π Daily Market Intelligence Report
Sunday, June 28, 2026
7:00 AM CST
π Top-Line Summary
On Sunday, June 28, 2026, the domestic spot market exhibits typical weekend volume contraction with 123,483 total available loads, representing a 3.9% decrease from yesterday's volume. Despite this drop, spot rates remain highly resilient, with the national average holding firm at $2.90/mile. This rate floor is supported by a AAA national diesel average of $4.887/gallon, which continues to act as a hard cost barrier for carriers. The temperature-controlled sector is experiencing extreme capacity tightness due to the peak summer produce harvest, driving reefer paid rates to a significant premium over posted rates. Meanwhile, localized flash flooding in the Midwest and South is creating routing challenges along major corridors like I-64, I-75, and I-10, offering high-margin opportunities for proactive brokers who can secure reliable capacity.
Insight
Weekend spreads are widest now, but reefer pressure is building into Monday
The current van and flatbed broker edge looks more like a Sunday positioning window than a durable weekly trend. Carriers are still taking discounted reloads to set up for Monday, but that leverage is likely to shrink quickly once produce tenders and end-of-month freight hit at the same time. Reefer is moving in the opposite direction: the paid market is already clearing above posted rates, and early-week outbound Georgia and South Carolina freight is the most likely place for another step-up.
β½ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
π¦οΈ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Flash Flood Warning (Southwestern Indiana (IN, Posey, Vanderburgh, Warrick counties)): Heavy rain and flash flooding may disrupt local freight movement and delay shipments along the I-64 corridor.
- Flash Flood Warning (East Tennessee and Kentucky (TN, Campbell, Claiborne, Scott counties; KY, Adair, Barren, Clinton counties)): Heavy rain of up to 4 inches is causing flash flooding, which could delay transit along the I-75 corridor between mile markers 131 and 161.
- River Flooding (Central Illinois (IL, Peoria, Tazewell, Woodford counties)): Minor river flooding along the Illinois River is expected to continue, potentially impacting local agricultural shipping routes and requiring detours near I-74.
- River Flooding (Southwest Louisiana (LA, Calcasieu Parish)): Minor flooding of the Calcasieu River near White Oak Park may cause localized delays and affect open-deck and heavy-haul routing near the I-10 corridor.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
I-75 delays should be most acute from late morning through early evening
The East Tennessee and Kentucky flood zone looks less like an all-day shutdown and more like a stop-start disruption window, with additional showers and thunderstorms favored from late morning into the afternoon. That raises the odds of missed appointment cascades on freight moving through the Cumberland Gap segment of I-75 even if roads briefly recover between cells.
- Early departures have the best chance of clearing the corridor before new convection develops.
- Loads scheduled into Knoxville, Corbin, and Lexington later today deserve extra appointment padding.
Weather Insight
River flooding remains a routing problem after the rain ends
Central Illinois and southwest Louisiana are the kind of flood markets that stay operationally messy under otherwise favorable weather. Minor river flooding near the Illinois River and along the Calcasieu corridor can keep local access roads, staging areas, and per mit routes constrained even with mostly sunny conditions returning.
- Open-deck and heavy-haul moves should treat Monday as a verification day, not an automatic recovery day.
- Agricultural and industrial freight near Peoria and Lake Charles may move, but with slower turns and more last-mile reroutes.
π° Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Fuel costs are stabilizing as global oil market volatility eases, but the current retail price of $4.887/gallon continues to squeeze carrier margins, particularly for owner-operators.
- Carrier Financial Health: Stricter federal enforcement, including CDL and visa restrictions, is accelerating carrier exits and capacity consolidation, shifting leverage toward remaining compliant carriers.
- Economic Indicators: Early peak-season import volumes and domestic manufacturing demand are keeping freight volumes resilient despite typical weekend lulls.
π° Impactful News Analysis
-
FedEx Freight Standalone Earnings Highlight Truckload Capacity Spillover π:
FedEx Freight's 4.8% revenue increase to $2.41 billion for the quarter ending May 31 demonstrates how truckload capacity constraints are driving heavier backhaul shipments into LTL networks. For brokers, this indicates that tight truckload capacity is pushing shippers to seek alternative consolidation options. Brokers should leverage this by offering partial and LTL solutions to shippers struggling with truckload rates, while anticipating continued rate firming in backhaul lanes.
