๐ Daily Market Intelligence Report
Sunday, April 12, 2026
7:00 AM CST
๐ Top-Line Summary
The national spot freight market is experiencing a typical weekend volume contraction, with total available loads dropping 2.5% overnight to 151,931, though the market average rate remains robust at $2.58/mile. Capacity networks continue to fracture under the weight of a punishing $5.663/gallon national diesel average, forcing carriers to strictly prioritize high-yield freight and reject marginal loads. Flatbed continues to dominate the market with 67,451 loads at a strong $2.85/mile paid rate, while reefer capacity commands $2.84/mile as the spring produce season awakens in California. Brokers must prioritize aggressive fuel surcharge negotiations and secure capacity early, particularly for routes traversing heavily flooded transcontinental corridors in the Midwest.
Insight
Sunday softness is unlikely to survive the Monday open
The weekend volume dip is masking a tighter start to the week. Carriers are already pricing for slower turns and detours as flooding across the Midwest is reinforced by another storm cycle in Illinois, Indiana and Iowa from Tuesday into Wednesday, which should keep capacity tight on freight delivering into Chicago and surrounding inland markets.
โฝ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe River Flooding (Midwest (IA, IL, IN, KS, MI, MN)): Widespread minor to moderate flooding is inundating local roadways and threatening major transcontinental corridors including I-70, I-90, and I-94. This is expected to create difficult conditions for regional routing, forcing detours that will likely tighten local capacity and drive detour premiums.
- Lake Shore Flooding (Upstate New York (NY, Tompkins County)): High water levels on Cayuga Lake are causing minor flooding along the shoreline. While major interstates remain clear, local pickup and delivery operations near the lake shore may face delays or require specialized routing.
- River Flooding (East Texas (TX, Angelina and Nacogdoches Counties)): The Angelina River is overflowing, flooding local gravel roads and parking areas near Hwy 59. This poses a risk to local logging and flatbed operations, potentially delaying regional freight movements.
- River Flooding (Central Washington (WA, Chelan County)): The Stehekin River is overtopping local bridges and inundating roadways. This localized flooding could disrupt regional agricultural and timber freight routing, requiring carriers to utilize alternate paths.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Midwest flooding shifts from a closure risk to a transit-time risk
The bigger problem now is not just whether major corridors remain open, but how much secondary-road flooding and repeated rain will drag down appointment reliability through midweek. Even where I-70, I-90 and I-94 remain usable, local access, final-mile routing and driver hours will be less predictable across Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and parts of Iowa.
- Add 6-12 hours of cushion on Midwest deliveries, especially produce and open-deck loads.
- Expect stricter carrier screening on loads with fixed delivery appointments into Chicago, northern Indiana and western Michigan.
๐ฐ Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Global energy markets remain volatile, keeping diesel prices pinned near historic highs. This sustained pressure is rapidly eroding the cash reserves of smaller fleets, forcing them to rely heavily on spot market premiums to survive.
- Carrier Financial Health: The combination of $5.663/gallon diesel and rising insurance premiums is accelerating market consolidation. Smaller owner-operators are increasingly leasing onto larger mega-fleets or exiting the market entirely, structurally reducing independent spot capacity.
- Economic Indicators: Despite inflationary pressures from fuel costs, consumer spending on essential goods remains stable, supporting steady baseline dry van volumes while seasonal agricultural and construction cycles drive specialized equipment demand.
๐ฐ Impactful News Analysis
-
Produce Season Ignites: Tender Rejections Climb in California ๐:
With tender rejection rates in Fresno climbing and USDA spot rates jumping nearly 25%, the spring produce season is officially disrupting West Coast capacity. Brokers must immediately pivot sourcing strategies, as carriers will aggressively reject dry van freight to chase high-paying reefer loads. Expect severe outbound rate inflation from California over the next 14 days.
-
Regional Fuel Squeeze: Southeast Carriers Grapple with Soaring Diesel ๐:
Local transport companies in Georgia are being squeezed by $5.35+ diesel prices, forcing them to raise fares or absorb losses. For brokers, this highlights the critical need to proactively address fuel costs in rate negotiations. Carriers in the Southeast will demand higher linehaul rates or strict fuel surcharges; brokers who fail to quote shippers accurately will face severe margin erosion.
