π Daily Market Intelligence Report
Monday, June 08, 2026
11:31 AM CST
π Top-Line Summary
The domestic spot market is starting the week with a total of 141,885 available loads, representing a minor 4.1% contraction from yesterday's levels. Despite this slight volume dip, the national average spot rate remains firm at $2.88/mile, supported by elevated operating costs as the verified national diesel average holds at $5.318/gallon. Sourcing dynamics show a clear divergence between equipment classes: temperature-controlled reefers continue to command a $0.09/mile carrier premium ($3.25/mile paid vs. $3.16/mile posted) due to peak summer produce harvests, while dry van and flatbed capacity offer favorable broker margins with spreads of $0.44/mile and $0.25/mile respectively. Active flash flooding in the Midwest and river flooding in the South are disrupting key transit corridors, trapping open-deck capacity and forcing tactical routing adjustments around major interstate junctions.
Insight
Volume Dip Does Not Equal Easier Coverage
The early-week load pullback is masking a market that is still operationally tight. Elevated rejections, high diesel, and flood-related detours are making carriers more selective on length of haul and reload certainty, so the loosest pricing remains concentrated on dense regional lanes and clear backhauls rather than true long-haul freight.
β½ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
π¦οΈ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Flash Flood Warning (Missouri and Illinois (MO, IL, St. Louis and Madison counties)): Heavy thunderstorms producing 1-3 inches of rain are causing active flash flooding across the St. Louis metro area, impacting I-44, I-55, and I-255. Expect localized route closures, reduced travel speeds, and delays at regional distribution centers.
- Missouri River Flooding (Missouri and Kansas (MO, KS, Boone, Cooper, and Howard counties)): Minor flooding continues along the Missouri River, overtopping low-lying rural roads and secondary agricultural routes. This is disrupting local grain and agricultural transport, forcing detours for regional flatbed and bulk carriers.
- Trinity River Flooding (Texas (TX, Dallas County)): Minor flooding along the Trinity River in Dallas is impacting local low-lying areas and recreational paths. While major interstate corridors like I-45 and I-20 remain open, local delivery routes and industrial park access roads near the river basin may experience localized disruptions.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
St. Louis Delays Likely to Echo Into Tuesday Morning
The heaviest rain across the St. Louis metro should ease this afternoon, but another round of thunderstorms is expected late tonight, which raises the risk that missed pickups and loaded trailers roll into Tuesday. Expect the biggest disruption on short-haul and relay freight touching I-44, I-55, and I-255, where detention and appointment misses can linger after the water recedes.
- Favor morning-after recovery windows over late-day same-day tenders in the metro.
- Pad transit on freight crossing the Mississippi through the St. Louis gateway by several hours.
Weather Insight
Missouri River Flooding Keeps Agricultural Capacity Sticky
Minor river flooding in central Missouri is more important for capacity than severity suggests because it is disrupting secondary farm and grain routes rather than the mainline interstate grid. With hotter, drier weather Tuesday likely allowing catch-up loading before storms return midweek, flatbed and reefer equipment tied to corn and produce moves may stay committed locally for another 48 hours instead of re-entering general spot availability.
π° Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Diesel futures are showing moderate volatility as global supply concerns are balanced by rising domestic production of alternative fuels, including renewable natural gas (RNG), which is increasingly adopted by major private fleets.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small carriers and owner-operators continue to face severe margin pressure due to the high cost of diesel at $5.318/gallon. This is accelerating carrier exits and consolidation, making strict broker vetting and carrier relationship management critical.
- Economic Indicators: Import cargo volumes are rising sharply as retail importers move aggressively to pull shipments forward, aiming to get ahead of proposed tariff increases and rising fuel surcharges.