-
Domestic Manufacturing Resilience Caps Equipment Lead Times π:
Vector Industries' ability to keep bypass feeder lead times under a week by utilizing domestic manufacturing and U.S.-sourced steel highlights a growing trend of nearshoring and domestic sourcing to avoid port congestion. For brokers, this suggests stable, predictable flatbed and dry van demand out of domestic manufacturing hubs like Waukesha, Wisconsin. Brokers should target these reliable domestic shippers who are less exposed to international supply chain disruptions.
-
AI Chip Demand Squeezes Consumer Electronics Supply Chains π:
The diversion of semiconductor manufacturing capacity toward high-margin AI chips is driving up prices and tightening supply for consumer electronics like gaming consoles. For brokers, this means high-value electronics shipments may see lower volumes but higher security and transit-time sensitivity. Brokers should focus on securing high-security team capacity for these high-value loads and communicate potential supply delays to retail clients.
News Insight
LTL spillover is most useful on Monday replenishment freight, not just true small shipments
The strongest application of the current LTL strength is on freight that is too urgent to wait for truckload prices to settle but too small to justify paying full Monday truckload premiums. In Southeast and Midwest backhaul markets, 8- to 16-pallet moves are increasingly via ble as partial or pooled options, especially for shippers trying to avoid reefer or van spot spikes at the start of the week.
πΊοΈ Regional & Lane Analysis
π Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast is currently the most lucrative region for brokers due to the collision of peak summer produce harvests (peaches, watermelons, tomatoes) and high import volumes. This has created an extreme capacity deficit for temperature-controlled equipment, driving reefer paid rates to a $0.17/mile premium over posted rates ($3.40 paid vs $3.23 posted).
π£οΈ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA β Miami, FL: This lane is experiencing high volume as retail goods and inbound imports from Savannah are distributed south. The return trip from Florida is traditionally soft, which creates a strong directional imbalance. Sourcing outbound capacity from Atlanta remains highly competitive, while inbound capacity to Atlanta is readily available.
Savannah, GA β Charlotte, NC: Port import surges at Savannah are driving heavy containerized and transloaded dry van volume into the Charlotte distribution hub. This short-haul corridor is highly active and sensitive to port congestion. Sourcing remains competitive as shippers rush to move freight inland.
Regional Insight
Atlanta-Miami margins improve when the northbound reload is booked first
The lane still favors carriers on the Atlanta outbound leg and brokers on the Florida return, but the cleaner play is to sell it as a paired move rather than two separate transactions. Locking a Miami or South Florida exit load before dispatching south materially lowers carrier resistance on the outbound rate and reduces the risk of equipment idling in a soft backhaul market.
Regional Insight
Savannah-Charlotte is turning into a speed premium lane
This corridor is short enough that transit cost is not the main pressure point; dwell is. As importers continue pulling cargo forward, the carriers earning the best utilization are the ones getting in and out of port-adjacent transload sites and Charlotte DCs quickly, which means shippers offering fast unloads and flexible pickup windows will hold capacity more easily than those trying to grind rate.
π Reefer: Peak Produce and the Paid-vs-Posted Premium
The temperature-controlled sector is currently the most volatile and lucrative market segment. Real-time data shows reefer paid rates averaging $3.40/mile, representing a significant $0.17/mile premium over posted rates ($3.23/mile). This premium is a direct result of the peak summer produce season, where high-value, time-sensitive commodities like peaches, watermelons, and tomatoes are harvesting rapidly across the Southeast and California. Carriers are fully aware of the urgency of these loads and are demanding high premiums to commit their pre-cooled equipment. Brokers who rely solely on posted rates are finding themselves unable to cover loads, as the real-time paid data indicates that the actual market clearing price is much higher. To secure capacity, brokers must adjust their pricing models to reflect this $0.17/mile premium, particularly on outbound lanes from Georgia, South Carolina, and California.
π° Rate Spread and Margin Arbitrage Opportunities
Today's real-time load board data reveals substantial rate spreads that savvy brokers can exploit for margin arbitrage. In the dry van sector, the average posted rate stands at $2.71/mile, while the average paid rate is $2.46/mile, representing a $0.25/mile broker advantage. This spread is driven by weekend repositioning, where carriers are willing to accept lower paid rates to move equipment out of softer markets and position themselves for the upcoming week. Similarly, the flatbed sector shows a $0.29/mile broker advantage, with posted rates at $3.45/mile and paid rates at $3.16/mile. This indicates that while demand remains active with over 48,000 available loads, carriers are accepting lower rates on specific lanes to maintain cash flow. Brokers should target these high-spread sectors, quoting shippers closer to the posted rates while sourcing capacity at the lower paid rates to maximize margins.
