📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Sunday, May 31, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The spot market is exhibiting pronounced weekend rate volatility today, with real-time transactional data showing 162,656 available loads and a market average rate of $2.86/mile. Capacity remains structurally tight across primary equipment types, heavily influenced by a high national diesel average of $5.475/gallon, which continues to restrict carrier deadhead behavior and establish a firm floor for rate negotiations. Severe weather disruptions, including active river flooding along the Gulf Coast and flash flood warnings in eastern Georgia, are further constraining equipment availability along critical freight corridors like I-10, I-59, and I-65. With peak summer produce season driving intense reefer demand across California and the Southeast, brokers must navigate sharp regional capacity imbalances and leverage significant rate spreads to protect margins.
Insight
Sunday pricing edge has a short shelf life
The widest posted-versus-paid spreads in dry van and specialized freight look like a Sunday repositioning window rather than a durable trend. That edge should compress quickly after first-shift Monday as weather-delayed freight re-enters the board, produce tenders build across Florida and Georgia, and carriers resist extra deadhead under $5.475 diesel.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- River Flooding and Corridor Disruptions (Gulf Coast States (LA, MS, TX, AR)): Active river flooding, particularly along the Pearl River, continues to inundate secondary roads and threaten major freight corridors including I-10 and I-59. This flooding may disrupt regional transit times and force carriers to execute extensive detours, tightening available open-deck and dry van capacity across the Gulf Coast region.
- Midwest River Flooding (Midwest States (MO, IN, IL, KS, KY)): Minor to moderate river flooding continues to impact low-lying woodlands, agricultural fields, and local highways across Missouri and Indiana, directly affecting corridors like I-70 and I-65. Saturated ground conditions and localized road closures could delay flatbed and heavy haul shipments, while driving up carrier rate demands due to routing complexities.
- Flash Flooding and Severe Thunderstorms (Eastern Georgia (GA, Burke County)): Heavy localized rainfall of 2 to 4 inches has triggered flash flood warnings, threatening small creeks, urban areas, and local highways. This sudden severe weather is expected to create difficult transit conditions and could delay loading and unloading operations at regional facilities, temporarily disrupting Southeast freight flows.
- High Wind Hazards (Wyoming Foothills (WY, North Snowy Range)): West winds of 25 to 40 mph with gusts up to 65 mph are creating hazardous crosswinds along I-80, particularly for light-weight or high-profile vehicles like tractor-trailers. These extreme wind conditions could delay transit times as drivers slow down or park to avoid blow-over risks, temporarily restricting northern transcontinental freight movement.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Pearl River disruptions will linger beyond today’s radar
Southeast Louisiana and coastal Mississippi should see less widespread rainfall through Monday, but river flooding will keep secondary-road access and facility turn times unstable even as the sky clears. The operational risk is less about full interstate shutdowns than soft pickup windows, longer ingress and egress at customer sites, and detour pricing that per sists until water recedes.
- Treat Monday morning ETAs along the I-10 and I-59 orbit as vulnerable to 2-4 hour slippage.
- Tuesday thunderstorms could slow any improvement and keep Gulf Coast capacity pinned near major corridors.
Weather Insight
Eastern Georgia is now part of the capacity squeeze
Heavy rain around the Augusta-Savannah corridor is pinching the cleaner eastern routing many drivers are using to avoid flood-affected western lanes. Conditions should improve later today, but residual delays into Monday morning and another unsettled per iod Tuesday keep northbound Southeast freight prone to extra transit padding.
- Afternoon pickups should cover more cleanly than same-day morning tenders in eastern Georgia.
- Carriers with flexible appointment windows will have an advantage on Jacksonville and Savannah-area reloads.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Elevated crude prices, with Brent averaging over $108 per barrel, are keeping diesel futures highly volatile, signaling sustained high fuel surcharges for carriers through the upcoming month.
- Carrier Financial Health: High operating costs and strict broker vetting standards following recent negligent hiring rulings are accelerating industry consolidation, driving smaller owner-operators out of the market and concentrating capacity within larger, well-capitalized fleets.
