📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Thursday, July 09, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
On Thursday, July 09, 2026, the domestic spot market is showing high-volume stability with 151,134 available loads, down slightly (-2.7%) from yesterday but maintaining strong momentum compared to last week's holiday-impacted levels. The market average rate has settled at $2.90/mile, supported by a verified AAA national diesel average of $4.81/gallon, which continues to act as a firm floor for carrier operating costs. Severe regional flooding in the Midwest is actively disrupting key freight corridors, including I-74 and I-90, trapping open-deck and dry van equipment and driving localized rate volatility. Meanwhile, extreme heat across the Southwest is slowing transit times along the I-10 and I-8 corridors. For freight brokers, the widening carrier premiums in the flatbed ($0.15/mile) and reefer ($0.22/mile) sectors present high-margin arbitrage opportunities, particularly for those who can leverage real-time routing adjustments to bypass weather bottlenecks.
Insight
Higher diesel and rising rejections are erasing cheap recovery capacity
With diesel at $4.81 and tender rejections still climbing, the first trucks to disappear are the ones normally used for short-notice recoveries and weather detours. That leaves flood-affected Midwest freight competing for a smaller pool of carriers willing to accept uncertain dwell, extra miles, and HOS burn, which helps explain why flatbed and reefer premiums are widening even as total load counts ease modestly.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Illinois River Flooding (Illinois (IL, Peoria, Tazewell, Woodford counties)): Minor flooding is occurring along the Illinois River, affecting Woodford, Tazewell, and Peoria counties. This is expected to create difficult conditions for freight operations along the I-74 and I-474 corridors, potentially delaying shipments and tightening local flatbed and dry van capacity.
- Southern Minnesota Flooding (Minnesota (MN, Mower county)): Minor flooding is occurring along local rivers in southern Minnesota, affecting Mower county. This is expected to create difficult conditions for freight operations along the I-90 corridor, potentially delaying shipments and tightening local flatbed and dry van capacity.
- Southwest Extreme Heat Wave (Southwest States (AZ, CA)): Dangerously hot conditions with afternoon temperatures of 108 to 114 degrees are expected across south-central Arizona and southeastern California. This extreme heat poses a risk of heat-related illnesses for drivers and could lead to equipment failures, particularly for reefers operating along the I-8 and I-10 corridors.
- Mid-Atlantic Flash Flood Watch (Mid-Atlantic States (MD, VA, DC)): Strong thunderstorms with torrential downpours are expected to track across the Mid-Atlantic region, with rainfall rates of 2 to 3 inches per hour possible. This could result in flash flooding of low-lying and flood-prone locations, particularly along the I-95 corridor, potentially delaying shipments and tightening local capacity.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Peoria disruption is most likely to intensify around the midday loading window
Along the Illinois River corridor, the biggest operational risk today is not a broad all-day washout but a late-morning to mid-afternoon slowdown layered onto existing flood conditions. Showers and thunderstorms near Peoria from roughly 10 a.m. through 3 p.m. can sharply slow yard turns, tarping, securement, and local shuttle moves along I-74 and I-474 even if mainline closures do not materially expand.
Weather Insight
Southern Minnesota stays tight even without fresh rain
The I-90 problem in southern Minnesota is now a cycle-time issue more than a same-day weather event. Conditions are comparatively quiet today, but standing water, detours, and equipment already pushed out of position will keep normal transit assumptions unreliable through Friday morning, especially on freight with narrow delivery windows.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Diesel futures are trending upward, driven by global supply concerns and rising crude oil prices. This is expected to keep upward pressure on retail diesel prices, driving carrier operating costs higher and restricting deadhead miles.
- Carrier Financial Health: Carrier financial conditions remain under pressure due to high operating costs and low spot rates. This is driving further market consolidation, with smaller carriers exiting the market or leasing onto larger fleets, which is gradually shrinking the active capacity pool.
- Economic Indicators: Economic indicators show steady manufacturing and industrial activity, which is supporting flatbed and heavy haul demand. Meanwhile, consumer spending remains resilient, supporting dry van and LTL volumes.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
Carrier Vetting and Compliance Standards Shift Post-Montgomery 🔗:
The newly released Freight Broker Carrier Vetting & Compliance Guide highlights a critical shift in the legal standard of care for carrier selection. Following the Montgomery v. Caribe Transport II ruling, brokers can be sued in state court for negligent carrier selection. This makes documented, defensible carrier-selection programs mandatory rather than optional. Brokers must implement rigorous pre-tender screening, continuous carrier monitoring, and documented per-load selection rationale to mitigate negligent-selection risk. This will likely shrink the usable carrier pool as non-compliant carriers are filtered out, driving up rates but protecting brokers from catastrophic liability.