π₯ Manufacturing and Agriculture Sector Dynamics
The agricultural sector is currently driving the most intense market dynamics, with peak summer harvests of blueberries, peaches, and watermelons straining reefer capacity across the Southeast and Midwest. This seasonal surge is competing directly with industrial manufacturing demand. In the manufacturing sector, domestic producers like Vector Industries are maintaining stable lead times by sourcing U.S. steel and keeping production in-house, which insulates them from port congestion. This domestic resilience supports steady flatbed and dry van demand out of Midwestern manufacturing hubs. Brokers should balance their portfolios by securing high-margin, volatile agricultural loads while maintaining a steady baseline of predictable, domestic manufacturing freight.
π Analyzing the Posted-vs-Paid Spread Velocity
A closer look at the rate velocity across equipment types reveals a stark contrast between carrier-dominated and broker-dominated sectors. In the reefer and heavy-haul sectors, paid rates are outstripping posted rates ($3.40 paid vs $3.23 posted for reefer; $3.84 paid vs $3.59 posted for heavy haul), indicating rapid upward rate velocity and extreme capacity tightness. Conversely, dry van, flatbed, and specialized sectors show significant broker advantages, where paid rates are lower than posted rates. This suggests that while carriers hold the leverage in specialized and temperature-controlled niches, general freight and open-deck capacity are experiencing temporary weekend softening. Brokers must monitor these spreads daily, as the transition into the new week will likely compress these broker advantages as shipping volumes rebound.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Use Sunday to buy van and flatbed repositioning miles; expect that margin window to narrow quickly on Monday.
- Price Southeast reefer to the paid market now, especially out of Georgia and South Carolina, and secure the backhaul before the truck loads.
- Build extra transit and appointment cushion on freight touching I-75, I-64, the Illinois River corridor, or the Lake Charles area.
- Offer partial and LTL alternatives on urgent Monday replenishment freight when truckload cover starts to break budget.
π Executive Signal Summary
This is a broker-friendly buying window in van, flatbed, specialized, and LTL/Partial β but it looks temporary, not structural.
- Van: $2.71 posted / $2.46 paid = $0.25/mile broker edge
- Flatbed: $3.45 posted / $3.16 paid = $0.29/mile broker edge
- Specialized: $3.18 posted / $2.69 paid = $0.49/mile broker edge
- LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload): $1.75 posted / $1.40 paid = $0.35/mile broker edge
Reefer and heavy haul are already trading above the board and deserve urgency pricing now.
- Reefer: $3.23 posted / $3.40 paid = $0.17/mile carrier premium
- Heavy haul: $3.59 posted / $3.84 paid = $0.25/mile carrier premium
The national average of $2.90/mile is useful as a temperature check, but dangerous as a truckload buy target.
- Flatbed + heavy haul + specialized = 87,952 of 123,483 available loads
- That is 71.2% of total board volume, so the all-mode average is still being pulled up by higher-rated open-deck and specialty freight
- Routine van decisions should be bought off van reality, not the $2.90 headline
Diesel at $4.887/gallon is still a hard behavioral floor.
- Carriers may take a discounted repositioning move
- They still do not want speculative deadhead, missed appointments, or soft Florida exits
Weather is a productivity problem first and a closure problem second.
- I-75, I-64, Peoria-area access, and Lake Charles-area routing are the zones most likely to create late pickup chains, missed delivery appointments, and costly reroutes
π§ What The Board Is Really Saying
Available loads fell to 123,483, down 3.9% from 128,428.
- That is a normal weekend contraction
- The more important read is where paid rates are clearing versus posted rates
The spread map is clean today.
- Buy-under-posted markets: van, flatbed, specialized, LTL/Partial
- Pay-over-posted markets: reefer, heavy haul
That does not mean all broker advantages are equally real.
- Van and flatbed look like Sunday positioning markets
- Specialized looks like the clearest repositioning/backhaul arbitrage pocket
- Reefer is the most likely mode to get tighter first when Monday demand hits
- Heavy haul is not just expensive β it is operationally fragile because permits and route viability matter more than board averages
Experienced brokers should read today as a sequencing market.