π° Impactful News Analysis
-
Importers Accelerate Cargo Volumes to Preempt Tariffs and Fuel Surcharges π:
Shippers are actively pulling import volumes forward to beat anticipated tariff increases and rising fuel costs. This pre-peak surge is driving early demand for dry van and intermodal capacity out of major port regions, particularly the West Coast and East Coast. Brokers should leverage this trend by securing multi-week capacity commitments from carriers on outbound port lanes, as spot rates are expected to face upward pressure through June.
-
Van Spot Rates Experience Modest Seasonal Pullback Following Holiday Peak π:
Recent transactional data indicates a modest pullback in dry van spot rates, matching historical seasonal expectations for the post-Memorial Day window. However, rates remain at historically elevated levels, up significantly year-over-year. This temporary softening provides a strategic window for brokers to lock in favorable rates on contract-style spot moves before the anticipated mid-summer volume surge in July.
-
Renewable Natural Gas Offers Price Stability Amid Diesel Volatility π:
As diesel prices remain high and volatile, major fleets (including UPS, FedEx, and Amazon) are expanding their use of Renewable Natural Gas (RNG). This transition highlights a growing divergence in carrier cost structures: fleets utilizing alternative fuels enjoy greater price stability, while diesel-dependent owner-operators face severe margin pressure. Brokers should note that carriers with alternative fuel capabilities may offer more stable pricing on long-term contract lanes.
News Insight
Tariff Pull-Forward Will Tighten Inland Southeast Vans Next
The import surge is unlikely to stay confined to port drayage. As Savannah and Charleston volumes spill inland, Atlanta and Charlotte should see more dry van capacity absorbed into short-turn port support and transload replenishment moves, which typically firms outbound truckload pricing later in the week even when headline national van volumes soften.
- Short-turn port turns may become more attractive to carriers than one-way inland loads under current fuel costs.
- Midweek quoting on Southeast outbound vans should assume less spot flexibility than Monday numbers imply.
πΊοΈ Regional & Lane Analysis
π Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast remains the most strategically vital region for freight brokers today, driven by the convergence of peak summer produce harvests and an early influx of import volumes at regional ports. Capacity is exceptionally tight for temperature-controlled equipment, while dry van and flatbed capacity show high volatility, creating excellent arbitrage opportunities. High fuel costs are keeping carriers localized, meaning outbound rates from the Southeast are commanding significant premiums, while inbound lanes offer highly negotiable backhaul rates.
π£οΈ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA β Miami, FL: This is a classic headhaul-to-backhaul lane that is currently experiencing heightened demand due to seasonal retail replenishment and regional produce distribution. Outbound Atlanta capacity is highly sought after, but carriers are hesitant to take loads into southern Florida without a guaranteed return shipment. This hesitation is amplified by high diesel costs, which make empty deadhead miles financially ruinous for small fleets.
Charlotte, NC β Birmingham, AL: This regional corridor is seeing consistent volume driven by industrial manufacturing and building materials. Flatbed demand is particularly strong along this route, while dry van capacity is balanced. The lane is highly sensitive to regional weather disruptions, as heavy rains in the Deep South can delay flatbed loading and unloading operations.
Regional Insight
AtlantaβMiami Works Best as a Paired-Coverage Play
The best margin on Atlanta to Miami is still created on the return, but timing matters: southbound trucks that deliver into South Florida usually show the most pricing flexibility after the first delivery cycle, not before. Brokers with northbound reloads available 24 to 36 hours after the inbound tender will have a stronger chance of capturing discounted repositioning capacity without sacrificing service on the headhaul.
- Quote the Atlanta outbound first, but sell the round-trip economics to the carrier.
- Northbound Florida freight is most negotiable on standard dry van; reefer remains less discountable because produce keeps a floor under rates.
π° Breaking Down: Importers Rush to Beat Tariffs and Rising Fuel Costs
The recent surge in import cargo volumes represents a strategic shift by major retailers and manufacturers to insulate their supply chains from impending regulatory and financial pressures. By pulling product shipments forward into June, importers are actively trying to bypass proposed tariff increases on key trading partners and mitigate the impact of rising fuel surcharges. This pre-peak influx is already having a tangible effect on domestic freight markets, particularly at major port gateways on the West and East Coasts.
