📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Tuesday, June 30, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
On Tuesday, June 30, 2026, the domestic spot market experienced a powerful pre-holiday volume surge, with total available loads climbing 8.5% overnight to 151,680. This sudden influx of freight signals an intense pre-holiday rush as shippers scramble to clear docks and position inventory ahead of the July 4th weekend. The national average spot rate has climbed to $3.07/mile, supported by a verified national diesel average of $4.853/gallon, which continues to act as a firm cost floor for carriers. Capacity is tightening rapidly across all major equipment types, particularly in the Midwest and South where severe river flooding is disrupting key corridors like I-64, I-74, and I-10. This combination of holiday demand, peak agricultural harvests, and weather-induced routing bottlenecks creates high-margin arbitrage opportunities for proactive brokers who can secure reliable capacity.
Insight
The tightest pricing window is likely the next 24 hours
The overnight surge points to a compressed booking cycle rather than a multi-day volume spike. Most discretionary truckload freight should price hardest from this afternoon through midday Wednesday, then shift from volume pressure to driver-availability pressure as holiday facility closures begin to limit reload options.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Midwest River Flooding (Illinois and Indiana (IL, IN, Peoria/Gibson counties)): Minor flooding on the Illinois River and Wabash River may disrupt local routes and delay open-deck/flatbed shipments along the I-74 and I-64 corridors.
- Gulf Coast & Southern Flooding (Louisiana and Mississippi (LA, MS, Pearl River county)): Minor flooding on the Pearl River could inundate secondary roads and delay shipments along the I-10 and I-59 corridors.
- Extreme Heat Wave (Midwest and Northeast (IL, IN, NY, NJ)): Dangerously hot conditions with heat index values up to 105 degrees may increase risk of equipment breakdowns (reefer failures, tire blowouts) and slow down loading/unloading operations.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Midwest flooding risk will outlast the weather
Illinois and Indiana turn mostly hot and dry through midweek, but that does not quickly normalize river-adjacent freight. The operational risk is lingering high water on secondary roads, access points, and per mit-approved routes near the Wabash and Illinois River corridors, so flatbed and heavy-haul moves should still be quoted with detour miles and wider delivery windows through at least Wednesday.
Weather Insight
Late-day storm window along the Pearl River corridor
The Gulf Coast disruption looks more time-specific than all-day. Conditions are relatively quiet this morning, but the Pearl River area is favored for storms and rain from mid-afternoon into early evening, which can slow local pickups and short-haul turns feeding I-10 and I-59.
- Front-load pickups before mid-afternoon where possible.
- Expect the best recovery conditions after the evening rain band clears.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Crude prices stabilizing below $80/bbl following tentative ceasefires near the Strait of Hormuz, suggesting potential medium-term diesel relief, though current retail prices remain high.
- Carrier Financial Health: Small carrier exits and regulatory crackdowns continue to thin out excess capacity, shifting pricing power back toward carriers as the contract-to-spot spread compresses.
- Economic Indicators: Shippers are pulling import volumes forward to preempt potential tariffs, driving strong port activity and domestic truckload demand ahead of traditional peak season.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
U.S. Bank Freight Index: Spot Rates Surge 31% YoY as Capacity Tightens 🔗:
Shippers face growing exposure to spot market volatility as the contract-to-spot spread compresses to just $0.11/mile. Brokers should advise clients to lock in contract rates now or prepare for higher spot spend as routing guides fail.
-
FMCSA Modernizes Regulations, Eliminates Redundant Paperwork While Boosting Fraud Enforcement 🔗:
The removal of administrative burdens (like self-reporting out-of-state convictions and carrying printed ELD manuals) improves carrier efficiency, while aggressive crackdowns on chameleon carriers shrink the usable capacity pool, requiring stricter broker vetting.
-
SONAR: Spot Rates Climb as July 4th Capacity Pressure Builds 🔗:
The national truckload index shows rates rising as driver availability drops ahead of the holiday. Brokers must secure capacity early and prepare shippers for limited facility hours and holiday delays.
News Insight
Fraud enforcement is tightening effective capacity faster than headline truck counts suggest
In a holiday spot market, the FMCSA crackdown makes bad coverage more expensive. The practical issue is not just fewer questionable carriers in the system, but fewer recovery options if a cheap truck fails to pick up on Wednesday and replacement capacity has already pivoted into higher-paying holiday freight.
