📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Thursday, July 02, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
On Thursday, July 02, 2026, the domestic spot market is experiencing a typical pre-holiday volume contraction as shippers rush to clear docks before the July 4th weekend, with total available loads on real-time platforms dropping 8.7% overnight to 126,538. Despite this volume decline, the national average spot rate remains highly resilient at $3.03/mile, indicating that carriers are successfully demanding rate premiums for remaining time-sensitive freight. A verified AAA national diesel average of $4.827/gallon continues to establish a firm cost floor, restricting carrier deadhead tolerance. Severe regional flooding in the Midwest (affecting I-74 and I-72) and the South (disrupting I-10 and I-59), combined with extreme heat warnings stretching from the Great Lakes to the Northeast, are compounding transit delays. For freight brokers, the positive spreads between posted and paid rates—particularly in the dry van ($0.21/mile) and reefer ($0.22/mile) sectors—present high-margin arbitrage opportunities for those who can lock in capacity early and leverage carrier desire for holiday-positioning.
Insight
Capacity is tighter than the headline load count suggests
The overnight drop in posted volume is masking a sharper same-day truck shortage: most discretionary freight is already off the board, leaving a higher mix of must-move holiday tenders that carriers can price aggressively. With diesel still near $4.83 and tender rejections elevated, lower fuel costs are not a same-day rate catalyst; the real inflection is timing, with truck pools likely to thin materially after midday as drivers stop accepting freight they cannot deliver before weekend shutdowns.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Midwest River Flooding (Illinois (IL, Peoria, Tazewell, Woodford, Pike, Scott, Calhoun, Greene, and Jersey counties)): Minor flooding along the Illinois River is inundating bottomlands and secondary roads. This may disrupt local agricultural transport and force flatbed and dry van carriers to utilize circuitous routing, potentially delaying transit times along the I-74 and I-72 corridors.
- Gulf Coast River Flooding (Mississippi and Louisiana (MS, Hancock, Pearl River counties; LA, St. Tammany, Washington parishes)): Minor flooding along the Pearl River is inundating secondary roads and low-lying areas. This could delay local freight movements and restrict access to facilities near the river, potentially impacting regional capacity along the I-10 and I-59 corridors.
- Extreme Heat Wave - Great Lakes & Northeast (Michigan, Illinois, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Island (MI, Wayne, Oakland, Macomb counties; IL, Cook County; CT, Hartford County; MA, Worcester County; RI, Providence County)): Dangerously hot conditions with heat index values around 105°F are expected. This extreme heat poses severe risks of heat-related illnesses for drivers during loading/unloading and increases the strain on reefer cooling units, potentially leading to equipment failures and cargo claims on temperature-sensitive freight.
- Extreme Heat Wave - Ohio Valley & Mid-Atlantic (Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia (IN, Dearborn County; KY, Kenton County; OH, Franklin County; PA, Allegheny County; WV, Monongalia County)): Dangerously hot conditions with heat index values around 105°F are forecast through Friday. This prolonged heat wave is expected to slow down outdoor operations, particularly for flatbed loading, and could tighten regional capacity as drivers limit their driving hours to avoid peak heat.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Central Illinois disruption is most likely to flare during the midday loading window
Flooding along the Illinois River remains the structural issue, but the sharper operational risk today is timing: the Peoria corridor is expected to heat up quickly this morning, then see a brief early-afternoon rain and thunder window before improving later in the day. That combination raises the odds of missed pickup appointments, slower securement on flatbeds, and local reroutes around secondary roads even where interstate pavement remains open.
- Prioritize pickups in the Peoria-Tazewell-Woodford area before noon where possible.
- Build extra same-day cushion on freight touching I-74 and I-72, especially farm, food, and building products.
Weather Insight
Pearl River flooding is a first- and last-mile problem more than a linehaul problem
Near the Mississippi-Louisiana state line, the flood impact is likely to per sist even with largely favorable daytime weather because the bottleneck is access roads, industrial approaches, and yard conditions near the river rather than broad corridor washouts. Expect the biggest friction on short regional moves feeding I-10 and I-59, where a truck may reach the market but still lose time getting into or out of the shipper.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Diesel futures are experiencing downward pressure following the easing of the Iran crisis and the US-Iran peace deal, which has allowed more tankers to pass through the Strait of Hormuz. This is expected to translate into further retail diesel price relief in the coming weeks, lowering carrier operating costs.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small carriers and owner-operators remain under intense financial pressure due to high operating costs, though the recent dip in diesel prices provides some breathing room. However, stricter regulatory enforcement and the upcoming July 20 deadline for replacing revoked ELD models are expected to force non-compliant, undercapitalized carriers out of the market, accelerating capacity consolidation.