-
Warehouse Expansion in Chicago Signals Growing Midwest Consolidation ๐:
Wolter's acquisition of CSI Materials Handling in Chicago underscores the growing demand for warehouse capacity and 3PL services in the Midwest. As distribution footprints expand in the region, brokers should anticipate increased inbound freight volumes to Chicago. However, current Midwest flooding may temporarily complicate this growth, creating short-term routing challenges and rate volatility.
News Insight
The California produce pull will tighten more than reefer
The Central Valley surge is likely to bleed into adjacent van networks as tractors and drivers redeploy toward higher-yield produce freight. That puts Monday-Tuesday pressure on Southern California short-haul and Inland West lanes, particularly Los Angeles-to-Phoenix, where carriers will increasingly ask for return-load visibility before committing capacity.
๐ Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Real-time data shows a $0.27 spread between posted ($2.47) and paid ($2.20) van rates, indicating that while brokers are attempting to hold the line on pricing, carriers possess enough leverage to negotiate significant premiums at the point of booking.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is critically tight in Central California (produce surge) and the Midwest (flood detours). Conversely, capacity remains relatively loose in the Northeast, offering brokers favorable inbound pricing opportunities.
- Technology Disruptions: The industry is seeing a rapid acceleration in automated fuel surcharge calculators integrated directly into TMS platforms, allowing carriers to instantly reject loads that fail to meet dynamic profitability thresholds based on real-time local diesel prices.
๐ฅ Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retailers are prioritizing essential goods and seasonal spring inventory, maintaining steady dry van demand. However, high fuel costs are forcing shippers to consolidate LTL shipments into full truckloads where possible.
- Manufacturing: Industrial manufacturing remains robust, driving the massive 67,451 available flatbed loads. Demand for raw materials and heavy machinery is keeping open-deck capacity critically constrained.
- Agriculture: The agricultural sector is the primary disruptor this week. The onset of the California produce season is rapidly absorbing temperature-controlled equipment, creating a ripple effect that will tighten national reefer capacity through May.
- Automotive: Automotive freight remains stable, though specialized auto-hauler capacity is tightening as carriers reposition to support spring dealership inventory refreshes.
๐บ๏ธ Regional & Lane Analysis
๐ Primary Region Focus: West Coast (California)
The West Coast freight market is undergoing a rapid seasonal transformation as the spring produce harvest begins in the Central Valley. Tender rejections are spiking in markets like Fresno, signaling that carriers are abandoning contracted dry freight to chase lucrative spot market produce loads. This seasonal demand is colliding with severe operating costs, as carriers demand massive premiums to run temperature-controlled units amid $5.663/gallon national diesel averages. The result is a highly volatile, capacity-constrained environment where brokers can capture significant margins if they secure equipment early and price aggressively.
๐ฃ๏ธ Key Lane Watch
Fresno, CA โ Chicago, IL: This transcontinental produce lane is experiencing extreme rate pressure as the Central Valley harvest accelerates. Carriers are demanding premium rates to move temperature-controlled freight into the Midwest, further complicated by severe flooding across IL and IN that threatens delivery timelines.
Los Angeles, CA โ Phoenix, AZ: This high-volume short-haul lane remains highly active, but capacity is tightening as Southern California carriers reposition north toward the Central Valley to capture produce freight. Dry van rates are firming as a result of this equipment drain.
Regional Insight
Fresno-Chicago now carries a delivery-side weather premium
On Fresno-to-Chicago reefer freight, harvest pressure is only part of the rate move. Carriers are layering in a delivery-side premium because additional storms are likely to hit Illinois and Indiana before much of this week's produce arrives, making strict appointment freight materially harder to cover than loads with flexible windows.
๐จ Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Outbound California (Fresno/Central Valley) - Reefer
- Outbound Midwest (IL/IN) - Flatbed and Van due to flood detours
- Pacific Northwest - Heavy Haul
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Temperature-controlled equipment is critically short in California. Flatbed capacity remains universally tight, particularly in the Midwest where flooding is delaying equipment turnaround times.