-
FTR Trucking Conditions Index Hits All-Time High on Favorable Rates 🔗:
FTR's Trucking Conditions Index for May jumped to 20.4, its strongest level ever, driven primarily by highly favorable freight rates for carriers. This indicates that carrier operating conditions have improved significantly, which could lead to capacity stabilization. However, for brokers, this means carriers are in a stronger negotiating position, and spot rates are likely to remain firm. Brokers should prepare for continued upward pressure on rates and focus on building strong relationships with reliable carriers to secure capacity.
News Insight
Late-day carrier swaps now carry outsized liability risk
The compliance shift is most consequential on weather-disrupted freight, where brokers are tempted to cover a missed truck with unfamiliar capacity after hours. Flood recoveries, reefer rescues, and last-minute open-deck substitutions now need a documented selection rationale showing why the carrier was the safest available option at tender time, not simply active and insured.
- Treat tractor or driver changes after booking as a fresh vetting event.
- Preserve the carrier-monitoring and insurance snapshot tied to the actual tender time.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Midwest US
The Midwest freight market is highly volatile today, with capacity severely constrained by active flooding and high agricultural demand. Flatbed and dry van equipment are in short supply as carriers face lengthy detours and delayed transit times. Meanwhile, reefer capacity is at an absolute premium as shippers scramble to move perishable corn crops. Rates are firming rapidly across the region, with carriers successfully demanding high premiums to cover increased operational risks and fuel costs.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL → Minneapolis, MN: This lane is experiencing significant disruption due to active flooding along the I-90 corridor in southern Minnesota. Capacity is highly constrained as carriers face lengthy detours and delayed transit times. At the same time, demand remains strong for both dry van and flatbed equipment, driving rates upward.
Peoria, IL → Indianapolis, IN: This short-haul lane is directly impacted by the ongoing Illinois River flooding, which has inundated local staging areas and disrupted the I-74 corridor. Capacity is extremely tight as local carriers are displaced or delayed by floodwaters. Demand for flatbed and dry van equipment remains robust, driving localized rate volatility.
Regional Insight
Chicago-to-Minneapolis premiums are easier to defend on route certainty than on speed alone
On northbound Chicago freight, the cleaner play is paying for a carrier committed to avoiding the southern Minnesota pinch points rather than chasing the cheapest posted truck. A longer Wisconsin routing can add miles but reduce HOS exposure and missed appointments, which makes premium guaranteed-service quotes more defensible on Friday deliveries than standard spot pricing built around normal I-90 cycle times.
Regional Insight
Peoria short-hauls need all-in pricing discipline
Peoria-to-Indianapolis freight is especially vulnerable to margin leakage because a short-mile load can still absorb a full day of truck time when flood staging, detours, and weather-driven delays stack together. All-in quotes with explicit dwell assumptions are safer than pure per mile pricing until river conditions and local yard access normalize.
📰 Breaking Down: Carrier Vetting and Compliance Standards Shift Post-Montgomery
The release of the Freight Broker Carrier Vetting & Compliance Guide at the 3PL Value Creation North America Summit marks a watershed moment for the freight brokerage industry. Following the landmark Montgomery v. Caribe Transport II ruling, the legal standard of care for carrier selection has fundamentally changed. Brokers can no longer rely on simple, automated checks of authority and insurance; they must now be able to prove, with documented evidence, that they took reasonable steps to select a safe carrier.
This shift has profound implications for broker operations and capacity sourcing. To mitigate negligent-selection risk, brokers must implement rigorous pre-tender screening, continuous carrier monitoring, and documented per-load selection rationale. This will inevitably lead to the exclusion of non-compliant or high-risk carriers, effectively shrinking the usable carrier pool. While this may drive up spot rates in the short term, it is a necessary step to protect brokerages from catastrophic liability claims.
Furthermore, the new FMCSA broker financial-responsibility rule and rising insurance scrutiny mean that documentation is no longer optional. Brokers who fail to implement robust vetting procedures face not only legal liability but also the risk of losing their operating authority or facing skyrocketing insurance premiums. In this new environment, compliance is no longer a back-office function; it is a core competitive advantage.
📊 Load Board Analysis: Rate Spreads and Capacity Signals
Today's real-time load board data reveals a highly active spot market with 151,134 available loads. While this represents a minor 2.7% decrease from yesterday, it shows a strong upward trend compared to last week's holiday-impacted levels, indicating robust underlying demand. The market average rate has settled at $2.90/mile, supported by a firm national diesel average of $4.81/gallon.