- Economic Indicators: Pre-holiday retail inventory replenishment and peak summer agricultural harvests are driving strong short-term spot demand. While overall manufacturing activity shows mixed signals, the surge in import volumes as shippers pull cargo forward to preempt potential tariffs is keeping port-adjacent capacity highly active.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
FMCSA ELD Revocations and July 20 Compliance Deadline Loom 🔗:
The FMCSA's removal of multiple ELD models from its approved registry creates an immediate compliance risk for brokers. Carriers utilizing these revoked devices have until July 20, 2026, to transition to compliant models. Brokers must proactively audit their carrier networks to ensure compliance, as dispatching a carrier with a revoked ELD is legally treated as having no ELD at all, exposing the brokerage to severe negligent hiring liabilities. This regulatory action will also temporarily sideline non-compliant owner-operators, further tightening capacity.
-
FMCSA Streamlines Paperwork with Administrative Rule Changes 🔗:
Effective July 22, 2026, the FMCSA is eliminating several redundant administrative requirements, including the mandate to carry a physical ELD user manual in the cab and the requirement for CDL holders to self-report out-of-state convictions. While these changes reduce the paperwork burden for legitimate carriers, they coincide with a massive expansion of fraud-targeting enforcement. Brokers should use this as a talking point with shippers to emphasize that while compliant carriers will face fewer administrative hurdles, the vetting process must remain rigorous to weed out 'chameleon' carriers.
-
Global Oil Prices Plummet as US-Iran Peace Deal Eases Strait of Hormuz Crisis 🔗:
The announcement of a US-Iran peace deal has triggered a dramatic drop in global oil prices, with tankers resuming normal transit through the Strait of Hormuz. This development has already led to record-breaking fuel price drops internationally and is beginning to ease domestic diesel prices (now at $4.827/gallon). For brokers, this downward trend in fuel costs will eventually reduce carrier fuel surcharges, making spot rates more negotiable. However, brokers should advise shippers that the full impact of lower oil prices will take several weeks to fully reflect at domestic pumps.
News Insight
The ELD crackdown is becoming a network-quality divider ahead of mid-July
The July 20 compliance deadline is not just a legal risk; it is an early signal of which small carriers will remain dependable through the second half of the month. Brokers that verify device compliance now can lock in cleaner capacity before the broader market starts screening out revoked units, while carriers that delay the swap may disappear abruptly from coverage plans during a per iod when summer produce already has reefer and van networks stretched.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast remains the most strategically lucrative region for freight brokers today. The region is currently experiencing a powerful convergence of peak summer produce harvests (watermelons, peaches) and high import volumes at major ports like Savannah. This has created a severe capacity deficit, particularly for temperature-controlled equipment, allowing carriers to demand substantial rate premiums. While total spot volumes are dipping nationally ahead of the holiday, Southeast outbound lanes continue to command some of the highest rates in the country, offering excellent margin opportunities for brokers who can source reliable capacity.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA → Orlando, FL: This high-volume regional lane is experiencing intense demand as retail and beverage distributors rush to replenish Florida's tourism hubs ahead of the July 4th weekend. Outbound capacity from Atlanta is exceptionally tight, with carriers leveraging the holiday rush to demand high rates. The lane is heavily influenced by the regional heat wave, which increases the risk of reefer equipment strain. Shippers are willing to pay premiums to ensure on-time delivery of temperature-sensitive consumer goods.
Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC: This critical port-to-distribution-hub corridor is highly active as importers pull containerized cargo forward to preempt potential tariffs. Flatbed and dry van capacity in Savannah is heavily constrained by both port volumes and competing agricultural demand in the region. The short transit time makes it an attractive lane for carriers, but pre-holiday driver shortages are driving up spot rates. Regional heat warnings are also slowing down port loading operations, compounding delays.
Regional Insight
Atlanta to Orlando favors carriers that can monetize the weak Florida reload
This lane will clear at a premium today, but the negotiating leverage is more nuanced than a simple holiday surge. Carriers know Florida reloads remain soft through the holiday, so the most competitive truck pricing will come from operators who can either secure a committed return, deliver into central Florida with a fast-turn receiver, or treat the load as a paid repositioning move. In practice, appointment flexibility and unloading speed may move more trucks than another small bump in linehaul.