- Economic Indicators: Sustained wholesale inflation and rising input costs are beginning to pass through to consumer goods, maintaining steady retail replenishment volumes while squeezing manufacturing margins.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
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Ocean Container Rates Surge Ahead of Peak Season Amid Geopolitical Tensions 🔗:
With trans-Pacific ocean container rates nearly doubling since late February, shippers are aggressively shifting toward early inventory replenishment to avoid peak season congestion and tariff uncertainty. This pull-forward strategy is expected to accelerate the domestic peak shipping season, driving an early influx of import volumes at West Coast and East Coast ports. Freight brokers should prepare for a surge in drayage and transloading demand, which will subsequently tighten dry van and intermodal capacity out of major port cities by mid-summer.
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FMCSA Temporary HOS and ELD Waivers Drive Agricultural Capacity Demand 🔗:
The FMCSA's active hours-of-service and ELD waivers for truckers hauling agricultural inputs like fertilizer across 35 states continue to reshape regional capacity dynamics. By allowing carriers greater operational flexibility, this regulatory relief is pulling a significant volume of flatbed and dry van equipment into agricultural support roles. Brokers handling industrial or construction freight must account for this capacity drain, particularly in the Midwest and South, by securing carriers early and quoting elevated spot rates to compete with high-paying agricultural demand.
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Global Energy Volatility and Rising Input Costs Maintain Pressure on Carrier Margins 🔗:
Ongoing geopolitical conflicts and elevated crude oil prices are driving up global transportation and logistics costs, directly impacting domestic fuel markets. With wholesale inflation reaching multi-month highs, carriers are facing severe pressure on their operating margins. For freight brokers, this means carrier rate negotiations will remain highly sensitive to fuel prices. To secure committed capacity, brokers must ensure fuel surcharges are accurately calculated and clearly communicated, while advising shippers to expect sustained rate pressure on long-haul lanes.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast is currently the most volatile and lucrative region for freight brokers, driven by the powerful convergence of peak summer produce harvests and severe weather disruptions. Outbound agricultural shipments from Florida and Georgia are consuming the majority of regional reefer and dry van capacity, while active river flooding along the Gulf Coast (I-10/I-59) and flash flooding in eastern Georgia are creating severe operational bottlenecks. This combination of high seasonal demand and restricted physical routing has led to extreme capacity imbalances, allowing brokers to command high margins on inbound repositioning lanes while navigating tight capacity on outbound routes.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA → Miami, FL: This lane is experiencing a massive capacity imbalance due to the peak Florida produce season. While outbound Florida freight is booming, inbound shipments to Miami are highly sought after by carriers looking to reposition their equipment into southern agricultural hubs. Widespread flooding along the Gulf Coast is forcing routing adjustments, adding transit time and complexity to southern Florida runs.
Jacksonville, FL → Nashville, TN: This critical Southeast-to-Midwest corridor is heavily impacted by both agricultural outflows and weather disruptions. Widespread flooding in Mississippi and Alabama is squeezing capacity along I-65 and I-10, forcing carriers to take longer, eastern routes through Georgia. Outbound Florida produce (tomatoes, sweet corn) is consuming a vast portion of regional reefer capacity.
Regional Insight
Atlanta to Miami is a positioning lane with a narrow buy window
The best opportunity on Atlanta-to-Miami is tied to timing: trucks that can get into South Florida by Monday are chasing stronger produce reloads early in the week, which supports aggressive buy-side pricing on Sunday night and early Monday. Carriers quoting broad Southeast weather premiums should be separated from those running the cleaner I-75 path, because route certainty matters more than headline volatility on this lane.
- Inbound Florida rates should stay negotiable through early Monday, then firm as outbound produce demand absorbs more equipment.
- Empty reefers repositioning into Florida remain credible dry-freight coverage where shipper specs allow.
Regional Insight
Jacksonville to Nashville needs schedule protection as much as rate
This lane is tightening from both ends: Florida produce is pulling trucks south, while eastern Georgia weather is complicating the preferred northbound bypass. Coverage will still clear at a premium, but the bigger risk is execution as carriers add conservative drive plans to protect hours and avoid weather-related misses.