Opportunity Zones:
- Inbound to California (Carriers desperate to position for produce)
- Northeast outbound (Loose capacity environment)
- Southwest backhauls to Los Angeles
๐ฏ Strategic Recommendations for Today
๐ผ For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Inform customers that the California produce season has officially started, driving up tender rejections and absorbing national reefer capacity. Combined with $5.663/gallon diesel and Midwest flooding, routing guides are at high risk of failure.
Action: Proactively request additional lead time for all temperature-controlled shipments and push for temporary rate increases or dynamic fuel surcharges to ensure load coverage.
๐ For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Aggressively source reefer carriers in the West Coast and flatbed operators in the Midwest. Build relationships with carriers willing to navigate flood-affected zones for a premium.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the promise of high-paying outbound produce freight to negotiate cheaper inbound rates into California. For Midwest loads, offer transparent detour routing assistance to win carrier trust.
Strategic Insight
Separate fuel and disruption pricing before the market reprices for you
Quote California reefer and Midwest-delivery freight with linehaul, fuel and route-disruption components broken out now. That structure makes midweek repricing easier if diesel or weather worsens, and it gives carriers a clearer path to accept loads without reopening the full all-in rate.
- Trade cheaper inbound-to-California freight for committed outbound produce coverage.
- Favor loads with broader appointment windows; they will cover faster than pure rate-shopped freight this week.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Book California reefer 24-48 hours earlier than normal; Monday morning pricing is likely to step higher.
- Pad Midwest delivery schedules through Wednesday, especially into Chicago, northern Indiana and western Michigan.
- Bundle Southwest backhauls with California positioning freight to secure capacity without paying the top of the spot market.
๐ Executive Signal Summary
This is a weekend pause, not a real loosening. Total available spot loads are 151,931, down from 155,883 (-2.5%), but the national average rate is still $2.58/mile with diesel at $5.663/gallon. That combination says the market is still expensive to operate in, and usable capacity is tighter than the Sunday board alone suggests.
The market is splitting into two games.
- Game 1: ordinary freight can often be bought below posted asks.
- Game 2: weather-exposed, appointment-sensitive, and produce-linked freight will reprice fast and punish hesitation.
California reefer is the clearest near-term tightening signal. Reefer has 6,524 loads, down 8.0% day over day, and the average paid rate is $2.84/mile versus a $2.83/mile posted rate. When paid moves above posted, even by a penny, it usually means the executable market is already tighter than the screen looks.
Open-deck still owns the opportunity set. Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized combine for 118,386 loads, or about 77.9% of total available freight. If your desk is not leaning into industrial, project, machinery, building products, steel, and odd-dimension freight today, you are underfishing the best pond.
Midwest flooding is now more of a reliability problem than a simple closure problem. The real risk is not just whether I-70, I-90, and I-94 stay open. It is whether local access, final-mile routing, and driver Hours of Service (HOS) hold together across Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, and Minnesota.
Todayโs winning posture:
- Buy disciplined on standard freight
- Pay early on California reefer and Midwest delivery risk
- Separate linehaul, fuel, and disruption charges in every volatile quote
- Protect service more aggressively than margin on must-cover customer freight
๐ What the data is really saying
๐งฎ Posted vs. paid: where the board is lying to you
Dry van: $2.47 posted vs. $2.20 paid
- Gap: -$0.27/mile
- Meaning: nationally, many van loads are still being posted above real clearing levels.
- Broker takeaway: do not chase the board on ordinary van freight. Negotiate.
Reefer: $2.83 posted vs. $2.84 paid
- Gap: +$0.01/mile
- Meaning: reefer is the only mode where execution is at or above asking.
- Broker takeaway: this is real scarcity, not just seller optimism.
Flatbed: $3.17 posted vs. $2.85 paid
- Gap: -$0.32/mile
- Meaning: the market is strong, but not every flatbed load deserves the premium ask.
- Broker takeaway: pay up for difficult open-deck freight, not for every tarp-and-go shipment.