Regional Insight
Savannah to Charlotte is increasingly a turn-time market, not just a rate market
On this short port corridor, margin leakage is likely to show up in gate delays, chassis dwell, and missed cutoff times more than in headline linehaul. Carriers trying to squeeze in one more holiday-week turn will favor loads with pre-cleared paperwork and predictable live-unload windows, which gives brokers room to protect margin by tightening accessorial language instead of overbidding the base rate.
- Expect stronger carrier response from North Carolina-based fleets looking for a final homebound turn.
- Port and receiver timing discipline is likely to decide coverage faster than another rate revision.
📰 Breaking Down: FMCSA's Aggressive ELD Revocations and the July 20 Deadline
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration's (FMCSA) recent regulatory actions represent a major shift in enforcement priorities that will have immediate downstream effects on spot market capacity. By removing 12 ELD models in May 2026 and a total of 79 models since January 2025, the agency is aggressively targeting non-compliant technology providers. With the compliance deadline of July 20, 2026, rapidly approaching, carriers utilizing these revoked devices have a narrowing window to transition to approved models. For freight brokers, this is not merely an administrative issue; it is a critical liability risk. Under current legal precedents, dispatching a carrier with a revoked ELD is treated the same as dispatching a carrier with no ELD at all, exposing the broker to severe negligent hiring claims in the event of an accident.
Furthermore, this crackdown is expected to disproportionately impact small fleets and owner-operators, who are more likely to utilize lower-cost, non-compliant ELD models. As these carriers are forced to temporarily sideline their trucks to install compliant hardware, we anticipate a localized tightening of spot market capacity, particularly in highly fragmented sectors like dry van and flatbed. Brokers must immediately implement automated compliance checks within their TMS to flag and block carriers utilizing revoked ELDs. Communicating this risk to shippers is also vital, as it demonstrates proactive risk management and justifies the exclusion of cheap, non-compliant carriers from their supply chains.
🚛 Reefer: Peak Summer Produce Collides with Pre-Holiday Capacity Squeeze
The temperature-controlled sector is currently the most volatile and high-opportunity segment of the domestic freight market. Today's real-time data shows reefer paid rates averaging $3.47/mile against a posted rate of $3.25/mile, representing a substantial $0.22/mile carrier premium. This spread is driven by the peak summer produce harvest, with high-volume commodities like watermelons in Texas and Georgia, corn in Illinois, and blueberries in Michigan requiring immediate, temperature-controlled transport. This agricultural demand is competing directly with pre-holiday grocery and beverage replenishment, creating a severe capacity deficit.
This capacity tightness is further compounded by extreme heat warnings stretching across the Midwest and Northeast, where heat index values are reaching 105°F. This extreme weather places immense strain on reefer cooling units, increasing the risk of mechanical failures and subsequent cargo claims. Carriers are demanding higher rates to offset the increased fuel consumption required to maintain sub-zero temperatures in extreme heat, as well as the risk of transit delays. Brokers must prioritize carrier vetting, ensuring that reefer units are pre-cooled prior to loading and that drivers are closely monitoring pulp temperatures. Leveraging backhaul lanes into major agricultural origins remains the most effective strategy for securing capacity at manageable rates.
💰 Capitalizing on the Pre-Holiday Rate Spread and Capacity Imbalances
Today's spot market data reveals highly lucrative arbitrage opportunities for freight brokers who can navigate the pre-holiday capacity contraction. Total available loads dropped 8.7% overnight to 126,538, a typical trend as shippers wind down operations before the July 4th weekend. However, the spread between posted and paid rates remains highly favorable for carriers, with dry van paid rates averaging $2.96/mile ($0.21/mile over posted) and reefer paid rates averaging $3.47/mile ($0.22/mile over posted). This indicates that while overall volume is declining, the remaining freight is highly time-sensitive, and shippers are willing to pay significant premiums to secure capacity.
Brokers can exploit this dynamic by targeting 'must-move' freight from high-volume shippers and utilizing aggressive negotiation tactics with carriers. Because many owner-operators are looking to secure loads that position them close to home for the holiday, brokers can offer lower rates on lanes heading toward major metropolitan areas in exchange for guaranteed, quick-paying freight. Conversely, outbound lanes from major distribution hubs like Atlanta and Chicago should be priced with healthy margins to account for the rapid depletion of the local truck pool. By securing capacity early in the day and leveraging carrier desire for holiday positioning, brokers can maximize their margins during this high-volatility window.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Price for the afternoon capacity cliff, not the morning load count.
