π Daily Market Intelligence Report
Thursday, April 23, 2026
7:00 AM CST
π Top-Line Summary
The national spot freight market is experiencing a slight mid-week recalibration, with total available loads dipping 4.3% overnight to 178,171, though the market average rate remains robust at $2.71/mile. This contraction is primarily driven by a 5.8% cooling in the massive open-deck sector, while enclosed trailer volumes, particularly dry van, have shown slight gains. Diesel prices sit at a verified $5.471/gallon, continuing to apply inflationary pressure on carrier operating costs and sustaining aggressive fuel surcharges. Operationally, severe and prolonged river flooding across the Midwest continues to fracture major transcontinental routing along I-80 and I-90, forcing extensive detours and tightening regional capacity pools as equipment turnaround times stretch.
Insight
The overnight pullback does not read like true loosening
The 4.3% decline in available loads looks more like a midweek reset inside open-deck freight than a broad capacity release. Van volumes are still inching higher, reefer remains structurally tight, and elevated diesel keeps an unusually firm floor under paid rates even where load counts are not surging. Any sense of relief is likely to be temporary, with the cleanest execution window arriving late Friday into Saturday before another round of rain threatens to refresh Midwest delays early next week.
β½ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
π¦οΈ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe River Flooding (Midwest (IL, IA, MI)): Prolonged flooding is expected to create difficult conditions for I-80, I-74, and I-90 routing, extending transit times and tightening regional capacity as carriers avoid compromised corridors.
- High Wind Warning (Wyoming (WY, Platte and Laramie Counties)): West winds gusting up to 80 mph pose a severe blow-over risk to high-profile vehicles along I-25, likely disrupting transcontinental routing and driving hazard pay premiums.
- Freeze Warning (Mountain West (UT, CO)): Sub-freezing temperatures in the upper 20s are expected to drive urgent protect-from-freeze (PFF) demands, tightening temperature-controlled capacity across the region.
- Blizzard Warning (Montana (MT, Valley and McCone Counties)): Snow accumulations and 60 mph wind gusts will drop visibility below 1/4 mile, likely disrupting I-15 and regional freight networks.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Midwest flooding risk shifts from acute disruption to prolonged cycle-time drag
Northern Illinois gets a workable pickup day, and Friday into Saturday should improve local execution across parts of the region, but Iowa remains active today and another heavy rain signal on Monday raises the odds that detours and high-water restrictions linger rather than clear cleanly.
- Late Friday through Saturday is the best window to move backlog freight before weather risk rebuilds.
- Monday freight across Illinois and Iowa should carry extra transit padding and wider appointment windows.
Weather Insight
Wyoming crosswinds are a capacity filter, not just a safety headline
Gusts near 80 mph in southeast Wyoming will sideline some high-profile equipment outright and slow the rest, especially empty vans, reefers, and lighter open-deck loads moving through the Cheyenne-Laramie corridor. That tends to show up as missed check calls, last-minute re-power requests, and carriers refusing fixed delivery commitments until winds ease, which can tighten western repositioning into the Midwest by tomorrow.
π° Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Global geopolitical tensions, particularly in the Middle East, continue to apply upward pressure on energy markets, suggesting diesel prices will remain a primary inflationary driver for transportation costs in the near term.
- Carrier Financial Health: Elevated fuel costs and stringent FMCSA compliance enforcement are disproportionately impacting smaller fleets and owner-operators, accelerating capacity consolidation and increasing the importance of rigorous carrier vetting.
- Economic Indicators: Surging supply chain costs, driven by a combination of high diesel prices and specialized capacity constraints, are stoking broader macroeconomic inflation concerns, potentially impacting future consumer spending and retail freight volumes.
π° Impactful News Analysis
-
Surging Diesel Prices Stoke Broad Inflation Concerns π:
With diesel prices rising significantly due to geopolitical conflicts, carriers are facing immense operating cost pressure. Brokers must proactively communicate these fuel-driven rate increases to shippers, framing them as unavoidable macro-level costs rather than standard margin expansion. Expect carriers to be highly rigid on rate negotiations, particularly on longer lengths of haul.
-
Geopolitical Tensions Drive Supply Chain Cost Spikes π:
The ripple effects of Middle Eastern conflicts are hitting the service and transportation sectors hard. Brokers should anticipate prolonged rate inflation and prepare customers for sustained elevated pricing. Securing dedicated capacity on critical lanes now may shield shippers from further spot market volatility as fuel costs remain unpredictable.