- Late-Monday pickups should cover more reliably than Sunday or early-Monday morning tenders.
- Upfront detention terms and delivery flexibility may secure capacity faster than a small last-minute rate increase.
🚛 Reefer: Peak Produce Collides with Southern Flooding
The temperature-controlled sector is experiencing extreme operational pressure today, driven by the simultaneous convergence of the peak summer produce harvest and severe regional weather. Real-time load board data shows reefer paid rates averaging $3.44/mile against a $3.21/mile posted rate, representing an aggressive $0.23/mile carrier premium. This rate surge is directly linked to the high concentration of reefer equipment in agricultural hubs across California, Florida, and Georgia, where time-sensitive commodities like blueberries, sweet corn, and tomatoes require immediate transport.
This intense agricultural demand has created severe reefer deficits in non-agricultural regions, as drivers prioritize high-paying outbound produce lanes to offset the steep fuel costs of running cooling units under $5.475/gallon diesel. Furthermore, active river flooding along the Gulf Coast has disrupted major transit corridors like I-10 and I-59, forcing carriers to execute extensive detours that add transit time and reduce overall equipment utilization. Brokers must expect reefer capacity to remain exceptionally tight through the upcoming week, requiring strategic carrier sourcing and elevated spot quotes to secure committed trucks.
💰 Spot Market Arbitrage: Exploiting the Posted-vs-Paid Spread
Today's real-time transactional data reveals highly lucrative rate spreads that savvy freight brokers can exploit to maximize margins. Most notably, dry van paid rates are averaging $2.15/mile against a $2.56/mile posted average, yielding a massive $0.41/mile broker advantage. This spread is driven by aggressive weekend carrier repositioning, as operators accept lower-paying loads to exit weather-impacted zones or position themselves near high-volume agricultural hubs for Monday morning.
A similar dynamic is visible in the specialized sector, where paid rates are averaging $2.53/mile against a $3.19/mile posted average, representing a substantial $0.66/mile broker advantage. By targeting these wide spreads, brokers can secure low-cost capacity on inbound lanes to major freight hubs, while charging shippers standard market rates. To capitalize on this opportunity, brokers should focus on booking Sunday and early Monday shipments, utilizing carriers that are highly motivated to reposition their equipment.
📅 June Transition: Agricultural Surges and End-of-Quarter Pressures
As the market transitions into June, freight brokers must prepare for a significant shift in capacity dynamics. The peak summer produce harvest is beginning to migrate northward, with Georgia and South Carolina blueberry and peach volumes expected to surge, while California's Central Valley harvest reaches maximum intensity. This seasonal transition will pull dry van and reefer capacity away from industrial lanes, driving up spot rates across the southern tier of the United States.
Simultaneously, the upcoming end of the second quarter (Q2) will trigger a massive retail and manufacturing push as shippers scramble to clear inventories and meet quarterly revenue targets. This seasonal surge traditionally leads to a sharp increase in tender rejection rates and spot market volumes. Brokers should advise their contract shippers to lock in capacity now, while preparing their sales teams to aggressively quote spot business as routing guides begin to fail under increased volume pressure.
🌐 Ocean Import Surges Accelerate Domestic Peak Season
The domestic freight market is poised for an early peak season, driven by a dramatic surge in ocean container rates. Spot rates for 40-foot equivalent containers moving from China to North America have nearly doubled since late February, fueled by ongoing geopolitical tensions and rising fuel costs. In response, major importers are abandoning just-in-time inventory strategies and pulling shipments forward to avoid late-summer port congestion and potential tariff increases.
This early influx of import volumes is already beginning to strain drayage and transloading infrastructure at major port cities. As these ocean containers are unloaded and transloaded into domestic dry vans and intermodal containers, brokers can expect a sharp increase in outbound port volumes. This surge will initially tighten capacity out of Southern California and East Coast port hubs, eventually cascading throughout the domestic truckload market and driving up spot rates earlier than historically expected.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Use Sunday and early Monday to buy inbound Southeast repositioning freight before the spread resets.
- Pad appointments on Gulf Coast and eastern Georgia freight; access delays and turn-time creep are the near-term problem.