Heavy haul: $3.18 posted vs. $3.15 paid
- Gap: -$0.03/mile
- Meaning: heavy haul is pricing efficiently.
- Broker takeaway: quote from specs and route reality, not from board games.
Specialized: $2.92 posted vs. $2.28 paid
- Gap: -$0.64/mile
- Meaning: this is the biggest distortion on the board.
- Broker takeaway: a lot of โspecializedโ freight is probably misclassified, poorly specโd, or being wish-priced by sellers.
LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload / Partial Truckload): $1.79 posted vs. $1.34 paid
- Gap: -$0.45/mile
- Meaning: there is room to create margin if you can consolidate intelligently.
- Broker takeaway: use it selectively as a customer-saving tool and a backfill tool.
๐ Mode-by-mode playbook for today
๐ Dry Van
Market read:
- 19,330 loads
- $2.47 posted
- $2.20 paid
What matters:
- Van is not broadly tight nationally.
- But it will tighten quickly on lanes touching Midwest flood zones and on lanes where drivers see poor reload visibility.
Best moves:
- Buy under ask on standard freight with clean pickup, flexible delivery, and dense reload markets.
- Reprice immediately on loads delivering into Chicago, northern Indiana, and western Michigan.
- Ask carriers about their next load, not just this load. With diesel at $5.663, carriers are pricing the round trip, not the first leg.
Watch-out:
- California produce can pull tractors and drivers away from nearby van freight, especially Southern California short-haul and Inland West lanes.
๐ง Reefer
Market read:
- 6,524 loads
- $2.83 posted
- $2.84 paid
What matters:
- This is the tightest signal on the board.
- Falling visible load count plus paid above posted tells you trucks are being committed early and sellers are no longer overreaching much.
Best moves:
- Book California reefer 24โ48 hours earlier than normal.
- Trade cheap inbound-to-California freight for committed outbound produce coverage.
- Push customers for wider appointment windows and earlier tenders.
- Quote fuel separately and build in a disruption component on Midwest-delivery reefer.
Watch-out:
- A reefer load into the Midwest now has two premiums:
- Origin premium from produce pull
- Delivery premium from flood-related appointment risk
๐ง Flatbed
Market read:
- 67,451 loads
- $3.17 posted
- $2.85 paid
What matters:
- Flatbed still has the biggest pool of opportunity.
- But the -$0.32/mile spread says a lot of postings are ambitious.
Best moves:
- Prioritize Monday industrial and construction freight today, especially anything with crane scheduling, jobsite delivery, or scarce trailer type.
- Differentiate easy flatbed from difficult flatbed:
- easy: legal dimensions, no tarp, flexible appointment
- difficult: tarp, multi-stop, difficult site access, weather-sensitive securement
- Win carriers with operational clarity:
- exact dimensions
- tarp requirement
- site access notes
- unload method
- detention terms
Watch-out:
- Flooding hurts flatbed harder than van when yard access, site mud, and detour mileage stack up.
๐๏ธ Heavy Haul
Market read:
- 35,197 loads
- $3.18 posted
- $3.15 paid
What matters:
- This remains a planning market, not a panic market.
- Small spread means the market is pricing close to reality.
Best moves:
- Do not quote before full validation:
- dimensions
- weight
- axle count
- permit path
- escort requirements
- loading method
- Pre-route around Midwest flood friction before offering transit promises.
- Reserve the right to reprice for permit or detour changes.
Watch-out:
- Heavy haul margins are usually lost through bad assumptions, not bad linehaul.
๐ช Specialized
Market read:
- 15,738 loads
- $2.92 posted
- $2.28 paid
What matters:
- The -$0.64/mile spread is the cleanest broker edge on the board.
- This is where sharp brokers beat lazy brokers.
Best moves:
- Challenge every trailer assumption.
- Ask what makes it specialized:
- dimensions?
- handling?
- permit?
- securement?
- destination constraints?
- Reclassify where possible and buy cheaper than competitors who accept the post at face value.
Watch-out:
- This freight often hides deadhead, access, unload, or handling risk. Verify before you get โcheap.โ
๐ฆ LTL / Partial
Market read:
- 7,691 loads
- $1.79 posted
- $1.34 paid
What matters:
- This is a relationship-defense tool in a high-fuel market.