- Buy cheap positioning miles first
- Lock volatile freight next
- Do not wait to price weather and appointment risk until after a truck is covered
π Mode-By-Mode Broker Playbook
π Dry Van: Take the spread, but donβt trust it to last
π§ Reefer: Price to the paid market now
πͺ΅ Flatbed: Todayβs margin is real, but Monday can erase it fast
What matters
- 48,121 available loads
- $3.45 posted / $3.16 paid
- $0.29/mile broker advantage
What this really means
- There is real room to buy flatbed under posted today
- But part of that spread exists because some carriers will accept lower-paying freight to reposition around construction and industrial demand
Where brokers win
- Short-haul industrial freight
- Backhaul-oriented reloads
- Operationally clean loads with exact loading details
Where brokers lose
- On loads with hidden cost:
- tarping
- crane delay
- jobsite congestion
- detour mileage
- flood-related staging issues
Best tactic
- Take the linehaul win, then protect it with strict scope control
ποΈ Heavy Haul: This is an execution market, not a posting market
What matters
- 24,537 available loads
- $3.59 posted / $3.84 paid
- $0.25/mile carrier premium
What this really means
- Specialized trailers may exist
- Executable route + permit timing + access certainty is what is actually scarce
Operational truth
- Flooding in Illinois, Indiana, and Louisiana can break a heavy-haul move even when the interstate is technically open
- Oversize freight fails on:
- local access roads
- permit changes
- escort timing
- alternate route approval
Desk actions
- Do not quote incomplete dimensions
- Verify first-mile and last-mile access before committing
- Add permit cushion on freight touching I-64 or I-10 corridors
- Use proven project carriers before fast-onboarded weekend capacity
βοΈ Specialized: Best pure arbitrage pocket on the board
What matters
- 15,294 available loads
- $3.18 posted / $2.69 paid
- $0.49/mile broker advantage
What this really means
- This is classic carrier repositioning behavior
- Some operators want directional freight more than perfect yield today
How to exploit it
- Target simple, exact-fit loads
- Sell inbound freight into stronger Monday markets
- Use this mode for clean backhauls and network-balancing moves
Do not do this
- Assume every βspecializedβ posting is a bargain
- Specialized margin disappears fast when the scope is fuzzy
What matters
- 8,631 available loads
- $1.75 posted / $1.40 paid
- $0.35/mile broker advantage
What this really means
- This is not the biggest gross-margin story
- It is one of the best account-retention stories
Best use cases
- Urgent Monday replenishment freight
- 8- to 16-pallet shipments
- Shippers resisting full truckload premiums
- Freight that is too urgent to wait, but too small to justify Monday truckload pain
π¦οΈ Weather-Adjusted Routing Plan
π§ I-75: Appointment-risk corridor today
Main concern
- Stop-start delays through East Tennessee and Kentucky
- The real risk is appointment cascade, not necessarily full closure
Broker moves
- Push early departures first
- Pad appointments into Knoxville, Corbin, and Lexington
- Pre-negotiate detention and late-arrival communication before dispatch
π§ I-64 / Southern Indiana: Flatbed and heavy-haul productivity hit
Main concern
- Flash flooding in southwestern Indiana affecting the broader I-64 orbit
- Open-deck freight will feel this through turn time and reroute cost
Broker moves
- Quote routed miles, not ideal miles
- Reconfirm origin access and loading readiness
- Build same-day contingency coverage on service-sensitive freight
π Peoria / Illinois River: Monday is verification day, not automatic recovery day
Main concern
- River flooding affects local access, agricultural movements, and oversize routing
- Even if mainline conditions improve, yards and access roads can stay messy
Broker moves
- Re-verify permits and approaches before sending open-deck or heavy-haul trucks
- Set customer expectations for slower turns near Peoria-area freight
π Lake Charles / I-10 corridor: First-mile and last-mile risk
Main concern
- Southwest Louisiana flooding around the Calcasieu corridor
- Industrial and project freight is vulnerable to local road and staging-area restrictions
Broker moves
- Treat the linehaul as secondary
- Validate the plant access and jobsite approach first
- Pre-bill reroute exposure where possible
πΊοΈ Regional Money Plays For The Next 24β72 Hours
π Southeast reefer: Still the highest-urgency buy
Why it matters
- Produce pressure and time-sensitive commodities are competing for the same truck pool
- Georgia and South Carolina are the most likely near-term repricing zones
Winning tactic
- Buy inbound capacity into produce origins before the truck is needed there
- Sell the return leg at the same time
- Present shippers with service-backed pricing, not just mileage quotes
π΄ Atlanta β Miami: Book the northbound reload first
