📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
The national spot freight market is experiencing a massive mid-week volume surge, with total available loads climbing 7.3% overnight to reach 186,081. This growth is entirely driven by an explosive open-deck and specialized freight boom, while enclosed trailer volumes have slightly contracted. The market average rate remains robust at $2.73/mile. Meanwhile, a sudden 20-cent drop in national diesel averages to $5.489/gallon is providing carriers with slight margin relief, though severe Midwest river flooding and high wind events in the Rockies continue to fracture major transcontinental routing and tighten regional capacity pools.
Insight
The volume spike is concentrated, not broad-based
Today’s 7.3% load surge is almost entirely an open-deck story, which matters for pricing discipline: flatbed and heavy haul are tightening the whole network by pulling owner-operators and small fleets away from enclosed freight, even though van and reefer counts softened overnight. That keeps linehaul sticky across the Midwest and argues against assuming a broad market loosening from the diesel drop alone.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Severe River Flooding (Midwest (IL, IA, MI, MO, OH)): Major river flooding is forcing extensive detours along critical freight corridors including I-80, I-90, and I-94. This is severely extending transit times, reducing equipment turnaround, and driving significant rate premiums for open-deck freight moving through the region.
- High Wind Warning (Wyoming (WY, Laramie Range)): West winds 35 to 55 mph with gusts up to 80 mph are expected along the I-25 corridor. This poses a severe blow-over risk for light weight and high-profile vehicles, likely forcing carriers to delay transit or demand hazard pay to operate in the region.
- Freeze Warning (Utah (UT, Millard and Juab Counties)): Sub-freezing temperatures as low as 25 degrees are driving urgent protect-from-freeze (PFF) requirements for temperature-sensitive freight moving through the I-15 corridor, tightening regional reefer capacity.
- Minor River Flooding (Washington (WA, Chelan County)): Minor flooding along the Stehekin River is inundating local roads and corduroy bridges. While not directly impacting major interstates, it is disrupting local first-mile/last-mile routing and agricultural pickups in the region.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Midwest flooding risk extends beyond today’s closures
A brief warm and mostly dry window today is unlikely to normalize routing before more weather arrives. Iowa faces strong storms Thursday, and Illinois, Missouri, Michigan, and Wisconsin all turn wet again Friday, which points to lingering high water, slower drainage, and another round of local detours through the end of the week.
- Mississippi and I-80 corridor crossings booked for late Thursday through Friday need extra transit time and detour pay built in up front.
- Chicago-area pickups moving east or southeast should cover more cleanly than westbound freight trying to cross into Iowa.
Weather Insight
Wyoming wind event will disrupt more than same-day transit
Along the Laramie Range, today’s 35-55 mph winds with gusts to 80 mph are the first leg of a broader disruption, with colder rain and snow expected Thursday into Friday. High-profile vans, empty trailers, and open-deck freight are likely to stagger departures rather than simply wait out a few afternoon gusts, which can delay westbound repositioning into the Rockies and Intermountain West for 24-48 hours.
- Expect carriers to protect morning dispatch decisions and stay firm on hazard premiums through Thursday.
- Transcon loads relying on I-25/I-80 relay timing should carry wider appointment buffers than usual.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Despite the recent 20-cent drop at the pump, global geopolitical tensions (particularly the Iran conflict) are keeping crude oil futures highly volatile, suggesting the recent diesel price relief may be short-lived.
- Carrier Financial Health: The sudden drop in diesel prices combined with surging spot rates in the open-deck sector is providing a critical cash flow injection for flatbed and heavy haul owner-operators, though van carriers remain under pressure from stagnant volumes.
- Economic Indicators: Sustained inflation and high fuel costs continue to pressure consumer goods volumes, while federal infrastructure spending is driving an unprecedented boom in industrial and construction freight.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
Diesel Prices Plummet 20 Cents, Offering Brief Margin Relief 🔗:
The sudden drop in national diesel averages to $5.40-$5.48/gallon provides a critical window for brokers to negotiate slightly better linehaul rates. However, because carriers are accustomed to $5.60+ fuel, they will likely attempt to retain the difference as profit. Brokers should use the verified drop in fuel costs as leverage during rate negotiations, particularly on longer lengths of haul where fuel is a major cost component.