-
Navigating Spot Rates in a Volatile Market π:
As contract freight continues to bleed into the spot market due to routing disruptions and capacity constraints, brokers have a prime opportunity to capture market share. Utilizing real-time rate intelligence to identify the spread between posted and paid rates (currently $0.06 for van and $0.25 for reefer) is critical for maximizing margins while ensuring reliable execution.
πΊοΈ Regional & Lane Analysis
π Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest remains the epicenter of spot market volatility today, driven by a collision of severe weather disruptions and massive open-deck freight demand. Prolonged river flooding across Illinois, Iowa, and Michigan is severely compromising major east-west arteries including I-80, I-90, and I-74. This is forcing carriers into lengthy detours, extending transit times, and effectively reducing the regional capacity pool as trucks take longer to complete their cycles. Consequently, brokers are seeing steep premiums required to secure reliable capacity, particularly for flatbed and heavy haul equipment needed for regional infrastructure projects.
π£οΈ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL β Columbus, OH: This critical Midwest corridor is heavily impacted by regional flooding and high open-deck demand. Capacity is tightening as carriers navigate compromised routing, while outbound van and flatbed volumes remain strong. The $5.471/gal diesel average is keeping a high floor on rates.
Des Moines, IA β Indianapolis, IN: This lane is currently a chokepoint due to severe flooding along I-80 and I-74 (WX730EC3CE). Reefer demand is spiking due to regional agricultural movements and residual protect-from-freeze requirements, colliding with restricted routing.
Regional Insight
Chicago to Columbus favors committed network carriers over late-day rate shopping
Chicago-area weather is cooperative enough for normal pickup execution today, so the real pressure on this lane is downstream truck economics rather than dock risk. Carriers are valuing the certainty of an Ohio-bound reload network more than a one-off linehaul, which means eastbound coverage should hold firm even if headline weather briefly improves. Paying for a carrier already built around the Ohio Valley is likely to outperform chasing a cheaper truck that still needs to solve its next move.
Regional Insight
Des Moines to Indianapolis will reward flexibility more than speed
Thunderstorm risk in Iowa today, combined with flood detours on the main eastbound corridors, makes this lane especially sensitive to small pickup or appointment slips. Friday is the better reset day for execution, but reefer acceptance will still skew toward freight with flexible receiver windows and enough margin to absorb out-of-route miles.
- Weekend freight should be covered before Thursday close rather than left for Friday spot buying.
- Relay or team-style handoffs become more attractive when delivery windows are tight.
π Flatbed: Dominating the Spot Market Despite Slight Cooling
The open-deck sector continues to be the undisputed heavyweight of the spring freight market. Even with a 5.8% overnight dip in available loads, flatbed freight accounts for a staggering 81,876 loadsβnearly four times the volume of the dry van sector. This sustained demand is driving paid rates to a highly lucrative $3.25/mile. The data indicates a severe structural capacity shortage for specialized equipment, fueled by a booming infrastructure and construction pipeline. Carriers are fully aware of their leverage, consistently securing an $0.08/mile premium over posted rates. For brokers, the strategy is clear: the margins are in open-deck freight, but securing reliable capacity requires aggressive pricing and deep carrier relationships, particularly in regions hampered by weather disruptions.
π Diesel Inflation and the Cost-Push Squeeze
Today's verified national diesel average of $5.471/gallon is acting as a massive inflationary anchor on the spot market. As highlighted in recent news regarding geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, these elevated energy costs are forcing carriers to maintain strict rate floors simply to survive. The data shows this clearly in the van sector, where despite a relatively loose 20,863 available loads, paid rates remain sticky at $2.42/mile. Carriers cannot afford to run cheap freight. This cost-push inflation means brokers must shift their sales narratives: rate increases are not driven by capacity scarcity in the van sector, but by the raw cost of fuel. Shippers hoping for a return to lower rates will be disappointed until global energy markets stabilize.
ποΈ Midwest Flooding Fractures Transcontinental Routing
The severe river flooding currently plaguing Illinois, Iowa, and Michigan (Alert WX0939ED61) is creating a significant infrastructure bottleneck that is rippling across the national load boards. Major arteries like I-80, I-90, and I-74 are facing severe operational constraints. When transcontinental corridors are compromised, the impact on capacity is twofold: first, carriers refuse to enter the affected zones without massive hazard premiums; second, the trucks that do take the loads are trapped in extended transit cycles due to detours, effectively removing them from the daily capacity pool. This infrastructure constraint is a primary driver behind the elevated heavy haul ($3.29/mile) and flatbed rates, as specialized equipment is disproportionately affected by complex rerouting and permitting challenges.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Use late Friday and Saturday as the best Midwest recovery window; price Monday freight with renewed weather risk.