- Prioritize carriers with verified dispatch contacts and active tracking compliance.
- Use tighter pickup-number control on produce, retail, and other high-claim freight.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast is currently the most lucrative region for freight brokers, driven by the collision of peak summer produce harvests, pre-holiday inventory pushes, and a massive surge in container imports at the Port of Savannah. This has created severe capacity imbalances, particularly for reefers and high-quality dry vans, allowing brokers to command premium rates from shippers while negotiating favorable margins with carriers.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA → Orlando, FL: This high-volume retail and food distribution lane is experiencing intense pre-holiday demand as shippers rush to stock Florida tourist hubs. Capacity is exceptionally tight as carriers avoid entering Florida due to historically weak outbound backhaul rates. The full summer produce season in Florida is winding down, but inbound demand remains at a peak.
Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC: Port import surges at Savannah are driving massive dry van and container demand along this key North-South corridor. Capacity is highly constrained as local carriers are being pulled into high-paying agricultural runs for the peak peach and watermelon harvests. Shippers are competing fiercely for available equipment to move retail imports inland.
Regional Insight
Atlanta to Orlando is trading on reload risk, not just inbound demand
This lane is behaving like a peninsula premium move: carriers are pricing the uncertainty of getting back into stronger Southeast freight during a holiday week. Coverage will favor fleets that already have a Florida reload plan, while one-off trucks are likely to build a round-trip assumption into Wednesday and Thursday quotes.
Regional Insight
Savannah to Charlotte remains a high-value turn lane
Savannah-to-Charlotte should stay firm because it still offers carriers a workable two-turn week if port pickups move quickly and dwell stays low. Fast appointment windows and immediate reload visibility in the Carolinas are now direct pricing levers; a few extra hours sitting at the port will push carriers to reprice or chase longer-haul alternatives.
📰 Breaking Down: The Supply-Side Transition and the Shrinking Contract-to-Spot Buffer
The latest U.S. Bank Freight Payment Index reveals a fundamental shift in the domestic freight market. Dry van spot rates have surged 31.29% year-over-year to $2.14/mile, while the spread between contract and spot rates has compressed to a mere $0.11/mile. This compression represents a critical turning point for freight brokers. Historically, shippers relied on a comfortable contract premium to insulate their budgets from spot market volatility. With that buffer nearly gone, any localized capacity disruption—such as the ongoing Midwest flooding or pre-holiday driver shortages—will immediately push spot rates above contract levels, forcing shippers to rely heavily on broker spot networks. This is a classic supply-led transition. While overall freight volumes remain relatively flat, the steady exit of unprofitable carriers and stricter regulatory enforcement have thinned out the capacity surplus. Brokers must prepare for a highly volatile pricing environment where traditional routing guides fail, creating prime opportunities to capture high-margin spot business from desperate shippers.
🚛 Reefer: Peak Produce Collides with Pre-Holiday Capacity Crunch
The temperature-controlled sector is currently the most volatile segment of the domestic freight market. Real-time load board data shows reefer available loads jumping 8.8% overnight to 8,357, while paid rates are averaging $3.60/mile—representing a massive $0.29/mile premium over posted rates ($3.31/mile). This surge is driven by the perfect storm of peak summer produce harvests (blueberries, peaches, and watermelons) and intense pre-holiday grocery distribution demand. Capacity is exceptionally tight across the Southeast and Midwest, where carriers are prioritizing high-paying agricultural lanes. Furthermore, extreme heat warnings across the Midwest and Northeast (with heat indexes up to 105 degrees) are putting immense strain on reefer units, increasing the risk of equipment failure and cargo claims. Brokers must prioritize carrier vetting to ensure units are pre-cooled and fully operational, while advising shippers to expect premium pricing and tight transit windows through the July 4th weekend.
💰 Capitalizing on the Posted-vs-Paid Rate Spread
Today's real-time load board data reveals significant rate spreads that brokers can exploit for maximum profitability. The flatbed sector shows a substantial $0.17/mile carrier premium, with posted rates at $3.47/mile and paid rates at $3.64/mile across 61,480 available loads. This indicates that shippers are actively bidding up rates to secure open-deck equipment for peak summer construction projects and to bypass flood-impacted routes in the Midwest. Conversely, the specialized sector shows a $0.16/mile broker advantage, with posted rates at $3.20/mile and paid rates at $3.04/mile. This spread suggests that while specialized load volumes are high (18,053 available loads), carriers are aggressively bidding on posted loads to secure backhauls or reposition equipment, allowing brokers to negotiate highly favorable margins. By focusing sales efforts on flatbed shippers who need immediate capacity and sourcing specialized carriers looking for repositioning freight, brokers can maximize their spread and drive record daily margins.