An analysis of equipment-specific data reveals significant rate spreads that present high-margin opportunities for brokers. In the flatbed sector, the average paid rate of $3.46/mile exceeds the average posted rate of $3.31/mile by $0.15/mile. This substantial carrier premium indicates that capacity is extremely tight, and carriers are successfully negotiating higher rates than initially posted. Brokers must be prepared to pay these premiums to secure open-deck equipment, particularly in regions affected by weather disruptions.
Similarly, the reefer sector shows an average paid rate of $3.32/mile compared to an average posted rate of $3.10/mile, yielding a $0.22/mile carrier premium. This tight pricing pressure is driven by the peak summer produce season, which is competing for temperature-controlled equipment. In contrast, the specialized and LTL/partial sectors show broker advantages of $0.18/mile and $0.11/mile, respectively, indicating that brokers have stronger negotiating leverage in these niches.
📅 Seasonal Calendar Watch: Peak Summer Produce and Harvest Transitions
We are currently in the absolute peak of the summer produce season, which is driving intense competition for temperature-controlled equipment across the country. Key commodities currently in transit include watermelons from Texas and Georgia, corn from Illinois and Indiana, and blueberries from Michigan and Washington. This high-volume agricultural movement is keeping reefer capacity exceptionally tight, particularly in the Southeast and Midwest corridors.
Over the next 7 to 14 days, we expect to see a transition in produce shipping origins. As southern harvests begin to wind down, volume will shift northward, driving increased demand for reefer capacity in the Midwest and Pacific Northwest. Brokers should prepare for this shift by establishing relationships with carriers in these emerging origin regions. Additionally, the end-of-quarter surge is approaching, which will likely drive a temporary spike in dry van and flatbed volumes as shippers scramble to clear inventories.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Midwest tightness is being driven by longer cycle times and missed turns, not just hard closures.
- Buy flatbed and reefer capacity earlier in the day; late coverage is getting both pricier and riskier.
- Use guaranteed-service pricing on Chicago-to-Twin Cities freight when routing around southern Minnesota.
- Protect short-haul Illinois margins with all-in quotes that account for detention and detours.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is still an execution-premium market, not a bargain-capacity market.
Total available loads are 151,134, down 2.7% from 155,316, but that dip is not a softening signal by itself. With 50,529 loads already moved, the board is being absorbed early enough that visible capacity is less usable than it appears.
The cleanest pricing signal is mode divergence.
Carriers are winning in the freight that is hardest to recover or reroute:
- Dry van: $2.63 posted / $2.74 paid = +$0.11/mile carrier premium
- Reefer: $3.10 posted / $3.32 paid = +$0.22/mile carrier premium
- Flatbed: $3.31 posted / $3.46 paid = +$0.15/mile carrier premium
- Heavy haul: $3.53 posted / $3.59 paid = +$0.06/mile carrier premium
Meanwhile, brokers still have leverage in:
- Specialized: $3.03 posted / $2.85 paid = +$0.18/mile broker advantage
- LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload / Partial): $1.66 posted / $1.55 paid = +$0.11/mile broker advantage
The Midwest problem is cycle time, not just closure maps.
Flooding around Peoria, IL and southern Minnesota is making trucks miss turns, burn HOS (Hours of Service), and lose reload options. That is why nearby trucks may still be bad buys.
Diesel at $4.81/gallon changes carrier behavior more than many brokers price for.
Higher fuel cost makes uncertain access, unpaid detours, and weak reload geography materially more expensive. In this market, extra miles are no longer “friction”; they are a direct rate trigger.
Late-day recovery freight now carries both margin risk and liability risk.
With the negligent-selection standard tightening after Montgomery v. Caribe Transport II, an after-hours truck swap on flood, reefer, or open-deck freight is not just a service decision. It is a documented safety and selection decision.
🧠 What the market is actually saying
The board is smaller than yesterday, but the market is not weaker.
A lot of brokers misread a lower board count as easing pressure. That is not the right read today. The stronger interpretation is: post-holiday demand is being covered quickly, and the cheapest flexible trucks are disappearing first.
The national average rate of $2.90/mile is not the right anchor for van buying.
Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized together account for 109,782 loads, or about 72.6% of the board. That means the all-mode average is heavily influenced by higher-rated open-deck and specialty freight. If a broker uses $2.90 to negotiate ordinary van freight, they risk overpaying in some lanes and underpricing disrupted Midwest lanes.
Carriers are pricing uncertainty more aggressively than distance.