- It is also a margin tool if you can match density with repositioning needs.
Best moves:
- Use partials to help customers avoid full truckload sticker shock.
- Pair Midwest deadhead exits with Northeast or Southwest consolidation.
- Offer a premium truckload vs. flexible partial choice, not just one disputed number.
Watch-out:
- Do not oversell transit precision. In a flood-affected week, partial only works when the customer accepts schedule flexibility.
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather impact: where execution will break first
Primary issue: Midwest river flooding and repeat rain are creating a transit-time and appointment-reliability problem, not just a closure headline.
Affected states and corridors:
- Illinois
- Indiana
- Iowa
- Michigan
- Minnesota
- Key corridors include I-70, I-90, and I-94
Operational meaning:
- Interstate open does not mean shipment safe
- Final-mile access can fail even when linehaul routing is technically available
- Drivers will protect Hours of Service (HOS) more aggressively when detours threaten appointment risk
Best broker response:
- Add 6โ12 hours of cushion on Midwest deliveries through midweek
- Call the facility, not just the carrier
- Verify truck route access, dock access, and yard conditions
- Protect detention, layover, and weather-detour language before dispatch
Where the highest failure cost sits:
- Chicago deliveries
- Northern Indiana
- Western Michigan
- Produce freight with hard appointments
- Open-deck loads with site-specific access limits
๐บ๏ธ Best lane and regional positioning for the next 24โ72 hours
๐พ California outbound
What is happening:
- Produce is tightening reefer first, then it will bleed into nearby van networks.
- Carriers are increasingly evaluating return-load visibility before committing.
Best broker play:
- Use inbound California freight as a bargaining chip
- Bundle Southwest backhauls with California positioning freight
- Secure outbound commitments now, before Monday reprices
Highest-risk lane:
- Fresno, CA โ Chicago, IL
- This lane carries both produce premium and delivery-side weather premium
๐๏ธ Chicago and surrounding Midwest
What is happening:
- The Midwest is likely to open tighter than Sunday makes it look because delayed freight, weather friction, and appointment risk stack on Monday and Tuesday.
Best broker play:
- Cover Monday deliveries today
- Favor broader delivery windows
- Build backup coverage on hard appointments
๐ Northeast outbound
What is happening:
- Capacity is relatively looser than the Midwest and California.
Best broker play:
- Buy aggressively on clean outbound freight
- Use Northeast carriers to build reload loops into stronger markets
- Sell the reload plan, not just the first leg
๐ต Southwest into Southern California
What is happening:
- Carriers want to get closer to California produce opportunities.
Best broker play:
- Source cheaper positioning freight
- Attach outbound California commitments
- Use this to avoid paying top-of-market on the eventual produce move
๐ผ Customer strategy: what to say today
Best message to shippers:
- โThe market is still coverable, but service reliability now depends on fuel realism, routing flexibility, and earlier tendering.โ
What customers need to hear clearly:
- California reefer is tightening now
- Midwest appointment risk is more expensive than linehaul alone
- The cheapest quote is the least reliable quote on weather-hit freight
How to structure your quote:
- Linehaul
- Fuel
- Route-disruption / detour
- Detention / layover assumptions
Why that works psychologically:
- Customers resist an unexplained big all-in number.
- They accept cost more easily when they can see which piece is controllable and which piece is market-driven.
Best ask from customers today:
- More lead time
- Wider appointment windows
- Permission to use alternate routing
- Temporary fuel or market-based surcharge flexibility
๐ค Carrier procurement strategy: how to win trucks without overpaying
Buy positioned capacity, not theoretical capacity:
- A truck 20 miles away is worth more than a truck 120 miles away in a $5.663 diesel market.
Ask sharper sourcing questions:
- Where is the truck now?
- What was the last delivery?
- What route will the driver actually run?
- Do HOS (Hours of Service) support the transit promise?
- What is the reload plan after delivery?
Use roundtrip logic:
- Carriers are not deciding lane by lane right now.
- They are deciding week by week, based on fuel burn, deadhead, and dwell.
