rate environment is entirely cost-driven, not demand-driven. Carriers are operating at their absolute break-even thresholds due to $5.647 diesel and rising insurance costs. They cannot and will not accept cheaper freight, even if it means sitting idle. The data suggests that capacity has effectively 'unionized' around a pricing floor. For brokers, this means the strategy of posting low and waiting for a desperate carrier to bite is dead. To move freight today, brokers must post closer to the actual paid rate to generate inbound calls, rather than wasting hours negotiating up from an artificially low starting point.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Price Midwest east-west freight for detour miles and Monday-tight capacity, not Friday's lighter board.
- Treat I-10 as a secondary bypass with weather risk, not a guaranteed relief valve.
- Keep reefer and PFF quotes elevated through Saturday because Mountain West cold is still absorbing capacity.
- Use pre-vetted carrier pools as a sales advantage; execution speed now matters as much as buy rate.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a replacement-cost market, not a “cheap Friday” market.
- Total available loads are 194,659, down from 212,422 yesterday, but the national average rate is still $2.96/mile.
- In a normal Friday fade, lower volume would pressure rates. Today it did not. That means capacity is staying expensive even as board volume lightens.
Paid rates are still telling the truth; posted rates are just the opening bid.
- Van: $2.76 paid vs. $2.58 posted = +$0.18/mile
- Reefer: $3.46 paid vs. $3.04 posted = +$0.42/mile
- Flatbed: $3.57 paid vs. $3.46 posted = +$0.11/mile
- Heavy Haul: $3.58 paid vs. $3.53 posted = +$0.05/mile
- Specialized: $3.06 paid vs. $3.00 posted = +$0.06/mile
- LTL (Less Than Truckload) / Partial: $1.73 paid vs. $1.70 posted = +$0.03/mile
- The message is simple: if you quote from posted averages alone, you are underpricing actual execution.
The market is tight because usable capacity is smaller than visible capacity.
- OTRI (Outbound Tender Rejection Index) is 16.29%, a cycle high.
- Add strict carrier vetting, flood detours, and diesel at $5.647/gallon, and the practical truck pool gets smaller fast.
Reefer is the sharpest margin trap, but van is the broader account risk.
- Reefer has the biggest spread, but van touches more customers and more daily freight.
- A broker can lose more relationships by underquoting van all day than by missing one reefer load.
Open-deck freight is still setting the emotional tone of the market.
- Flatbed, Heavy Haul, and Specialized total 146,716 loads, about 75.4% of the board.
- They also account for 57,971 moved loads, about 79.3% of execution.
- When open-deck carriers feel strong, that confidence bleeds into van and reefer negotiations too.
🧠 What The Board Is Really Saying
Friday softness is mostly optical.
- The board is lighter, but the rate floor held.
- That usually means carriers are not chasing freight lower; they are staying disciplined and protecting margin.
This is a cost-floor market, not a demand-spike market.
- Diesel at $5.647/gallon is forcing hard deadhead discipline.
- Flooding in Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, and Mississippi is reducing turns.
- Compliance pressure after Montgomery v. Caribe is narrowing fallback capacity.
- Put together, those factors create structural tightness, not just temporary excitement.
The trend over time supports that view.
- One week ago: 219,548 loads, $2.94/mile
- Today: 194,659 loads, $2.96/mile
- Loads are lower than a week ago, but rates are slightly higher.
- One month ago: 186,081 loads, $2.73/mile
- Versus a month ago, today’s market has only modestly more visible volume but materially higher rates. That is classic evidence of a hardening cost base.
Carrier psychology is shifting from “stay moving” to “stay profitable.”
- In loose markets, carriers take imperfect freight to keep wheels turning.
- In markets like this, they reject freight that does not cover:
- Fuel
- Detour risk
- Dwell
- Cooling-unit fuel burn for reefer
- Weak reloads
- That is why waiting for desperation calls is a losing broker tactic today.
🚛 Mode-By-Mode Broker Playbook
🧊 Reefer
🚚 Dry Van
🏗️ Flatbed
🏋️ Heavy Haul
🔧 Specialized
📦 LTL / Partial
🌦️ Regional Playbook For The Next 24–72 Hours
🌊 Midwest: Treat Monday as tighter than today’s board suggests
Core read
- Flood conditions in Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana are still disrupting normal turns around I-70 and I-64.