🌐 Tariff Preemption and Port Surges Reshaping Domestic Freight Flows
A broader macroeconomic trend is currently reshaping domestic freight lanes: importers are aggressively pulling cargo volumes forward to preempt proposed tariffs and rising global shipping costs. This front-loading of imports has triggered a massive surge in container volumes at major East Coast ports, particularly Savannah. This port activity is injecting a steady stream of high-volume dry van freight into the domestic supply chain, colliding directly with the seasonal agricultural peak. The result is a highly compressed capacity environment along major North-South corridors like I-95 and I-75. While consumer spending and manufacturing activity show stable but modest growth, this artificial supply chain acceleration is driving a supply-side market reset. Brokers should leverage this trend by targeting port-adjacent shippers and offering consolidated LTL or dedicated truckload solutions to move retail imports inland before holiday facility closures disrupt operations.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Book core Wednesday freight early; the market is likely to get tighter before it gets quieter.
- Quote Midwest open-deck and oversize freight with detour assumptions through at least Wednesday even under dry skies.
- On Southeast lanes, reload certainty is now one of the strongest tools for lowering buy rates.
- Avoid bargain coverage on pre-holiday produce and retail freight; recovery windows are too short.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a short-window execution market, not a casual shopping market.
- Total available loads jumped to 151,680, up 8.5% overnight, which tells you shippers are compressing bookings into a narrow pre-holiday window.
- The best pricing pressure is likely from this afternoon through midday Wednesday.
Most of the board still favors carriers.
- Vans, reefers, flatbeds, and heavy haul account for 123,542 loads, or 81.5% of total volume, and all four are paying above posted rates.
- That means most freight still requires real replacement-cost buying, even though a couple of categories show broker-friendly spreads.
Reefer is the highest-risk, highest-urgency buy on the board.
- 8,357 reefer loads
- $3.31 posted / $3.60 paid
- +$0.29/mile carrier premium
- This is where produce, grocery pull-forward, heat risk, and holiday timing are stacking on top of each other.
Flatbed is where visible spread understates real pain.
- 61,480 flatbed loads
- $3.47 posted / $3.64 paid
- +$0.17/mile carrier premium
- The issue is not just rate; it is detour miles, slower turns, site access, and trapped equipment near flood-affected corridors.
Specialized and LTL/Partial are your tactical margin pockets.
- Specialized: 18,053 loads, $3.20 posted / $3.04 paid, -$0.16/mile broker advantage
- LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload): 10,085 loads, $1.78 posted / $1.70 paid, -$0.08/mile broker advantage
- These are useful today, but only disciplined brokers will keep the advantage.
Diesel at $4.853/gallon keeps deadhead tolerance tight.
- Carriers will keep rewarding locality, fast turns, reload visibility, and clean appointments over theoretical mileage.
The national average of $3.07/mile can mislead a van desk.
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized together make up 109,096 loads, or 71.9% of total board volume.
- So do not let higher-rated open-deck and specialty freight distort your van pricing logic.
📈 What The Market Is Really Saying
The volume spike is real, but the bigger story is freight mix.
- Dry van only rose to 24,142 loads, while flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized all posted much larger percentage moves.
- That says industrial, project, construction, port-support, and agricultural freight are driving this market more than broad consumer replenishment alone.
Carriers are pricing trip quality more aggressively than mileage.
- In a holiday week, a carrier’s hidden questions are:
- Will I get loaded fast?
- Will I get unloaded before the facility closes?
- Can I see my next move?
- Am I getting dragged into a weak reload market?
- If you answer those well, you will often beat a broker who offers a slightly higher rate with worse trip design.
Shippers are still vulnerable to board-price anchoring.
- Many will see posted rates and assume that is still executable.
- On today’s board, that is dangerous in the four biggest service-sensitive modes:
- Van: $2.87 posted / $2.99 paid
- Reefer: $3.31 posted / $3.60 paid
- Flatbed: $3.47 posted / $3.64 paid
- Heavy haul: $3.62 posted / $3.67 paid
- Your sales edge today is explaining replacement cost before routing guides fail.