Market reality
- Southbound volume is attractive
- Northbound Florida freight is still softer and determines carrier willingness
Winning tactic
- Sell it as a paired move
- Secure the Florida exit before dispatching south
- This reduces:
- carrier rate resistance
- idle time
- late fall-offs after pickup
β Savannah β Charlotte: This is a speed premium lane
Market reality
- The lane is not being priced mainly on miles
- It is being priced on:
- port readiness
- gate speed
- document accuracy
- unload efficiency
Winning tactic
- Use port-experienced carriers
- Pre-clear pickup numbers and appointments
- Favor shippers who can promise fast unloads and flexible pickup windows
π° Where To Press Margin vs. Where To Protect Service
β
Press margin here
π‘οΈ Protect service here
Southeast reefer
- Replacement cost is already above posted
Heavy haul
- Execution failure is more expensive than rate overpayment
Weather-touched freight
- Margin disappears when accessorials, reroutes, and missed appointments are ignored
Florida one-ways
- Cheap southbound buys become expensive if the reload plan is absent
π£οΈ Negotiation Angles That Work Today
π¬ With shippers
- βDry van is buying below posted today at $2.46 paid against $2.71 posted, but that is a positioning market and not a safe Monday assumption.β
- βReefer is already clearing at $3.40 paid against $3.23 posted, so posted numbers are no longer replacement cost.β
- βOn Savannah freight, dwell and turn time matter more than a few cents per mile.β
- βWeather is not shutting the country down, but it is slowing turns enough that appointment flexibility has real value today.β
π¬ With carriers
- Lead with the trip plan, not only the rate.
- Sell:
- exact pickup window
- unload speed
- detention terms
- reload visibility
- route awareness
- Carriers are more likely to discount today when the next move is visible.
- For Florida and produce freight, certainty beats haggling.
π 24β72 Hour Probability Outlook
Base case β 60%
- Van and flatbed broker advantages shrink into Monday
- Reefer strengthens further in Southeast produce lanes
- Heavy haul remains paid-over-posted
- Weather slows turns more than it blocks freight
Stress case β 25%
- I-75 and I-64 disruptions create rescue freight
- Missed appointments roll into Monday repricing
- Open-deck and oversize freight face permit and route complications beyond the initial rain window
Opportunity case β 15%
- Specialized arbitrage remains open longer than expected
- LTL/Partial conversions save customers from truckload spike exposure
- Brokers who pre-build Florida and produce backhauls widen margin without increasing risk
β
Todayβs Priority Stack
Cover Southeast reefer early and price to $3.40 paid reality
- Do not let posted numbers anchor you
Buy van and flatbed repositioning miles before the Monday setup rush
- Take the spread while it is still a Sunday spread
Pair Florida freight before you dispatch it
- Outbound without reload visibility is false margin
Reprice all weather-touched freight for productivity loss
- Especially I-75, I-64, Peoria-area, and Lake Charles-area loads
Push LTL/Partial alternatives on urgent replenishment freight
- Best use is budget relief with service preservation
Use specialized selectively for clean backhaul arbitrage
π― Metrics To Watch Before The Day Ends
First-call acceptance rate
- Especially on Georgia, South Carolina, Savannah, and Florida freight
Early-cover vs. late-cover buy delta
- Compare what the same freight costs before noon versus later
Bounce rate on low-priced van coverage
- This will tell you whether you bought real capacity or just optimistic promises
Reload attachment rate
- Critical on Florida, produce cycles, and specialized repositioning freight
Accessorial capture rate
- Detention, reroute, layover, tarping, and delay recovery
π Bottom Line
- Today rewards brokers who understand the difference between a cheap screen and a cheap truck.
- Van, flatbed, specialized, and LTL/Partial offer real buying opportunities right now.
- Reefer and heavy haul should be treated as pay-up execution markets.
- The Southeast remains the best hunting ground, but only for brokers who attach reload logic and move early.
- Weather should be priced as lost productivity, not ignored until service fails.
- The brokers who win today will be the ones who combine rate discipline with operational realism.
π‘ 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.
π
This Day in History
1098: Fighters of the First Crusade defeat Kerbogha of Mosul at the battle of Antioch.
1635: Guadeloupe becomes a French colony.
1914: Causes of World War I: Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria and his wife Sophie are assassinated in Sarajevo, beginning the July Crisis and providing the casus belli of World War I.
π Quote of the Day
"If your happiness depends on what somebody else does, I guess you do have a problem."
β Richard Bach