For freight brokers, this early volume surge represents both an opportunity and a capacity risk. The sudden demand for drayage and outbound dry van capacity from port cities is absorbing regional truck supply, which will likely trigger localized rate spikes. Brokers must proactively communicate with their shipper clients, advising them to expect tighter capacity and potential rate firming on lanes originating near major ports. Additionally, securing carrier commitments early in the week will be critical to maintaining service levels as port-bound volumes continue to build.
π Reefer: Peak Produce Season Collides with Regional Capacity Squeezes
The temperature-controlled sector is currently the most volatile segment of the domestic freight market. With average paid reefer rates reaching $3.25/mile against a posted average of $3.16/mile, carriers are successfully commanding a $0.09/mile premium. This rate structure is a direct reflection of the peak summer produce season, which is currently drawing massive amounts of refrigerated equipment into the agricultural heartlands of California, Georgia, South Carolina, and Texas.
This agricultural pull is creating a severe capacity deficit for non-produce shippers who rely on temperature-controlled transport for pharmaceuticals, chemicals, and processed foods. Brokers operating in this space must prepare for intense rate competition. To secure reliable equipment, brokers should emphasize 'carrier-friendly' freightβsuch as pre-cooled loads, flexible delivery windows, and fast facility turnaround timesβto position themselves as preferred partners for tight reefer capacity.
π
Mid-June Produce Transitions and Summer Shipping Surges
As we progress through the second week of June, the domestic freight market is entering a critical seasonal transition. The Southeast produce harvest is reaching its zenith, with blueberries in Georgia and peaches in South Carolina moving at maximum volume. Simultaneously, the Texas watermelon harvest is in full swing, drawing significant flatbed and reefer capacity to the South Central region. These agricultural cycles are expected to maintain intense pressure on regional capacity for the next 14 to 21 days.
Brokers must also prepare for the upcoming end-of-quarter shipping surge as June draws to a close. Shippers will be pushing to clear inventories and meet quarterly revenue targets, leading to a projected volume spike across all equipment types. By securing carrier capacity now on key contract lanes, brokers can protect their margins from the anticipated spot market volatility that traditionally characterizes the final two weeks of June.
π Global Trade Pressures and Domestic Fuel Realities
The broader macroeconomic landscape is exerting significant pressure on domestic carrier operations. While the verified AAA national diesel average has stabilized slightly at $5.318/gallon, it remains an exceptionally high operating cost that dictates carrier behavior. Small fleets and owner-operators are highly sensitive to fuel burn, leading to a near-total rejection of long deadhead miles. This has effectively regionalized the spot market, as carriers prioritize short-haul, high-density corridors to minimize fuel consumption.
At the same time, global trade tensions and shifting tariff policies are altering traditional freight flows. The rush to import goods ahead of new duties is creating a temporary imbalance between port-bound freight and domestic manufacturing volumes. Brokers who monitor these macro trends can better anticipate where capacity will tighten next, allowing them to proactively adjust their pricing models and carrier sourcing strategies before market shifts occur.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Use national softness selectively; regional and reload-secure freight will price better than long-haul one-offs.
- Build extra transit and appointment cushion through the St. Louis gateway through Tuesday morning.
- Treat Southeast van capacity as firmer by midweek as port pull-forward freight absorbs short-turn trucks.
- On Atlanta-Miami, margins improve fastest when the return load is sourced before the southbound truck delivers.
π Executive Signal Summary
This is a softer screen, not an easier market: 141,885 total loads are down 4.1% from 147,970, but the national average spot rate is still $2.88/mile and diesel remains $5.318/gallon. That keeps a hard floor under executable capacity.
Dry van and specialized are the best margin-hunt modes today:
- Dry van: 21,571 loads, $2.65 posted / $2.21 paid, a $0.44/mile broker advantage
- Specialized: 16,990 loads, $3.23 posted / $2.49 paid, a $0.74/mile broker advantage
- Those are real opportunities, but only on clean freight with clear reload logic.