Effective capacity is tighter than headline truck counts suggest.
- FMCSA (Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration) fraud enforcement
- Holiday home-time behavior
- Flood detours
- Extreme heat
- High diesel
- All of that makes usable capacity smaller than visible capacity.
💰 Where Today’s Best Margin Actually Lives
1) Reefer urgency with quality control
- Why it pays
- $0.29/mile carrier premium is the strongest carrier leverage on the board.
- Produce season and grocery urgency are both live.
- How to win
- Sell reliability, not discounting
- Require:
- pre-cooled equipment
- full fuel
- continuous-run confirmation when needed
- tracking compliance
- recent maintenance confidence
- Where brokers get hurt
- Cheap truck
- warm trailer
- weak communication
- missed pickup on Wednesday with no recovery truck left
2) Flatbed and heavy haul in flood-friction lanes
- Why it pays
- Flatbed: 61,480 loads
- Heavy haul: 29,563 loads
- Weather is turning ordinary miles into productivity loss and permit complexity.
- How to win
- Quote:
- detour miles
- wider delivery windows
- tarp and securement scope
- site-access verification
- Where brokers get hurt
- Using ideal mileage
- assuming dry weather means normal access
- ignoring secondary-road and permit-route friction
3) Specialized repositioning freight
- Why it pays
- $0.16/mile broker advantage is real.
- This is a classic exact-scope arbitrage market.
- How to win
- Post and source only when you can define:
- dimensions
- weight
- loading method
- commodity sensitivity
- escort/permit assumptions if relevant
- Where brokers get hurt
- Vague scope turns a broker-advantage load into a service failure or margin bleed fast.
- Why it pays
- $0.08/mile broker advantage
- Useful when truckload cutoffs are missed.
- How to win
- Offer it early for:
- palletized overflow
- non-cube-critical freight
- budget-sensitive replenishment
- Where brokers get hurt
- Waiting until truckload has already failed and then presenting LTL/Partial as a rescue instead of a plan.
🚚 Mode-By-Mode Broker Playbook
Dry Van
- Market read: Firm, but not the whole story
- 24,142 loads
- $2.87 posted / $2.99 paid
- Action
- Shorten quote validity
- Cover same-day and next-day priority freight before noon
- Use local carriers over cheap out-of-position trucks
- Push partial alternatives on late-booking freight
Reefer
- Market read: Pay-up execution market
- 8,357 loads
- $3.31 posted / $3.60 paid
- Action
- Buy equipment integrity first
- Attach backhaul before dispatch when possible
- Schedule morning loading/unloading where heat is an issue
- Tighten pickup-number control on produce and grocery
Flatbed
- Market read: Spread is visible, hidden cost is bigger
- 61,480 loads
- $3.47 posted / $3.64 paid
- Action
- Scope-control every load
- Call shipping/receiving points to confirm access
- Price reroutes up front
- Sell realistic service windows, not optimistic ones
Heavy Haul
- Market read: Route-and-permit market
- 29,563 loads
- $3.62 posted / $3.67 paid
- Action
- Do not quote incomplete dimensions
- Validate permit path before committing
- Expect slower first-mile and last-mile execution near flood-affected areas
Specialized
- Market read: Broker edge exists, but only with precision
- 18,053 loads
- $3.20 posted / $3.04 paid
- Action
- Lean into repositioning carriers
- Use exact load descriptions
- Pre-negotiate accessorial language
LTL/Partial
- Market read: Overflow valve with margin protection
- 10,085 loads
- $1.78 posted / $1.70 paid
- Action
- Proactively convert freight that misses the truckload morning window
- Use as a budget-control option, not just a last resort
🗺️ Regional Reads That Matter Today
Southeast: highest-value selling region
- The Southeast remains the best mix of urgency and margin.
- Produce
- Savannah import flow
- Florida inbound demand
- Holiday restocking
- Broker move
- Sell certainty and reload planning together
Atlanta, GA → Orlando, FL
- This lane is pricing on reload risk, not just southbound demand.
- Broker move
- Offer carriers:
- northbound reload visibility
- paired-cycle planning
- fast unload commitments
- If you cannot show the reload, expect carriers to price a round-trip assumption into the move.
Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC
- This remains a high-value turn lane because it can still produce a workable two-turn week.