- On key Midwest lanes, the cheapest truck is often the wrong truck when backhaul uncertainty and detour miles are rising.
- For reefer and open-deck moves, build transit padding and detour language into the quote upfront instead of negotiating after pickup.
π Executive Signal Summary
This is a selective reset, not a true market loosening.
- Total available loads are 178,171, down 4.3% from 186,081, but that drop is concentrated in open-deck rather than showing a broad release of capacity.
- Dry van climbed to 20,863 loads, reefer held at 7,353, and LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload / Partial Truckload) rose to 10,208.
- National average paid rate is still $2.71/mile, which is too firm for anyone to call this a cheap-truck day.
Execution improved even while visible volume fell.
- Loads moved today are 63,067, up from 61,172 at the comparable capture yesterday.
- That matters: fewer posted loads plus more completed moves usually means the market is processing backlog more efficiently, not suddenly becoming soft.
Open-deck is still the marketβs center of gravity.
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized combine for 139,747 loads, or about 78.4% of visible spot volume.
- Those same segments account for 54,408 loads moved today, or about 86.3% of executed volume.
- If your desk is not prioritizing industrial and project freight first, you are working the wrong part of the board.
The biggest pricing signal today is not flatbed β it is reefer.
- Reefer paid is $2.86/mile versus $2.61/mile posted, a massive +$0.25/mile execution premium.
- Flatbed is +$0.08, LTL/Partial is +$0.08, van is +$0.06, heavy haul is +$0.05.
- Specialized is the outlier at $2.88 paid versus $2.92 posted, meaning the board is asking more than the executable market is actually paying.
Fuel is still holding the floor under pricing.
- Diesel is $5.471/gallon.
- Even on cleaner van freight, carriers do not have much room to chase cheap freight unless the reload, dwell, and routing are all attractive.
π What The Market Is Actually Telling You
Headline load softness is misleading.
- A less experienced broker sees -4.3% total loads and assumes rates should ease.
- A better read is this: the market is rotating, not collapsing.
- Open-deck cooled overnight, but the freight mix still favors carriers with specialized equipment and shippers with time-sensitive freight.
Rate resilience is stronger than top-line volume.
- One week ago, the market average was also $2.71/mile with 188,298 total loads.
- One month ago, the market average was $2.51/mile with 187,516 total loads.
- That is the key signal: with similar total load counts to a month ago, the market is paying $0.20/mile more today. That tells you the floor is being set by fuel, seasonal specialization, and impaired truck productivity, not just by raw volume.
Todayβs improved throughput is encouraging, but not enough to relax discipline.
- The rise to 63,067 loads moved suggests some freight is finally getting matched and executed.
- But weather and detours are still stealing turns in the Midwest, and western disruptions are interfering with repositioning.
- In practical terms: you may get more loads covered today than yesterday, but you still should not quote as if trucks are abundant.
Specialized freight is where many brokers will overpay unnecessarily.
- Specialized paid is $2.88/mile versus $2.92/mile posted.
- That usually means one of three things:
- Some shippers are over-specifying equipment
- Some carriers are posting aspirational numbers
- The real buy is lower when the load can be reclassified onto standard open-deck
- This is a sharp broker edge today: verify whether the load truly needs specialized equipment before buying at posted ask.
π Mode-By-Mode Broker Playbook
π§ Flatbed
ποΈ Heavy Haul
π Dry Van
π§ Reefer
πͺ Specialized
π¦ LTL/Partial
π¦οΈ Regional Priorities For The Next 24β72 Hours
π Midwest Flooding
π¬οΈ Wyoming Wind Exposure
βοΈ Mountain West Freeze / Montana Blizzard
π£οΈ Key Lane Tactics
ποΈ Chicago, IL β Columbus, OH
π½ Des Moines, IA β Indianapolis, IN
π° Pricing And Negotiation Tactics That Win Today
Quote from paid behavior, not posted hope
- Van: use $2.42/mile as your executable baseline, not $2.36/mile, on non-clean freight.
- Reefer: if you quote from $2.61/mile posted on service-sensitive freight, you are likely underwriting the load yourself.
- Flatbed: use $3.25/mile paid as the market truth before adding disruption-specific costs.
- Specialized: this is the exception where you should push back against inflated asks and verify actual equipment need.
Use two-option pricing on volatile freight
- Option 1: Flexible service
- broader pickup or delivery window
- lower service certainty
- better chance to preserve shipper budget
- Option 2: Priority service
- committed capacity
- tighter execution control
- higher cost
- This works especially well on Midwest weather-exposed freight because it turns an argument about price into a choice about service.