Reefer and heavy haul are not discount markets:
- Reefer: 6,080 loads, $3.16 posted / $3.25 paid, a $0.09/mile carrier premium
- Heavy haul: 28,562 loads, $3.72 posted / $3.87 paid, a $0.15/mile carrier premium
- In both cases, service protection matters more than rate-shopping.
Open-deck still controls the day: Flatbed + heavy haul + specialized = 104,893 loads, or about 73.9% of all available loads. That means weather-driven productivity loss in the Midwest and South will affect the whole market more than the van headline suggests.
St. Louis is the key execution choke point for the next 24 hours: flash flooding around I-44, I-55, and I-255 is less about statewide shutdowns and more about missed appointments, delayed turns, detention, and rescue freight.
The Southeast will likely tighten before the national board shows it: produce season plus tariff-driven import pull-forward should absorb short-turn van capacity around Savannah, Charleston, Atlanta, and Charlotte as the week progresses.
π What the market is really saying
Raw volume is down, but carrier selectivity is up.
- Carriers are not reacting to just load count.
- They are reacting to fuel burn, weather detours, dwell risk, and reload certainty.
- That is why a lower board count does not automatically translate into cheaper real coverage.
The best-priced freight today is βsimple freight,β not βany freight.β
- A broker can still buy well on:
- regional van
- specialized backhauls
- repositioning flatbed freight
- But the load needs:
- firm hours
- defined commodity
- realistic transit
- believable reload geography
OTRI (Outbound Tender Rejection Index) staying elevated matters more than the small daily volume dip.
- Contract freight is still leaking into spot.
- That means replacement cost can rise quickly if a carrier falls off or a shipper tenders late.
Diesel at $5.318/gallon continues to regionalize the market.
- Cheap trucks far away are often fake capacity.
- The nearest truck with a probable reload is usually the real truck.
π Mode-by-Mode Broker Playbook
Dry Van: best same-day buying window
- Market read: 21,571 loads, $2.65 posted / $2.21 paid
- Why it works today:
- The $0.44/mile spread gives brokers room.
- Import pull-forward is real, but inland tightening is likely to show up more clearly later in the week than on Monday morning.
- How to use it:
- Cover Monday and Tuesday freight now on dense lanes.
- Prioritize loads with short deadhead and fast turn potential.
- Keep quote validity short on anything touching the Southeast.
- Math that matters:
- On a 600-mile van load, a $0.44/mile spread equals about $264 of gross room before accessorial leakage.
- Big mistake to avoid:
- Using the van average to price rural, long-haul, weak-reload freight. That freight will not clear at the same discount.
Reefer: protect service first
- Market read: 6,080 loads, $3.16 posted / $3.25 paid
- Why it is tight:
- Produce is pulling reefers into California, Georgia, South Carolina, Texas, and other active harvest zones.
- When paid exceeds posted, it usually means the board is understating actual procurement cost.
- How to use it:
- Quote reefer with a premium-first mindset.
- Tender early and use trusted carrier benches.
- Sell carriers on pre-cooled freight, fast loading, and flexible appointment windows.
- Big mistake to avoid:
- Treating posted reefer numbers like a live executable market in peak produce season.
Flatbed: margin exists, but execution risk is high
- Market read: 59,341 loads, $3.59 posted / $3.34 paid
- Why it works selectively:
- A $0.25/mile spread is useful on repositioning lanes.
- But flooding in Missouri and surrounding corridors turns some βgoodβ rates into bad turns.
- How to use it:
- Buy on clean plant-to-plant freight.
- Reprice anything touching flood-affected corridors on turn time, not just loaded miles.
- Confirm tarping, loading equipment, and appointment discipline upfront.
- Big mistake to avoid:
- Assuming all flatbed freight is equally negotiable because the average spread looks healthy.