- Broker move
- Win with:
- port document readiness
- tight pickup appointment discipline
- fast receiver unloads
- immediate Carolinas reload options
- A few hours of dwell at port or receiver can destroy the lane economics.
Illinois / Indiana flood belt
- The risk is friction, not necessarily full shutdown.
- Broker move
- Add:
- detour assumptions
- wider service windows
- access verification on river-adjacent facilities
- This matters most for flatbed and heavy haul, but it can hit van and reefer turns too.
Pearl River / I-10 / I-59 orbit
- This looks more like a time-of-day execution problem than an all-day collapse.
- Broker move
- Front-load pickups before mid-afternoon
- Use regional carriers who know alternate local approaches
🧠 Best Negotiation Angles Today
With Shippers
- “Posted board rates are no longer your true replacement cost in most high-volume modes.”
- “If this freight must move cleanly, earlier commitment is cheaper than late rescue.”
- “On Midwest open-deck freight, the risk is slower turns and access friction, not just linehaul.”
- “On Florida and port freight, reload certainty and dock speed are now pricing levers.”
- “If truckload timing gets compromised, LTL/Partial can preserve both service and budget.”
With Carriers
- Lead with trip quality.
- clean pickup
- fast unload
- tracking
- reload visibility
- realistic route
- Best carrier language today
- “This one is local, ready, and reload-friendly.”
- For reefer
- Acknowledge heat and product sensitivity before the carrier has to ask.
⚠️ Risk Controls That Protect Profit
Fraud control
- Use verified dispatch contacts
- Confirm tracking compliance
- Tighten pickup-number release
- Avoid bargain coverage on produce, retail, and claim-sensitive freight
Heat-risk control
- Extreme heat raises:
- reefer failure risk
- tire issues
- dock slowdown
- Build extra time and stronger equipment standards
Flood-risk control
- Verify first-mile and last-mile access with the facility
- Do not rely on interstate status alone.
Holiday-closure control
- Confirm receiver hours directly
- Pre-authorize detention, layover, or reconsignment rules where warranted
Margin control
- Pre-sell accessorial exposure
- This week, unbilled delays are silent profit killers.
📊 24–72 Hour Probability Map
Base Case — 60%
- Rates stay firm through Wednesday
- The market then shifts from volume pressure to driver-availability pressure
- Reefer and flood-affected open-deck freight remain the most fragile
Stress Case — 25%
- Heat-driven equipment failures
- Late-booking rescue freight
- More severe facility-hour mismatches
- Heavy haul permit/reroute surprises
Opportunity Case — 15%
- Specialized and LTL/Partial deliver outsized margin
- Brokers with local carrier pools and visible reloads outperform national board shoppers
- Fast-turn Southeast freight produces the best same-day win rate
✅ Today’s Priority Stack
- Reprice open quotes that still reflect posted-board assumptions
- Cover reefer and flood-exposed open-deck freight early
- Use local carriers to reduce deadhead and fall-off risk
- Sell reload certainty on Florida and Carolinas freight
- Convert late palletized freight to LTL/Partial before truckload fails
- Tighten carrier vetting on all holiday-sensitive freight
- Pre-sell accessorials and wider service windows instead of apologizing later
🎯 What To Watch Before Lunch
- Quote-to-cover speed
- First-call carrier acceptance
- Buy rate drift above posted in reefer and flatbed
- Savannah port dwell feedback
- Florida reload visibility
- Reefer exception count
- Accessorial recovery rate
- Truckload-to-LTL/Partial conversion rate
🏁 Bottom Line
- The board is tighter than it looks because usable capacity is shrinking faster than posted capacity.
- The biggest money today is not in blindly chasing spread; it is in structuring cleaner trips than your competitors.
- Reefer, flatbed, and Southeast reload-sensitive freight deserve your first attention.
- Specialized and LTL/Partial are your tactical margin tools, but only if scope and execution stay clean.
- If you wait too long today, freight stops being a rate discussion and becomes a recovery discussion.
💡 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.
📅 This Day in History
1559: King Henry II of France is mortally wounded in a jousting match against Gabriel, comte de Montgomery.
1860: The 1860 Oxford evolution debate at the Oxford University Museum of Natural History takes place.
1916: World War I: In "the day Sussex died", elements of the Royal Sussex Regiment take heavy casualties in the Battle of the Boar's Head at Richebourg-l'Avoué in France.
💭 Quote of the Day
"The most effective way to do it, is to do it."
— Amelia Earhart