Expedited Transport Agency Logo

πŸ“Š Daily Market Intelligence Report

Monday, May 04, 2026

7:00 AM CST


πŸ“Š Top-Line Summary

Monday morning spot market volumes are rebounding sharply with a 9.8% surge to 138,898 available loads, driving the market average rate up to $2.76/mile. Capacity is tightening significantly across specialized and temperature-controlled sectors, with reefer carriers commanding a 16-cent premium over posted rates amid a 16.6% volume spike. Record-high diesel prices, now averaging $5.641/gallon nationally, continue to squeeze carrier margins and establish rigid rate floors, particularly in the Midwest where severe flooding continues to fracture transcontinental routing and trap open-deck capacity.

Insight

Monday is the cleanest booking window before weather resets the Midwest

The current volume rebound is landing ahead of another wet push into Illinois, Indiana, and Missouri on Tuesday, which should keep flood-affected routing impaired rather than allow a quick normalization. That makes Monday's daylight hours the best chance to secure Midwest coverage before carriers reprice for detours, slower turns, and tighter reload options.

Daily market overview

β›½ Diesel Price Analysis

Price Trend Over Time

Diesel Price Trend Chart

Diesel Historical Price Comparison

Diesel Historical Price Comparison Chart

🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence

U.S. freight weather impact map

Current Major Weather Events:

Weather Affected Corridors:

I-90
Interstate90
Severe
States
Hazards
Flood Warning, Freeze Watch
Alert Count
2
I-55
Interstate55
Severe
States
Hazards
Flood Warning
Alert Count
1
I-64
Interstate64
Severe
States
Hazards
Flood Warning
Alert Count
1
Weather Insight

Flood disruption likely extends through midweek, not just today

Conditions in the flooded lower Ohio Valley are relatively manageable today, but forecast rain Tuesday across Illinois and Indiana and heavier rain in Missouri will slow water recession and keep corridor reliability weak through at least Wednesday. The biggest freight consequence is not road closure volume alone, but longer cycle times as carriers pad transit and avoid uncertain handoffs near the I-55 and I-64 corridors.

πŸ’° Financial Market Indicators

πŸ“° Impactful News Analysis

  1. Global Air Cargo Rates Surge 30%, Signaling Potential Shift to Expedited Ground πŸ”—:
    With air freight rates spiking 30% due to regional capacity constraints and fuel costs, brokers should anticipate increased demand for expedited team transit and LTL services as shippers seek cost-effective alternatives for urgent freight. This presents a high-margin opportunity for brokers who can reliably source team capacity.
  2. Surging Diesel and Fertilizer Prices Squeeze Agricultural Shippers πŸ”—:
    Record-high diesel and input costs are severely impacting farmers, which may lead to delayed or altered planting seasons. Brokers should prepare for volatile produce volumes and ensure fuel surcharges are accurately calculated to secure reefer capacity, as carriers will be highly sensitive to operating costs in rural agricultural zones.
  3. Record High Diesel Prices Hit the Midwest πŸ”—:
    With diesel hitting record highs in key freight hubs like Michigan, brokers must anticipate immediate carrier pushback on linehaul rates in the Midwest. Securing capacity will require transparent fuel surcharge negotiations, minimizing deadhead miles, and pricing loads to accurately reflect the localized fuel burden.
News Insight

Air cargo inflation favors near-air truckload lanes first

The immediate spillover from higher air cargo rates is most likely on next-day ground lanes in the roughly 500-900 mile range, where teams and premium solo service can replace air without a full mode change inside the shipper's network. Expect the first pressure in expedited van and high-service LTL rather than across the broader truckload market.

πŸ—ΊοΈ Regional & Lane Analysis

πŸ“ Primary Region Focus: Midwest

The Midwest is currently the most volatile and strategically critical region for freight brokers today. A combination of severe, widespread river flooding across Illinois, Indiana, and Missouri is fracturing major transcontinental corridors (I-64, I-90, I-55), creating massive routing inefficiencies and trapping capacity. Simultaneously, record-high regional diesel prices are forcing carriers to shrink their operating radiuses. This dynamic is driving immense premiums in the open-deck and heavy haul sectors, while reefer capacity tightens as carriers balance regional demands.

πŸ›£οΈ Key Lane Watch

Chicago, IL β†’ St. Louis, MO: This critical I-55 corridor is currently facing severe disruption due to ongoing flood warnings in both Illinois and Missouri. Capacity is extremely tight as carriers avoid the route or demand high premiums for potential detours, while heavy haul and flatbed demand remains robust. The combination of infrastructure disruption and high fuel costs is making this a highly volatile lane.

Route map for Chicago, IL β†’ St. Louis, MO

Indianapolis, IN β†’ Columbus, OH: This lane serves as a critical bypass for freight avoiding the flooded I-64 corridor to the south. Volume is surging as routing shifts northward, absorbing available capacity and driving up spot rates across all equipment types. The influx of out-of-route freight is creating localized capacity imbalances.

Route map for Indianapolis, IN β†’ Columbus, OH
Regional Insight

Chicago-St. Louis risk shifts from pure linehaul to service failure

On Chicago-St. Louis, the sharper risk is now missed appointment exposure rather than simply a higher spot rate. With Missouri set for heavy rain Tuesday and flood warnings still active along the corridor, carriers will increasingly protect themselves with wider delivery windows, making same-day tender acceptance and realistic appointment flexibility more valuable than chasing the last few cents on linehaul.