Heavy Haul: route first, quote second
- Market read: 28,562 loads, $3.72 posted / $3.87 paid
- Why it is firm:
- Flooding and detours complicate permitted routes and site access.
- On oversize freight, one routing problem can wipe out a margin fast.
- How to use it:
- Validate route feasibility before final pricing.
- Confirm permit assumptions and escort needs.
- Use carriers with proven heavy-haul discipline.
- Big mistake to avoid:
- Quoting off averages without route validation.
Specialized: highest margin pocket on the board
- Market read: 16,990 loads, $3.23 posted / $2.49 paid
- Why it works:
- The $0.74/mile spread is the biggest broker leverage in the report.
- Weather-affected repositioning is creating backhaul behavior.
- How to use it:
- Target outbound freight from or near impacted regions where trucks want to reposition.
- Audit dimensions, securement, loading method, and site access before award.
- Math that matters:
- On a 500-mile specialized move, $0.74/mile is about $370 of gross room.
- Big mistake to avoid:
- Winning the rate and losing the load through preventable accessorials or bad specs.
LTL (Less Than Truckload) / Partial: use as a margin-defense tool
- Market read: 9,341 loads, $1.70 posted / $1.38 paid
- Why it matters:
- The $0.32/mile spread gives brokers a tactical alternative where truckload pricing is hard to defend.
- How to use it:
- Convert flexible shipments that do not need dedicated truckload.
- Use partials near manufacturing hubs where truckload capacity is tight or inconsistent.
- Big mistake to avoid:
- Forgetting accessorial risk like appointments, liftgate, residential, or limited access.
π¦οΈ Weather-Adjusted Execution Priorities
St. Louis metro: treat today as a turn-loss market
- Flash flooding is hitting I-44, I-55, and I-255.
- The bigger issue is not pure closure risk; it is:
- late pickups
- missed delivery appointments
- detention spillover
- Tuesday rescue freight
- Broker move:
- Add transit cushion now.
- Do not overpromise same-day metro recoveries late in the day.
- Pre-negotiate detention and missed-appointment language.
Central Missouri agricultural areas: capacity will stay sticky
- Secondary roads matter more than interstate headlines in farm and grain freight.
- Reefer and flatbed equipment tied to produce and ag freight may stay local longer than expected.
- Broker move:
- Do not assume those trucks return to general spot availability tomorrow.
Dallas local exposure: localized disruption, not broad shutdown
- Major interstates remain largely usable, but local industrial access can get messy.
- Broker move:
- Ask carriers specifically about shipper and consignee access, not just highway route.
π§ Best Regional Plays for the Next 24β72 Hours
Southeast vans: buy before midweek tightens
- Import pull-forward at East Coast ports tends to absorb short-turn capacity first.
- Atlanta and Charlotte are likely to feel that before national averages fully reflect it.
- Broker move:
- Lock multi-load commitments now where possible.
- Keep Tuesday and Wednesday quotes tighter on Southeast outbound freight than Monday board softness implies.
Atlanta, GA β Miami, FL: only works if you sell the round trip
- South Florida still punishes brokers who procure one-way.
- Under current fuel costs, carriers want the northbound story before committing hard.
- Broker move:
- Quote southbound first, but negotiate using total round-trip economics.
- The best buy usually appears after the carrier sees the inbound delivery and believes the return is real.
Charlotte, NC β Birmingham, AL: stable but weather-sensitive
- This is still a usable regional corridor for van and flatbed.
- The risk is not market collapse; it is rain-driven loading and unloading inefficiency.
- Broker move:
- Favor facilities with strong turnaround history.
- Price flatbed with enough room for weather delay, especially if tarping is involved.
π§ Customer and Carrier Psychology You Can Exploit Today
Shippers will misread the headline volume dip
- Many customers see fewer loads and assume lower rates should follow automatically.