-
Local Businesses and Fleets Feel Pressure from Geopolitical Fuel Spikes 🔗:
Despite the recent national average drop, regional fuel volatility remains a massive pain point for local and regional fleets. The ongoing conflict in Iran is causing unpredictable price swings at the pump, forcing carriers to demand higher base rates to insulate themselves from sudden fuel cost spikes. Brokers must account for this risk premium when pricing contract freight or multi-day spot loads.
-
Service Industries Overhaul Fuel Surcharge Models Amid Inflation 🔗:
Across various logistics and service sectors, companies are publicly overhauling their fuel surcharge and pricing models to combat 50% year-over-year diesel cost increases. For freight brokers, this signals that carriers will be increasingly rigid about accessorials and fuel pass-throughs. Transparency in how fuel is calculated on a load-by-load basis will be critical to securing capacity from sophisticated mid-sized fleets.
News Insight
The diesel break is most usable on repeat freight, not distressed freight
The 20-cent drop in diesel is real leverage on lanes with balanced capacity and short lead times, especially multi-load van awards and clean eastbound Midwest freight. It is far less likely to move the buy side on flood-affected, open-deck, or highly time-sensitive shipments, where carriers will treat the fuel savings as a hedge against the next price swing rather than a reason to cut linehaul.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest is currently the most volatile and opportunity-rich freight region in the country. A massive surge in flatbed and heavy haul demand is colliding with severe, widespread river flooding across Illinois, Iowa, and Michigan. This flooding is fracturing major transcontinental corridors (I-80, I-90, I-94), forcing extensive detours and severely reducing equipment turnaround times. As a result, capacity is trapped, and carriers are commanding massive premiums to operate in the region. The open-deck market is absorbing all available trucks, leaving van and reefer shippers scrambling for the remaining capacity.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL → Davenport, IA: This critical I-80 corridor lane is currently ground zero for Midwest flooding disruptions. The Des Plaines and Mississippi river basins are experiencing severe flooding, forcing localized detours and slowing transit times significantly. Simultaneously, industrial and construction demand out of the Chicago market is surging.
Gary, IN → Columbus, OH: This heavy industrial lane is experiencing a massive surge in flatbed and specialized freight volumes. While it avoids the worst of the Illinois/Iowa flooding, it is catching the secondary effects of the regional capacity squeeze as trucks are pulled westward to cover lucrative emergency freight.
Regional Insight
Chicago-Davenport is becoming a timing play as much as a rate play
The best execution window is front-half today into early Thursday, before Iowa storms and Friday rain add another layer of delay risk to already compromised river crossings. Loads that miss that window are more likely to convert into weekend spillover freight, which usually widens the gap between quoted and actual buy rates on short Midwest open-deck hauls.
- Ask for exact crossing plans before booking; generic “I-80” routing is not enough right now.
- Favor carriers with outbound reloads east of the river, since deadhead recovery has become harder to model.
🚛 Flatbed & Heavy Haul: The Spring Infrastructure Boom is Here
The real-time load board data paints a staggering picture of the current open-deck market. With flatbed volumes surging 9.0% to nearly 87,000 loads and heavy haul jumping 9.5% to over 41,000 loads, these two equipment types now represent a massive portion of the total spot market opportunity. Paid rates are reflecting this desperation for capacity, with flatbed clearing at $3.28/mile and heavy haul at $3.29/mile. This is not a localized event; it is a nationwide absorption of specialized equipment driven by federal infrastructure projects, seasonal construction, and energy sector mobilization. For brokers, this means routing guides for open-deck freight are likely failing at a high rate. The $0.14/mile spread between posted and paid flatbed rates indicates that shippers are consistently having to bump their offers to secure trucks. Brokers who can source reliable multi-axle and step-deck capacity right now hold immense pricing power over their customers.