- In flood zones, protect margin with detention and accessorial discipline because delays are likely to be local and facility-driven.
- On Atlanta-Orlando and Savannah-Charlotte, appointment speed and reload strategy are stronger coverage tools today than incremental rate increases alone.
- Use ELD compliance checks now to secure reliable July capacity before the deadline begins sidelining smaller carriers.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a smaller board, not a softer market: Total available loads are 126,538, down 8.7% from 138,664, yet the national average rate is still $3.03/mile. That tells you the freight left on the board is more urgent, more selective, and more expensive to replace than the headline volume suggests.
Paid market reality is still above posted-market fiction:
- Dry van: $2.75 posted / $2.96 paid = +$0.21/mile
- Reefer: $3.25 posted / $3.47 paid = +$0.22/mile
- Flatbed: $3.35 posted / $3.55 paid = +$0.20/mile
- Heavy haul: $3.49 posted / $3.62 paid = +$0.13/mile
- LTL (Less Than Truckload)/partial: $1.78 posted / $1.88 paid = +$0.10/mile
- Specialized: $3.14 posted / $3.09 paid = -$0.05/mile broker edge
The all-mode average is misleading if you broker vans: Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized account for 91,302 of 126,538 loads, or 72.2% of total volume. That means the $3.03/mile national average is being pulled up by higher-rated open-deck and specialty freight. Do not use it to anchor dry van buying.
The market’s real risk is timing, not just price: As the holiday window closes, carriers stop evaluating loads on pure cents-per-mile and start evaluating them on home time, unload speed, deadhead, and weekend position. That shift usually creates an afternoon capacity cliff even when the morning board still looks workable.
Weather is turning ordinary loads into productivity-risk loads: Central Illinois flooding and Pearl River access issues are more likely to create missed appointments, facility delays, reroutes, and detention disputes than full network shutdowns. That means the margin leak is often in unbilled exceptions, not the base rate.
Today’s cleanest margin pocket is specialized freight with exact scope: A -$0.05/mile broker advantage is rare in a pre-holiday market. That edge is real, but only on well-defined, favorable-routing shipments where carriers want a final positioning move.
🧠 What The Market Is Really Saying
Carriers are pricing weekend outcome, not just today’s dispatch
A truck that ends in the right market, with a quick unload and a believable next step, is worth more to a carrier than a slightly higher-paying load that strands them. This is especially true on:
- Atlanta → Orlando
- Savannah → Charlotte
- Homebound specialized freight
- Short open-deck turns that can clear before shutdowns
Shippers who waited are now buying service recovery, not transportation
When load counts fall but paid rates stay strong, it usually means the easy freight has already cleared. What remains is:
- Late-booked freight
- Must-move holiday tenders
- Weather-touched freight
- Freight with poor appointment design
- Loads needing same-day problem solving
Diesel is slightly easier, but still keeps locality valuable
At $4.827/gallon, fuel is still high enough to punish unpaid deadhead. Carriers will keep favoring:
- Shorter repositioning
- Known shippers
- Clean appointment windows
- Reload visibility
- Realistic route miles
The board size hides how active the market already is
Loads moved today show where execution is already happening:
- Flatbed: 20,208
- Heavy haul: 9,997
- Specialized: 6,006
- Dry van: 3,746
- LTL/partial: 2,730
- Reefer: 1,534
The lesson: open-deck and project freight are still clearing aggressively even in a declining-volume environment. If you wait for those markets to “soften,” you may just be waiting for worse trip quality.
💰 Where The Money Is Today
🚚 Dry Van
- Market read: Tighter than the load count looks
- Data: 18,964 loads, $2.75 posted, $2.96 paid
- Broker implication:
- The +$0.21/mile spread says you should quote from replacement cost, not board optimism.
- Most van pressure today is not broad-based panic; it is timing compression around retail, beverage, and distribution-center freight.
- Best plays:
- Cover before lunch on anything that truly must deliver before weekend closure.
- Use local and network-fit trucks, not cheap out-of-position trucks.
- Convert lower-density freight to LTL/partial early instead of after a truckload miss.