Break out costs visibly
- Fuel
- Detour or route inefficiency
- Tarp
- Protect-from-freeze (PFF)
- Detention
- Layover
- Permit/reroute exposure on heavy haul
- Customers fight vague all-in increases more than they fight clearly documented cost drivers.
Sell certainty, not just a truck
- The market psychology today is simple:
- shippers see lower load counts and want cheaper rates
- carriers see $5.471 diesel, weather drag, and better alternatives
- The winning broker is the one who explains what operational failure a higher rate prevents.
π§ Behavioral Edges Smart Brokers Can Exploit
Shippers will misread the market
- They will point to 178,171 loads being below yesterday and assume capacity is opening up.
- Your counterpoint should be:
- rates are still $2.71/mile on average
- loads moved improved
- reefer and open-deck remain execution-premium markets
- fuel is still $5.471/gallon
Carriers are valuing reload quality over raw linehaul
- Especially in Chicago, Ohio Valley, and weather-affected Midwest lanes, carriers are choosing freight that preserves their next move.
- That means a broker with a credible reload story can win coverage even without being top dollar.
Small fleets are still operating defensively
- Elevated diesel and stricter compliance enforcement keep smaller carriers selective and financially cautious.
- On critical loads, favor incumbent carriers and re-verify assigned driver details if a substitution occurs.
The cheapest truck will fail more often on disrupted lanes
- Cheap capacity tends to be cheap because it has one or more of these issues:
- weak route knowledge
- no reload plan
- poor communication discipline
- high sensitivity to detention or delays
- On flood-affected freight, that discount is often false economy.
π‘οΈ Risk Controls For Todayβs Freight
π Probability-Weighted 24β72 Hour Outlook
Base case β 55%
- Open-deck stays firm
- Reefer remains the most underposted execution market
- Van stays balanced but not cheap
- Friday into Saturday offers the cleanest Midwest recovery window
Stress case β 30%
- Midwest delays linger longer than expected
- Monday rain refreshes detour risk
- Western wind and northern-tier disruptions slow equipment repositioning
- Late-cover freight becomes materially more expensive than morning quotes
Relief case β 15%
- Some clean van lanes improve late Friday
- LTL/Partial absorbs overflow effectively
- A portion of Midwest backlog clears without major appointment fallout
- Relief would still be lane-specific, not broad-based.
β
Todayβs Priority Action Plan
Re-segment your board immediately
- Bucket 1: Midwest flood-exposed open-deck
- Bucket 2: Reefer and PFF-sensitive freight
- Bucket 3: Heavy haul with permit/reroute risk
- Bucket 4: Clean van lanes worth negotiating
- Bucket 5: Freight that can convert to LTL/Partial
Cover in this order
- Midwest flatbed
- Heavy haul with route complexity
- Urgent reefer
- Weekend freight
- Clean van after hard freight is secured
Audit every specialized load
- Confirm whether βspecializedβ is truly required
- This is one of the easiest margin wins on the board today.
Change your quoting standard
- Use paid rates as the operating baseline
- Add accessorials separately
- Shorten quote validity on weather-sensitive freight
Pre-book the best Midwest window
- Late Friday into Saturday is the best current recovery opportunity
- Do not leave weekend freight to Friday spot buying
Prepare customers for Monday now
- Tell them upfront that Monday freight may need more padding, more flexibility, and more money if weather risk rebuilds.
Track these desk metrics by close
- First-call cover ratio
- Minutes to cover by mode
- Quote-to-book variance
- Loads requiring post-quote route or accessorial adjustment
- Carrier fall-off rate on weather-exposed freight
π§Ύ Bottom Line
- Todayβs market is not getting loose; it is getting more selective.
- Open-deck still controls the board, reefer has the strongest real execution premium, and specialized is the best place to avoid overpaying.
- The brokers who win today will cover Midwest risk freight early, price from paid behavior, convert flexible freight into partials where appropriate, and sell execution certainty instead of defending every nickel of rate.
π
This Day in History
1635: The first public school in the United States, the Boston Latin School, is founded.
1918: World War I: The British Royal Navy makes a raid in an attempt to neutralise the Belgian port of Bruges-Zeebrugge.
1949: Chinese Civil War: Establishment of the People's Liberation Army Navy.
π Quote of the Day
"Making money isn't hard in itself... What's hard is to earn it doing something worth devoting one's life to."
β Carlos Ruiz Zafon