📈 Diesel Relief vs. Spot Rate Stickiness
Today's news highlights a sudden and sharp 20-cent drop in national diesel averages, bringing the price down to $5.489/gallon. Historically, a drop of this magnitude would immediately soften spot rates as fuel surcharges adjust downward. However, the real-time load board data shows market average rates holding completely firm at $2.73/mile, with paid rates for van and reefer actually showing slight premiums over posted rates. This stickiness suggests two things: First, the underlying capacity network is tighter than load-to-truck ratios imply, likely due to carriers refusing to operate at lower margins. Second, carriers are successfully retaining the fuel savings as profit rather than passing it back to brokers. The ongoing geopolitical instability (highlighted by the Iran conflict in today's news) is giving carriers the justification they need to keep rates high, arguing that the fuel drop is temporary and risk premiums must remain intact.
🏗️ Midwest Flooding Fractures the I-80/I-90 Corridors
The extensive Flood Warnings (WXD5612322) across Illinois, Iowa, and Michigan are creating a severe infrastructure bottleneck right as the spring freight season peaks. The Des Plaines River and Mississippi River basins are cresting, threatening critical arteries like I-80, I-90, and I-94. When these major transcontinental routes are compromised, the impact on capacity is exponential. Trucks are forced onto secondary highways, reducing average speeds, extending transit times by hours or days, and ultimately removing available hours-of-service from the regional capacity pool. This infrastructure constraint is directly visible in the load board data, where available loads have surged 7.3% overnight. Shippers are pushing freight into the market, but trucks are moving slower, creating a backlog. Brokers operating in the Midwest must factor in an additional 10-15% transit time for the next 48-72 hours and price accordingly, as carriers will demand detention and detour pay for navigating the compromised network.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Do not generalize today’s load surge into a full-market tightening call; open-deck is driving the move, but it is still lifting enclosed pricing indirectly in the Midwest.
- Price Chicago-to-Iowa freight for execution risk through Friday, not just mileage, because another round of storms could keep detours in place longer than shippers expect.
- Use diesel relief as a negotiating tool on repeat van freight and cleaner eastbound lanes, not on weather-disrupted or specialized moves.
- Expect Rockies repositioning to slow into Thursday as Wyoming wind and follow-on wintry weather interrupt normal relay timing.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
This is a mode-split market, not a broad market breakout.
- Total available loads are 186,081, up from 173,450, but the real force is open-deck concentration.
- Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized combine for 148,212 loads, which is about 79.6% of all visible spot volume.
- If a broker reads today as “everything is tight,” they will overpay van and underquote open-deck risk.
Execution is tighter than the headline load count suggests.
- Total loads moved today are 61,172, versus 68,966 at the comparable capture yesterday.
- That means the market is showing more available freight but fewer completed moves so far, which is a classic sign of slower truck turns, harder coverage, and more freight waiting on real execution.
The national average rate is holding firm because productivity is impaired.
- Average rate is $2.73/mile, unchanged from yesterday, even with softer van and reefer counts and lower diesel at $5.489/gal.
- That tells you the market is pricing turn-time loss, weather friction, and equipment migration, not just raw demand.
Open-deck is pulling capacity away from enclosed freight.
- Flatbed: 86,924 loads at $3.28 paid
- Heavy haul: 41,210 loads at $3.29 paid
- Specialized: 20,078 loads at $2.93 paid
- Small fleets and owner-operators who can choose are following the best daily yield, which keeps van and reefer from loosening as much as their volume dip would normally imply.
Fuel relief is usable leverage only on clean freight.
- Diesel at $5.489/gal helps on repeat van freight, balanced lanes, and short-lead-time awards.
- It is not strong leverage on flood-affected Midwest freight, open-deck project cargo, PFF (Protect From Freeze) reefer, or hazard-exposed Rockies freight.
📊 What the market is actually pricing
The biggest pricing signal is the paid-versus-posted gap.