- Trap:
- Letting a shipper anchor you to posted rates when the lane is really clearing at paid-market levels.
🥬 Reefer
- Market read: Highest urgency and highest claim exposure
- Data: 7,474 loads, $3.25 posted, $3.47 paid
- Broker implication:
- The +$0.22/mile spread is significant, but the bigger cost is failure.
- Produce season, grocery replenishment, and heat are all competing for the same equipment.
- Best plays:
- Confirm pre-cool status before dispatch
- Verify setpoint, reefer fuel level, and continuous-run instructions
- Target carriers with a believable return into Texas, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, or California produce zones
- Pay for equipment integrity before paying for last-minute rescue
- Trap:
- Buying the cheapest truck with weak temperature-control discipline
🏗️ Flatbed
- Market read: Biggest volume bucket, but also biggest hidden-cost bucket
- Data: 50,285 loads, $3.35 posted, $3.55 paid
- Broker implication:
- The visible spread is +$0.20/mile, but the real issue is slower turns from flood routing, heat, loading delays, and securement time.
- Best plays:
- Price tarping, detention, reroutes, and layover exposure upfront
- Confirm loading method, site access, and securement scope
- Front-load Illinois and Indiana pickups where possible
- Trap:
- Quoting ideal mileage while ignoring real productivity loss
🏭 Heavy Haul
- Market read: Permit timing matters more than rate theory
- Data: 25,022 loads, $3.49 posted, $3.62 paid
- Broker implication:
- The +$0.13/mile spread is modest, but permit-office holiday closures amplify the service risk.
- Best plays:
- Lock dimensions, axle details, and route assumptions immediately
- Advise shippers that permit-sensitive freight has a shrinking execution window
- Avoid overpromising delivery timing where floods or first/last-mile restrictions exist
- Trap:
- Treating a holiday-week permitted move like a normal weekday project
⚙️ Specialized
- Market read: Best tactical broker edge on the board
- Data: 15,995 loads, $3.14 posted, $3.09 paid
- Broker implication:
- A -$0.05/mile broker advantage means some carriers are accepting lower rates to position home or secure favorable backhauls.
- Best plays:
- Target lanes into major metro areas or toward carrier home regions
- Post exact dimensions, handling needs, and appointment discipline
- Use this market for precise, quick-turn wins
- Trap:
- Vague load details that turn a broker edge into a claim or an accessorial fight.
📦 LTL / Partial
- Market read: Overflow solution, not a bargain market
- Data: 8,798 loads, $1.78 posted, $1.88 paid
- Broker implication:
- Stable enough to use for freight that does not truly need a full truck.
- Best plays:
- Offer as a planning option before truckload fails
- Use on palletized or appointment-flex freight
- Set expectations around terminal congestion and transit variability
- Trap:
- Presenting partial as a desperate fallback instead of a cost-control strategy
🌦️ Weather-Adjusted Broker Strategy
🌊 Central Illinois Flood Belt
- What matters: Peoria, Tazewell, and Woodford-area flooding is a same-day productivity problem
- Real risk:
- Secondary-road disruption
- Missed pickup appointments
- Longer first/last-mile transit
- Flatbed securement delays in heat and passing storms
- Broker moves:
- Prioritize pickups before noon
- Add delivery cushion on freight touching I-74 and I-72
- Pre-negotiate detention and reroute language
- Call facilities directly to confirm access
🌊 Pearl River / Gulf Access Friction
- What matters: This is mostly a facility-access problem, not a corridor-collapse problem
- Real risk:
- Trucks can reach the market but still lose the turn getting into or out of shipper yards.