In flood and heat markets, the premium is increasingly attached to:
- Reliable yard access
- Real appointment flexibility
- Known unload times
- Good reload geography
- Low detour exposure
That is why two trucks with the same rate can have very different true cost.
The market is rewarding planning more than heroics.
Shippers still need freight moved, but the brokers who win today will not be the ones promising impossible transit. They will be the ones selling route certainty, appointment realism, and clean communication.
💰 Best broker opportunities today
1. Reefer is still the sharpest premium market
- Why it matters:
7,896 loads with a +$0.22/mile carrier premium is a meaningful squeeze, especially with July produce at peak intensity.
- What is driving it:
Watermelons, corn, blueberries, peppers, peaches, grocery demand, and weather detours are all competing for the same pre-cooled equipment.
- Best broker play:
- Cover early
- Sell the round trip
- Target carriers who want inbound freight into produce-origin states
- Pre-negotiate detention, missed appointment, and reefer fuel expectations
- Where brokers lose money:
- Booking “available” reefers without verifying pre-cool readiness
- Waiting until midday to source hot produce freight
- Treating detours as absorbable instead of billable
2. Flatbed is the best gross-dollar pool, but only on truly loadable freight
- Why it matters:
61,739 loads is the largest segment on the board, with $3.31 posted / $3.46 paid.
- What is driving it:
Construction, industrial restart, and flood-disrupted staging yards are tightening usable open-deck capacity.
- Best broker play:
- Verify dimensions, tarp needs, securement, loading equipment, and site conditions before quoting
- Separate linehaul from detention, reroute, layover, and access charges
- Favor trucks already clear of the flooded staging zones
- Where brokers lose money:
- Pricing off normal short-haul assumptions in central Illinois
- Believing “site open” means “truck-ready”
- Ignoring midday slowdown around Peoria
3. Dry van is the quiet repricing risk
- Why it matters:
22,279 loads with a +$0.11/mile carrier premium is not explosive, but it is enough to erode margin if quotes sit too long.
- Best broker play:
- Use same-day quote validity
- Reconfirm pickup and delivery windows before tender
- Prefer low-deadhead carriers with clean HOS
- Where brokers lose money:
- Letting morning quotes linger into afternoon
- Assuming Midwest van freight is still a “normal” buy
- Buying the cheapest truck without asking how it will actually route
4. Specialized is a margin-repair pocket
- Why it matters:
18,990 loads with $3.03 posted / $2.85 paid gives brokers a $0.18/mile advantage.
- Best broker play:
- Use it on well-defined freight with clear equipment-fit
- Press rate only when scope is precise
- Avoid vague tenders that can turn into accessorial battles
- Hidden truth:
Broker advantage here does not mean sloppy buying is safe. It means disciplined brokers can still extract margin where freight is spec’d clearly.
5. LTL/Partial is a service valve, not a discount bin
- Why it matters:
11,177 loads and a $0.11/mile broker advantage make this the cleanest alternative when truckload coverage becomes unstable.
- Best broker play:
- Convert flexible palletized freight early
- Use it to save customer service when full truckload becomes rescue freight
- Where brokers win:
- Customers with flexible delivery windows
- Freight under margin pressure from short-haul truckload inefficiency
🌦️ Weather-adjusted operating plan
Midwest flood corridors
- Primary issue:
The real cost is lost turns, uncertain access, and detention risk, not just hard closure miles.
- Most affected themes today:
- Peoria / I-74 / I-474
- Southern Minnesota / I-90
- Secondary friction across I-55 and I-57
- Broker actions:
- Call for actual yard-access status before tender
- Quote with explicit dwell assumptions
- Pad short-haul schedules more than normal
- Treat same-day truck substitutions as high-risk events
Southwest heat corridors
- Primary issue:
Heat on I-8 and I-10 creates driver safety, tire, engine, and reefer-unit stress.
- Broker actions:
- Push loading into early morning or overnight where possible
- Use stronger guaranteed-service language only when appointment windows support it
- Confirm reefer fuel, setpoint, and equipment condition before dispatch
- Customer psychology tip:
Shippers often resist rate increases but will accept appointment-window changes if you clearly tie them to service reliability.
Mid-Atlantic flash flood risk
- Primary issue:
I-95 can slow suddenly even when the broader market still looks normal.
- Broker actions:
- Recheck appointment tolerance on same-day and next-day East Coast freight
- Avoid selling “tight but doable” transit on weather-sensitive loads
🗺️ Lane tactics that can make money today
Chicago, IL → Minneapolis, MN
- Best strategy:
Sell route certainty, not standard transit fantasy.