- Flatbed: $3.28 paid vs. $3.14 posted → +$0.14
- Heavy haul: $3.29 paid vs. $3.20 posted → +$0.09
- Reefer: $2.79 paid vs. $2.72 posted → +$0.07
- Van: $2.48 paid vs. $2.42 posted → +$0.06
- Specialized: $2.93 paid vs. $2.90 posted → +$0.03
- LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload / Partial): $1.79 paid vs. $1.76 posted → +$0.03
Flatbed is the clearest “posted rates are stale” market.
- A +$0.14 spread means brokers quoting open-deck off board asks without execution adjustments are still underestimating the real buy.
- In today’s conditions, that gap often widens further on loads with tarping, jobsite risk, flood detours, or poor reload geometry.
Heavy haul averages understate lane-level danger.
- The +$0.09 gap is meaningful, but the bigger issue is that reroutes can create permitting and axle-planning friction that a national average cannot capture.
- Heavy haul is not expensive just because capacity is tight; it is expensive because mistakes compound quickly.
Van and reefer are softer in count, not truly loose in execution.
- Van loads are 20,694 and reefer loads are 7,410, both down slightly, but their paid premiums remain intact.
- That means the market still rewards carriers for selectivity, especially when weather, timing, or reload quality are imperfect.
Week-over-week context matters.
- One week ago, total loads were 194,353 and average rate was $2.71/mile.
- Today, total loads are lower at 186,081, but the average rate is higher at $2.73/mile.
- That is a strong sign that capacity productivity and mode mix are supporting pricing more than topline volume alone.
Month-over-month, the floor is clearly higher.
- One month ago, average rate was $2.60/mile.
- Today’s $2.73/mile confirms the market is carrying a meaningfully firmer floor, especially where fuel, weather, and industrial freight intersect.
🚛 Mode-by-Mode Broker Playbook
🟧 Flatbed
🏗️ Heavy Haul
🚐 Dry Van
🧊 Reefer
🟪 Specialized
📦 LTL/Partial
Read: Still useful as an account-defense product, not today’s arbitrage play
- 9,765 loads
- $1.79 paid
- +$0.03 over posted
What to do today
- Offer partials to customers who are resisting truckload inflation.
- Sell it honestly as:
- cost-efficient
- flexible on timing
- better for non-urgent freight
- Use it to save relationships where the shipper’s first reaction is sticker shock.
What changed from yesterday’s tone
- The visible pricing gap is smaller now, so this is more about customer retention and mode conversion than obvious same-day spread capture.
🗺️ Regional Priorities for the Next 24–72 Hours
🌊 Midwest: price the turn loss, not just the mileage
Core read
- Flooding across Illinois, Iowa, Michigan, Missouri, and Ohio is still reducing truck velocity.
- Even where main routes remain technically passable, crossings, local access, and secondary-road detours are burning hours-of-service and killing same-day reload plans.
Broker move
- Add transit padding and sell it early.
- Build quotes with:
- linehaul
- fuel
- detour / route inefficiency
- detention
- layover risk where justified
- Favor regional carriers already inside the zone over inbound trucks that look cheaper on paper.
🌉 Chicago, IL → Davenport, IA
🏭 Gary, IN → Columbus, OH
🌬️ Wyoming I-25 / I-80 corridor
❄️ Utah I-15 corridor
💵 Pricing and Negotiation Tactics That Win Today
Use diesel relief surgically, not emotionally.
- Best leverage lanes
- repeat van freight
- eastbound Midwest freight with clean access
- short-haul and medium-haul lanes with balanced capacity
- Weak leverage lanes
- flatbed
- heavy haul
- flood-affected Midwest freight
- PFF reefer
- Wyoming hazard-exposed moves
Sell “certainty of execution,” not just rate.
- Shippers often accept higher pricing when the broker explains:
- where the cost is coming from
- what specific service failure it prevents
- why cheaper capacity is less reliable today
- The psychology matters: customers resist vague inflation, but they accept documented operational cost.
Quote from paid behavior, not posted hope.
- If you are using $3.14 to buy flatbed in a disrupted Midwest lane, you are likely underwriting the load.