- Re-price outbound Florida and Georgia reefer freight higher for Tuesday and Wednesday, especially on one-way lanes with weak backhaul.
- Challenge generic weather premiums with route-specific conversations, particularly on Florida-bound freight running the I-75 corridor.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
The national average of $2.86/mile is hiding a very segmented market.
- Dry van and specialized are showing temporary broker leverage.
- Reefer and heavy haul are still carrier-led.
- Flatbed looks buyable on paper, but not necessarily easy to execute once Monday industrial demand and weather friction hit.
Today’s real edge is timing, not just price.
- Dry van paid is $2.15/mile versus $2.56/mile posted, a $0.41/mile broker-favorable spread.
- Specialized paid is $2.53/mile versus $3.19/mile posted, a $0.66/mile broker-favorable spread.
- Those spreads look like a short-lived Sunday repositioning window, not a new loose market.
Reefer is the clearest warning sign for the next 72 hours.
- Paid reefer is $3.44/mile versus $3.21/mile posted, a $0.23/mile carrier premium.
- That is produce pressure, cooling-unit fuel burn, and reload competition all showing up at once.
- Florida, Georgia, and California remain the key gravity centers for reefer capacity.
Diesel at $5.475/gallon is still the market’s hard behavioral constraint.
- It is reducing deadhead tolerance.
- It is increasing resistance to vague appointments, dwell, and poor reload markets.
- It is making “cheap but far away” capacity much less real than it appears on a screen.
Weather is more of a productivity problem than a headline closure problem.
- Gulf Coast flooding and Indiana/Missouri river flooding are degrading access, turn times, and route efficiency.
- Eastern Georgia is tightening a routing alternative that many carriers were using to avoid western disruptions.
- That matters because Monday and Tuesday capacity is decided by truck productivity today.
📊 What the tape is really saying
Total available loads are 162,656, down 8.6% from 178,045 yesterday.
- Do not read that as broad loosening.
- Weekend volume naturally compresses, but the important signal is where the paid market is diverging from the posted market.
The board is heavily influenced by industrial and open-deck freight.
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized account for 121,874 of 162,656 available loads, about 74.9% of the board.
- That means the national average rate can mislead enclosed-trailer decisions.
- A broker quoting van or reefer off the headline average is using the wrong reference point.
Available loads are higher than one week ago, but the average rate is slightly lower.
- One week ago: 143,975 loads and $2.91/mile.
- Today: 162,656 loads and $2.86/mile.
- The read-through is not “market is soft.”
- It is “more freight is visible, but weekend and lane-specific repositioning are creating selective buy opportunities.”
Loads moved today are 18,491 at the current capture point.
- That tells you the market is active enough to trust the signal, but still early enough that timing advantage matters more than full-day averages.
🚚 Mode-by-mode broker playbook
🚛 Dry Van
❄️ Reefer
🪵 Flatbed
🏗️ Heavy Haul
⚙️ Specialized
📦 LTL/Partial
🌦️ Weather read-through: where execution will actually break
Gulf Coast flooding is a first-mile and last-mile problem first.
- Pearl River and nearby Gulf lanes are more likely to create:
- late arrivals
- yard congestion
- longer ingress/egress
- appointment misses caused by local access
- Treat ETAs (Estimated Time of Arrival) on I-10 and I-59 orbit freight as vulnerable to 2–4 hours of slippage.
Indiana and Missouri flooding matters most for open-deck and specialty freight.
- Heavy and industrial shipments are more exposed to:
- county-road detours
- bridge/path constraints
- permit timing changes
- A “safe” mainline route can still fail on local access.
Eastern Georgia is now part of the squeeze, not just a weather footnote.
- Carriers using eastern routing to avoid western disruptions now face:
- flash flooding risk
- slower appointment reliability
- tighter northbound scheduling
- This matters on Jacksonville, Savannah, and Augusta-related reload logic.
Wyoming winds are a selective but real risk.
- I-80 high-profile traffic can slow or park temporarily.