- Recommended approach:
- Quote a premium guaranteed-service option
- Use carriers willing to route around southern Minnesota exposure, even with extra miles
- Explain that longer routing may reduce HOS burn and missed appointment risk
- Why this works:
Customers will often accept a premium when the alternative is a Friday delivery miss.
Peoria, IL → Indianapolis, IN
- Best strategy:
Use all-in pricing discipline.
- Recommended approach:
- Quote linehaul with clear detention/dwell assumptions
- Reconfirm shipper access before dispatch and again before arrival
- Avoid pure per-mile logic on short-haul flood freight
- Why this works:
A short-mile load can still consume a full truck day when yard friction stacks up.
🧾 Pricing and negotiation strategy for today
With shippers
- Lead with operational math, not generic “market is tight” language
- Diesel is $4.81/gallon
- Paid rates exceed posted in van, reefer, flatbed, and heavy haul
- Flood freight is paying for turn-time loss
- Heat freight is paying for schedule risk
- Best message:
“We can protect service if we either buy earlier, widen the appointment window, or quote guaranteed routing. Waiting usually costs more than deciding now.”
With carriers
- Sell trip quality before rate
Carriers in this market respond best to:
- Ready freight
- Verified access
- Fast unload
- Accurate commodity details
- Visible reload opportunity
- Realistic schedule
- Best tactic:
On reefer and flatbed, offer the carrier a better day, not just a higher rate. That often widens the usable pool faster than throwing out blind money.
Internally on the desk
- Set three quoting rules
- Same-day validity on Midwest van and flatbed
- Midday re-quote trigger on reefer
- All-in pricing on Illinois short-hauls
- Why:
Most margin leakage today will come from stale quotes and unpriced accessorial exposure, not from one dramatic linehaul miss.
⚖️ Compliance and liability discipline
Treat every late-day swap as a new vetting event.
If the tractor, carrier entity, or driver changes, your selection file needs to reflect the actual tendered provider.
Document why the carrier was the safest reasonable option, not just an active option.
On weather-disrupted freight, that means preserving:
- Insurance snapshot
- Safety status
- Identity verification
- Equipment fit
- Routing capability
- Tender-time rationale
Do not let urgency weaken standards.
The expensive mistake today is not overpaying by $0.10 to $0.20/mile. The expensive mistake is a negligent-selection, cargo, or identity-fraud event on a rushed recovery load.
📈 24–72 hour probability map
Most likely outcome
- Reefer stays the hardest buy
- Flatbed remains firm in the Midwest
- Dry van continues to reprice quietly where flood detours distort cycle time
- Specialized and LTL remain the best broker-leverage pockets
Higher-risk outcome
- Peoria yard delays worsen around midday loading
- Southern Minnesota transit assumptions remain unreliable into Friday
- Southwest afternoon pickups produce more service failures than dispatchers admit upfront
Opportunity outcome
- Brokers who control routing, appointment flexibility, and reload visibility outperform brokers who only negotiate rate.
- Brokers who convert flexible freight to LTL/Partial early will preserve more customer relationships and avoid rescue coverage losses.
✅ Priority operating plan for the desk
Cover hardest freight first
- Reefer
- Midwest flatbed
- Flood-touched van
- Heavy haul with permit or route sensitivity
Tighten quote controls
- Same-day validity
- Midday refresh on produce and flood lanes
- Explicit detour and dwell language
Use alternative service earlier
- Shift eligible freight into LTL/Partial before it becomes a truckload emergency
Buy on trip economics
- Prefer carriers with:
- Short deadhead
- Flood-aware routing
- Known unload conditions
- Reload visibility
Raise dispatch discipline
- 100% appointment reconfirmation on Midwest and Southwest freight
- 100% reefer readiness verification
- 100% loadability verification on open-deck and heavy haul
🏁 Bottom line
- The market is active, selective, and less forgiving than the slight volume decline suggests.
- Reefer and flatbed are still where carriers hold the clearest leverage.
- Dry van is the sneaky margin leak if you treat flood-affected freight like normal freight.
- Specialized and LTL/Partial are your best controlled-margin tools today.
- In this market, the winning broker is not the cheapest buyer of trucks. It is the broker who prices uncertainty correctly, documents carrier choice carefully, and sells certainty better than competitors sell optimism.
💡 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
1896: William Jennings Bryan delivers his Cross of Gold speech advocating bimetallism at the 1896 Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
1918: In Nashville, Tennessee, an inbound local train collides with an outbound express, killing 101 and injuring 171 people, making it the deadliest rail accident in United States history.
2011: South Sudan gains independence and secedes from Sudan.
💭 Quote of the Day
"If you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change."
— Wayne Dyer