Best bargaining chip in California:
- Promise of an outbound produce load in exchange for a more attractive inbound rate.
Best bargaining chip in the Midwest:
- Operational transparency
- Carriers will often accept a fair but not extreme rate if you give them:
- detour visibility
- appointment realism
- facility access notes
- clean detention terms
๐ก๏ธ Biggest risks to margin this week
Risk 1: treating posted rates as real rates
- Nationally, that will cause overbuying in van, flatbed, specialized, and partial.
Risk 2: underpricing reefer
- Reefer is the exception. The screen is already behind the executable market.
Risk 3: quoting Midwest freight as if road-open equals problem-solved
- Most service failure will come from local access, hours burn, dock congestion, and missed appointments.
Risk 4: sloppy specialized quoting
- The huge spread means a lot of freight is being priced on bad assumptions.
- Verify specs before quoting.
Risk 5: accessorial leakage
- In this market, bad detention, layover, and detour management can erase a weekโs margin faster than a weak linehaul.
Risk 6: truck substitution and identity drift
- On volatile freight, same-day changes in dispatcher, driver, email, or banking should trigger verification.
- Compliance discipline matters more when the market gets chaotic.
๐ฎ Probability-weighted outlook for the next 24โ72 hours
Base case โ 60%
- Monday opens firmer
- California reefer steps higher
- Midwest delivery-side premiums hold through midweek
- Best posture: cover early, shorten quote validity, separate fuel and disruption pricing
Stress case โ 25%
- Flooding and repeat storms create a second wave of missed appointments into Illinois, Indiana, and Michigan
- More contract freight spills into spot
- Best posture: protect core accounts first, build backup trucks, widen delivery promises
Relief case โ 15%
- Some Sunday repositioning softens select van and flatbed lanes Monday morning
- Best posture: buy standard freight hard where routing is clean, but do not pre-discount reefer or Chicago-area freight
โ
Priority actions for today
Cover California reefer early
- Book 24โ48 hours earlier than normal
- Trade inbound positioning for outbound commitments
Reprice Midwest deliveries now
- Especially Chicago, northern Indiana, and western Michigan
- Add 6โ12 hours of schedule cushion
Separate quote components
- Linehaul
- Fuel
- Detour/disruption
- Detention/layover assumptions
Lean harder into open-deck
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized represent 118,386 loads
- That is where the richest daily opportunity still sits
Attack specialized with better questions
- The -$0.64/mile spread is a broker edge if specs are verified correctly
Do not blindly chase van board prices
- Van paid is $2.20 against $2.47 posted
- Negotiate ordinary freight; reserve premiums for real execution risk
Offer flexible alternatives to customers
- Premium truckload
- Flexible truckload
- LTL/Partial where transit tolerance allows
Verify facility access before dispatch
- Dock, yard, truck route, unload method, and hours matter more than interstate status alone
Build backup coverage on hard appointments
- Especially produce, flatbed jobsite deliveries, and Midwest inbound freight
Track margin leakage by accessorial type tonight
- Detention
- Layover
- Route deviation
- Missed appointment cost
- That will tell you whether your desk is pricing volatility correctly
๐ง Bottom line
This is not a broad panic market. It is a selective execution market.
The brokers who win the next 24โ72 hours will be the ones who:
- Stay disciplined on ordinary freight
- Move early on California reefer
- Treat Midwest weather as a delivery-reliability problem, not a simple routing problem
- Exploit the big posted-to-paid gaps in flatbed and specialized
- Sell transparency to customers and operational certainty to carriers
The screen says Sunday softness. The real market says Monday selectivity, reefer scarcity, and weather-priced service risk.
๐
This Day in History
627: King Edwin of Northumbria is converted to Christianity by Paulinus, Bishop of York.
1910: SMS Zrรญnyi, one of the last pre-dreadnought battleships built by the Austro-Hungarian Navy, is launched.
1927: Shanghai massacre of 1927: Chiang Kai-shek orders the Chinese Communist Party members executed in Shanghai, ending the First United Front.[citation needed]
๐ญ Quote of the Day
"Only the educated are free."
โ Epictetus