- Important mainly for:
- empty vans
- light flatbeds
- time-sensitive transcons
🗺️ Best regional and lane tactics for today
🌴 Southeast: where most of the money and risk sit
🚚 Atlanta, GA → Miami, FL
🚛 Jacksonville, FL → Nashville, TN
🧠 What shippers and carriers are thinking right now
Shipper psychology
- Many shippers will see:
- dry van posted at $2.56/mile
- specialized posted at $3.19/mile
- They may assume today is a cheap market.
- Your job is to explain that today’s posted-vs-paid gap is lane-specific and time-sensitive.
Best customer message
- “Today’s buy-side opportunity is real, but it is not durable. If this misses today’s window, tomorrow’s replacement cost may be materially higher.”
Carrier psychology
- Carriers are filtering for:
- deadhead
- fuel burn
- dwell
- receiver reliability
- reload quality
- In reefer and open-deck, they are also filtering for operational pain per day, not just rate per mile.
Best carrier message
- Be precise.
- appointment time
- commodity
- route
- access notes
- detention terms
- reload logic
- Precision gets capacity faster than broad promises in a tight, weather-distorted market.
💰 Highest-return moves for brokers in the next 24 hours
Exploit specialized while the spread is extreme
- $3.19 posted vs $2.53 paid is your cleanest same-day margin window.
- Use it on industrial backhauls, plant-support freight, and Monday pre-covers.
Buy inbound Southeast van freight before the window closes
- $2.56 posted vs $2.15 paid is valuable only if you control timing.
- Focus on loads feeding Florida, Georgia, and major reload hubs.
Reprice all reefer outbound Florida/Georgia for Tuesday-Wednesday
- $3.44 paid vs $3.21 posted tells you execution is already above screen value.
- The market is unlikely to get easier once more produce tenders stack in.
Pre-book Monday flatbed with full operational detail
- Flatbed looks negotiable now, but Monday productivity loss can erase any apparent savings.
- Secure capacity before the industrial week fully starts.
Convert flexible truckload shipments to LTL/partial
- $1.35 paid vs $1.66 posted gives you room to protect both service and margin on lower-urgency freight.
⚠️ Risk controls that protect margin this week
📈 Probability-weighted 72-hour outlook
50% — Monday spread reset
- Dry van and specialized broker leverage compresses sharply by first shift Monday.
- Reefer stays firm or firms further.
- Flatbed becomes harder to cover than today’s spread suggests.
35% — Sharper Southeast squeeze into Tuesday
- Produce tenders build faster.
- Eastern Georgia remains sticky.
- Gulf access delays continue.
- Biggest impact hits reefer, Southeast van, and open-deck freight with appointment sensitivity.
15% — Localized soft pockets linger into early Monday
- Mostly on inbound positioning freight and non-urgent industrial backhauls.
- If it happens, it will be lane-specific, not a broad market softening.
✅ Priority checklist for today’s desk
- 1. Reprice outbound reefer higher now, especially Florida and Georgia.
- 2. Buy inbound Southeast van and specialized loads before first-shift Monday.
- 3. Lock Monday flatbeds early and validate site conditions before award.
- 4. Push LTL/partial conversions on every flexible shipment.
- 5. Add written weather and access terms to all flood-exposed loads.
- 6. Challenge broad weather premiums with route-specific conversations, especially on I-75-oriented Florida freight.
- 7. Use known, compliant carriers first on heavy haul and high-consequence freight.
- 8. Train reps to sell “cost of failure,” not board screenshots.
🏁 Bottom line
- This is not a universally loose market.
- It is a selectively buyable market for van and specialized today, a still-tight market for reefer and heavy haul, and a deceptively firm market for flatbed once operational friction is priced correctly.
- The brokers who win today will be the ones who buy the Sunday window without mistaking it for Monday reality.
📅 This Day in History
455: Emperor Petronius Maximus is stoned to death by an angry mob while fleeing Rome.
1790: The United States enacts its first copyright statute, the Copyright Act of 1790.
1973: The United States Senate votes to cut off funding for the bombing of Khmer Rouge targets within Cambodia, hastening the end of the Cambodian Civil War.
💭 Quote of the Day
"What a book a devil's chaplain might write on the clumsy, wasteful, blundering, low, and horribly cruel work of nature!"
— Charles Darwin