- Your response should be:
- βThe board is lighter, but the executable truck is still expensive because fuel, flood detours, and seasonal reefer pull are keeping carriers disciplined.β
- That frames the conversation around service reality, not just screen math.
Carriers are discounting for certainty, not because they are weak
- A truck may take less money today if you provide:
- exact pickup hours
- clean commodity details
- short deadhead
- credible reload path
- That same truck will often reprice tomorrow if uncertainty enters the load.
Small fleets remain highly fuel-sensitive
- At $5.318/gallon, deadhead, detention, and vague appointment windows feel punitive.
- Brokers who remove uncertainty are effectively paying less through better load design.
π¬ Negotiation Posture for Today
With shippers on van and specialized
- Message: buy the window, not the headline.
- Use language like:
- βToday still gives us leverage on clean freight, but I would not expect the same flexibility after the market digests port and weather effects.β
With shippers on reefer
- Message: pay for certainty.
- Use language like:
- βThe market is already paying above posted on reefer. The goal today is reliable execution, not theoretical savings.β
With carriers on open-deck freight
- Message: acknowledge productivity loss upfront.
- Use language like:
- βWe know this lane is a turn-time problem, not just a mileage problem. Tell us what you need for realistic execution.β
- That tends to produce better compliance and fewer day-of surprises.
With carriers going into Florida
- Message: sell the reload, not just the linehaul.
- The more concrete your northbound plan, the more negotiable the southbound rate becomes.
β οΈ Risks Most Likely to Destroy Margin
π Probability-Weighted 72-Hour Outlook
Base case β most likely
- Van stays buyable today, especially on dense lanes.
- Reefer remains premium.
- Flatbed stays negotiable on paper but choppy in execution.
- Southeast outbound pricing firms by midweek.
Stress case β worth preparing for
- St. Louis recovery is slower than expected.
- Tuesday morning sees a burst of rolled freight, missed appointments, and rescue coverage.
- Open-deck turns in Missouri-adjacent corridors slip another half-day to full day.
Opportunity case β less likely but real
- If weather clears faster than expected, some specialized and flatbed repositioning discounts last into tomorrow morning.
- That would be the window to buy aggressively on defined backhaul freight.
π Highest-Return Broker Actions for Today
Lock dry van freight on dense regional lanes now
- Focus on Monday and Tuesday pickups with strong reload geography.
- Be more aggressive around the Southeast before port spillover firms the market.
Exploit specialized spread, but only on fully defined freight
- This is the best gross-margin pocket on the board.
- Protect it with strict spec verification before award.
Protect all reefer quotes immediately
- Requote anything that was priced optimistically.
- Push shippers toward early tenders and realistic appointment windows.
Re-audit all Midwest and St. Louis-touching open-deck freight
- Add transit cushion.
- Confirm route feasibility and detention expectations in writing.
Use LTL/partial where truckload economics are hard to defend
- It is a smart customer-retention tool when dedicated truckload feels too expensive.
Prioritize pre-vetted carriers on urgent or weather-affected freight
- In disrupted markets, speed plus compliance beats cheap unknown capacity.
π Bottom Line
Todayβs opportunity is real, but it is selective.
Buy van and specialized where the freight is clean. Protect reefer. Treat open-deck as a productivity market, not just a rate market.
The brokers who win today will not be the ones who chase the lowest posted number. They will be the ones who correctly separate:
- cheap to book
- from
- cheap to execute
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
218: Battle of Antioch: With the support of the Syrian legions, Elagabalus defeats the forces of emperor Macrinus.
1940: World War II: The completion of Operation Alphabet, the evacuation of Allied forces from Narvik at the end of the Norwegian campaign.
1966: An F-104 Starfighter collides with XB-70 Valkyrie prototype no. 2, destroying both aircraft during a photo shoot near Edwards Air Force Base. Joseph A. Walker, a NASA test pilot, and Carl Cross, a United States Air Force test pilot, are both killed.
π Quote of the Day
"It is better to be looked over than overlooked."
β Mae West