- Broker moves:
- Use regional carriers who know the approaches
- Avoid building tight second turns
- Clarify yard conditions and alternate entrances
- Protect accessorial recovery upfront
🔥 Heat Wave Markets
- What matters: Heat around 105°F increases dwell pain, driver fatigue, and reefer stress
- Real risk:
- Longer live loads/unloads
- Reduced driver willingness for messy freight
- Higher reefer mechanical and claim exposure
- Broker moves:
- Schedule loading earlier where possible
- Ask about reefer maintenance and fuel
- Pad open-deck loading windows
- Communicate realistic Hours of Service (HOS) limits to shippers
🗺️ Lane-Specific Plays
🍊 Atlanta, GA → Orlando, FL
- What is happening: This is a premium lane today, but the real buying issue is weak Florida reload
- Broker advantage:
- The best-priced carriers will view this as either:
- A paid repositioning move
- A load with a known central Florida unload
- A lane tied to a believable return
- Best tactics:
- Sell unload speed harder than linehaul pennies
- Offer committed appointment visibility
- Use carriers that already want to rotate through Georgia or Florida
- Do not do:
- Keep nudging the rate up in tiny increments while leaving reload uncertainty unresolved
🚢 Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC
- What is happening: This is becoming a turn-time market, not just a rate market
- Broker advantage:
- Capacity improves when you reduce:
- Gate uncertainty
- Chassis dwell
- Paperwork delay
- Receiver slowness
- Best tactics:
- Source Transportation Worker Identification Credential (TWIC)-ready drivers
- Confirm paperwork before dispatch
- Tighten detention language
- Market the load as a final homebound Carolinas turn
- Do not do:
- Overbid the base rate while leaving port friction unresolved
🧾 Shipper Conversations That Win Today
“The posted market is not the executable market.”
Use the spread to justify urgency:
- Van is clearing about $0.21/mile over posted
- Reefer is clearing about $0.22/mile over posted
- Flatbed is clearing about $0.20/mile over posted
“The cheapest decision this morning is usually the most expensive decision this afternoon.”
This is how you move a shipper off hesitation when they still want yesterday’s logic in today’s window.
“Weather risk today is mostly dwell, access, and missed turns.”
That helps shippers understand why you need approval for:
- Detention
- Layover
- Reroute
- Accessorial protections
“If the freight is flexible, partial is strategy—not compromise.”
This protects the relationship and preserves margin.
📞 Carrier Conversations That Get Trucks Covered
Lead with trip quality first
- Ready freight
- Firm appointment
- Known unload time
- Short deadhead
- Reload visibility
For reefer, acknowledge operational pain before they ask
- Setpoint confirmed
- Product sensitivity known
- Continuous run if required
- Heat-aware expectations
- Pre-cool verified
For open deck, show you understand the work
- Securement details
- Tarping needs
- Yard access
- Flood-related routing realities
- Holiday closure timing
For specialized, sell homebound logic
- This is one of the few markets today where a carrier may trade rate for positioning value.
⚠️ Risk Controls You Should Tighten Today
🛠️ Today’s Desk Plan
🕗 Before 9 AM
🕙 Mid-Morning Through Noon
- Reprice uncovered freight to paid-market reality
- Push flexible shippers toward partial/LTL before the truckload window degrades
- Tighten all accessorial language in writing
- Sell quick-turn certainty on Savannah and Atlanta lanes
🕛 After Noon
- Assume capacity gets more selective, not cheaper
- Stop offering aggressive service promises on weather-touched loads without added cushion
- Use your vetted local carriers first
- Avoid rescue buys from unknown carriers unless compliance and identity are clean
📊 What To Watch For The Rest Of The Day
🎯 24–72 Hour Probability Map
Base case — 55%
- Rates stay firm through the holiday cutoff window
- Afternoon buying becomes service-premium buying
- Reefer and flood-exposed open deck stay hardest to cover cleanly
Stress case — 30%
- Late freight pays sharply higher replacement cost
- Heat creates more reefer exceptions and slower live loads
- Local flood friction causes more missed turns and detention fights than outright lane closures
Opportunity case — 15%
- Specialized freight remains a broker-favorable niche
- Homebound and quick-turn carriers create selective buy-side wins
- Early conversion to LTL/partial protects both margin and customer trust
🏁 Bottom Line
- This is a timing market wearing a volume-decline disguise.
- The freight left on the board is more urgent than the board count implies.
- Van and reefer should be priced from paid-market reality, not posted-rate hope.
- Flatbed and heavy haul need productivity pricing, not just mileage pricing.
- Specialized is today’s best tactical broker edge, but only with exact scope.
- The brokers who win today will be the ones who reduce uncertainty for both shipper and carrier before lunch.
💡 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
626: Li Shimin, the future Emperor Taizong of Tang, ambushes and kills his rival brothers Li Yuanji and Li Jiancheng in the Xuanwu Gate Incident.
1298: Battle of Göllheim: Albert I of Habsburg defeats Adolf of Nassau-Weilburg.
1964: Civil rights movement: U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson signs the Civil Rights Act of 1964 meant to prohibit segregation in public places.
💭 Quote of the Day
"The biggest adventure you can ever take is to live the life of your dreams."
— Oprah Winfrey