Regional Insight

Indianapolis-Columbus is becoming a density play for van and partial

The bypass effect is making Indianapolis-Columbus more useful as a short-haul balancing lane than a pure margin lane. As diverted Midwest freight pushes north and east, brokers who can stack multi-stop van or partial freight on this corridor should see better trailer utilization and faster coverage than on longer eastbound alternatives that now carry more weather uncertainty.

πŸ“ˆ Rate Velocity Brief: Specialized Premiums and Van Spreads

Today's real-time load board data reveals a massive divergence in rate velocity across equipment types. The specialized and heavy haul sectors are experiencing explosive upward rate pressure, with specialized paid rates commanding a staggering $0.33/mile premium over posted rates ($3.24 vs $2.91) and heavy haul securing a $0.21/mile premium. This indicates severe, immediate capacity scarcity for niche equipment. Conversely, the dry van sector continues to offer a protective buffer for broker margins, maintaining a $0.06/mile negative spread ($2.33 paid vs $2.39 posted) despite a 7.7% increase in available loads. This stark contrast suggests that while general freight carriers are prioritizing utilization over rate, specialized operators hold absolute pricing power.

🌐 Macro Freight Pulse: Fuel Costs and Agricultural Squeeze

The intersection of surging operational costs and seasonal agricultural demands is creating a volatile macro environment. With national diesel prices hitting $5.641/gallonβ€”and localized record highs reported in the Midwestβ€”carrier operating margins are under severe stress. This fuel inflation is simultaneously squeezing the agricultural sector, where steep fertilizer and diesel costs are threatening planting seasons. Despite these upstream pressures, downstream reefer demand is surging, evidenced by today's 16.6% spike in temperature-controlled load volumes and a firm $0.16/mile carrier premium. This data points to a market where shippers are forced to pay elevated spot rates to move critical agricultural and temperature-sensitive freight, regardless of the underlying macro headwinds.

πŸ—οΈ Infrastructure Capacity: Midwest Flooding Fractures Routing

Severe and persistent river flooding across the Midwest is creating significant non-driver capacity constraints, directly impacting the open-deck market. With active National Weather Service flood warnings (WXB2D094BB, WXCB7AF0D1) impacting critical transcontinental corridors like I-55, I-64, and I-90 across Illinois, Indiana, and Missouri, routing has become severely fractured. This infrastructure disruption aligns perfectly with today's 13.0% surge in flatbed volumes (58,000 available loads) and the sustained $0.09/mile premium carriers are extracting. The flooded corridors are effectively trapping specialized capacity, extending transit times, and forcing carriers to demand higher rates to compensate for detours and reduced equipment velocity.

Strategic Takeaways

High-Signal Additions

🧭 Savvy Broker's Playbook

πŸ”‘ Executive Signal Summary


🧠 What the market is really saying


πŸ’Έ Best money-making deployments for the next 24 hours

1) Pre-book Midwest dry van before lunch

2) Use LTL/Partial to defend accounts before they shop the market

3) Treat reefer as a truck-first market, not a quote-first market

4) Sell service premiums on open-deck, not just rate premiums

5) Build an expedited ground watchlist on 500–900 mile lanes


🚚 Mode-by-mode playbook

🚐 Dry Van

🧊 Reefer

🟧 Flatbed

πŸ—οΈ Heavy Haul

πŸŸͺ Specialized

πŸ“¦ LTL/Partial


🌧️ Regional & lane strategy that matters now

🌊 Midwest: book before the weather reprices reality

πŸ›£οΈ Chicago, IL β†’ St. Louis, MO

πŸ”„ Indianapolis, IN β†’ Columbus, OH

🌾 South Texas agricultural risk


πŸ—£οΈ Negotiation tactics that fit this market

🀝 With carriers

🧾 With shippers

🧠 With your own team


πŸ›‘οΈ Risk controls to tighten before dispatch


πŸ“ˆ Probability-weighted 24–72 hour outlook


βœ… Desk priority stack for maximum daily performance

  1. Book Midwest-sensitive dry van freight before the market fully reprices
  2. Move any convertible reefer freight to van immediately
  3. Use partial and consolidation to defend small and mid-size accounts
  4. Treat Chicago β†’ St. Louis as a service-risk lane, not a cheap short-haul
  5. Quote flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized with detour and time-risk built in
  6. Shorten quote validity on all weather-sensitive freight
  7. Re-screen every new or abnormally cheap carrier before dispatch
  8. Watch these desk metrics all day
    • Time to cover
    • Carrier fallout rate
    • On-time pickup performance
    • Accessorial recovery rate
    • Quote-to-book ratio by mode

🧾 Bottom line

πŸ“… This Day in History

1942: World War II: The Battle of the Coral Sea begins with an attack by aircraft from the United States aircraft carrier USS Yorktown on Japanese naval forces at Tulagi Island in the Solomon Islands. The Japanese forces had invaded Tulagi the day before.
1949: The entire Torino football team (except for two players who did not take the trip: Sauro TomΓ , due to an injury and Renato Gandolfi, because of coach request) is killed in a plane crash.
1970: Vietnam War: Kent State shootings: The Ohio National Guard, sent to Kent State University after disturbances in the city of Kent the weekend before, opens fire killing four unarmed students and wounding nine others. The students were protesting the Cambodian Campaign of the United States and South Vietnam.

πŸ’­ Quote of the Day

"One loses many laughs by not laughing at oneself."

β€” Mary Engelbreit