- Even where rain eases, the freight impact lingers through:
- access road issues
- bridge restrictions
- slower loading windows
- late equipment repositioning
Broker action
- Quote eastbound Midwest freight for detour miles and delayed turns now.
- Do not promise normal Monday appointment reliability based on lighter Friday volume.
- Pre-book alternates for flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized loads that could slip over the weekend.
🚧 Gulf Coast: Use I-10 as a pressured lane, not a clean bypass
Core read
- Flooding and storms in Louisiana and Mississippi keep the I-10 corridor vulnerable.
- Freight diverted south to avoid Midwest disruption will not necessarily recover cleanly.
Broker action
- Bake extra transit time into any weekend transcon using coastal Louisiana or Mississippi.
- Sell service cushion, not guaranteed recovery.
- Use reefer and expedite pricing aggressively when appointments are inflexible.
❄️ Mountain West: Reefer pressure stays elevated
Core read
- Late freeze conditions across Wyoming and Colorado are keeping PFF demand active.
- That prevents any near-term reefer reset.
Broker action
- Keep reefer and PFF quotes elevated through Saturday.
- Ask about door openings and stop count on food and beverage freight; multi-stop risk is higher in this weather.
- Expect carriers to break out heated service, fuel, and continuous-run charges separately.
🛣️ Chicago → Nashville: A hedge lane, not a bargain lane
Core read
- This lane is absorbing diverted freight away from disrupted Midwest east-west corridors.
- It is operationally cleaner, but it will attract more volume quickly.
Broker action
- Use it to reposition committed carriers and secure service.
- If a carrier gives you a favorable southbound price, lock reload visibility before the truck leaves Chicago.
- Do not confuse “cleaner” with “cheaper.”
💬 How To Quote Shippers Today
Reset the anchor immediately.
- Use language like:
- “Posted averages are not where trucks are clearing today.”
- “Fuel, compliance, and detours are embedded in real execution cost.”
- “We can buy cheaper paper capacity, but not cleaner actual coverage.”
Offer three versions of the solution.
- Option 1: Premium service
- Best for fixed appointments or sensitive freight.
- Option 2: Flexible truckload
- Lower cost if pickup or delivery can flex.
- Option 3: LTL / Partial conversion
- Best for budget-sensitive freight with elastic transit expectations.
Shorten shelf life on quotes.
- Reefer, van recoveries, and weather-exposed open deck should have tighter validity than normal.
- In this market, stale quotes become broker-funded claims on margin.
Separate disruption cost from base linehaul whenever possible.
- Break out:
- fuel pressure
- reroute risk
- detention
- layover
- special handling
- temperature protection
🤝 How To Buy Trucks Smarter Today
Lead with trip economics, not just the headline rate.
- At $5.647/gallon diesel, carriers care about:
- deadhead
- dwell
- detours
- reload strength
- exit lane quality
Use compliance speed as a competitive weapon.
- The new FMCSA (Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration) USDOT suffix environment means onboarding confusion can cost you real coverage time.
- Pre-cleared alternates are now worth real money, especially after hours and on weather-affected freight.
Reserve your best paper for your highest-risk freight.
- Put your cleanest, fastest-to-dispatch carriers on:
- reefer
- flood-affected open deck
- same-day recoveries
- high-value or high-visibility customer loads
Do not save pennies and risk hours.
- In a market this tight, the cheapest truck is often the one most likely to create a service failure later.
⏱️ Execution Plan For The Day
📈 Probability-Weighted 24–72 Hour Outlook
✅ Bottom Line
- Do not confuse lower Friday volume with softer capacity.
- Reefer is today’s biggest margin trap.
- Van is today’s biggest portfolio risk.
- Open deck is still shaping carrier confidence across the market.
- Diesel, weather, and compliance are reinforcing each other.
- The winning broker today will buy earlier, quote closer to paid reality, reserve pre-vetted capacity for critical freight, and sell customers options before service failures force ugly repricing.
📅 This Day in History
1863: American Civil War: Union forces begin the Siege of Port Hudson which lasts 48 days, the longest siege in U.S. military history.
1872: Reconstruction Era: President Ulysses S. Grant signs the Amnesty Act into law, restoring full civil and political rights to all but about 500 Confederate sympathizers.
2017: United States President Donald Trump visits the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem and becomes the first sitting U.S. president to visit the Western Wall.
💭 Quote of the Day
"Spend eighty percent of your time focusing on the opportunities of tomorrow rather than the problems of yesterday."
— Brian Tracy