- If you are using $2.42 to buy same-day van in a flood-affected origin, you are probably behind the executable market.
Use two-option pricing on volatile freight.
- Option 1: Economy / flexible pickup
- broader pickup window
- lower service certainty
- Option 2: Priority / committed capacity
- higher cost
- stronger pickup confidence
- This works especially well on Midwest weather-exposed freight because it lets the shipper choose the pain instead of arguing the premise.
Keep accessorials visible.
- Break out:
- fuel
- tarp
- detour / route inefficiency
- PFF / temperature protection
- hazard / wind exposure where defensible
- detention
- layover
- permit / reroute cost on heavy haul
- Clear pricing structure protects margin and reduces end-of-load disputes.
🧠 Behavioral Signals Smart Brokers Should Exploit
Carriers are treating fuel savings as a hedge, not a discount trigger.
- They do not trust lower diesel to last, so they are trying to keep the benefit rather than pass it back immediately.
- That means negotiation works better when you bring them:
- repeat business
- fast load/unload
- good reload probability
- low claims/admin friction
Shippers will misread the top-line surge.
- Many customers will see 186,081 loads and assume there must be ample truck supply.
- Your counter is simple: available freight rose, but executed moves fell, so the network is not getting looser; it is getting slower.
Owner-operators will chase daily yield over category loyalty.
- In a market where flatbed and heavy haul are paying $3.28 and $3.29, some flexible operators shift focus quickly.
- That is why enclosed freight can stay sticky even when van and reefer load counts dip.
Cheap inbound trucks into bad origins are often false savings.
- The cheapest truck on the phone is usually cheapest because it has weak reload prospects, poor local knowledge, or higher tolerance for risk you will end up paying for later.
🛡️ Risk Controls for Today’s Freight
📈 Probability-Weighted Outlook
Base case — 60%
- Open-deck stays tight through Thursday
- Midwest flood detours keep pricing elevated
- Van remains selectively firm
- Reefer stays premium on weather-sensitive freight
- Posted-to-paid spreads remain widest in flatbed and heavy haul
Stress case — 25%
- Additional Midwest rain extends the detour cycle
- Chicago-to-Iowa turns worsen
- Late-day buy rates rise faster than morning quotes
- Rockies relay timing slips into a wider transcon disruption
Relief case — 15%
- Some van negotiations improve on cleaner eastbound lanes
- A few Midwest appointments cover more smoothly than expected
- Diesel relief helps on repeat freight
- Relief would still be lane-specific, not broad-based
✅ Today’s Priority Action Plan
Re-segment the board immediately
- Separate freight into:
- Midwest flood-exposed
- open-deck / project
- reefer / PFF
- clean van negotiation lanes
- mode-convertible LTL/partial opportunities
Cover in this order
- Midwest flatbed
- Midwest heavy haul
- urgent reefer with freeze sensitivity
- time-sensitive van in disrupted origins
- everything else after core risk freight is secured
Change your quoting standard
- Quote from paid market behavior
- Add named accessorials instead of hiding risk inside one all-in number
Use diesel leverage where it can actually work
- Push on repeat van lanes
- Push on clean eastbound freight
- Do not waste time trying to negotiate down carriers on hard open-deck or weather-disrupted freight
Ask one extra question on every Midwest load
- “What is the actual crossing and reload plan?”
- That single question will filter out a lot of weak capacity
Protect customer expectations before the freight gets covered
- Tell them now if the lane needs:
- extra transit time
- detour tolerance
- priority pricing
- flex appointments
Use LTL/partial as a relationship tool
- When truckload pricing shocks the customer, do not just cut your margin
- Offer a different operating model
Track four desk metrics by close
- first-call cover ratio
- minutes to cover by mode
- quote-to-book variance
- loads requiring route-specific adjustment after initial quote
🧾 Bottom Line
- Today’s load surge is real, but it is concentrated in open-deck.
- The most important hidden signal is weaker execution throughput, not just higher board volume.
- Flatbed and heavy haul are where the money is, but also where sloppy quoting gets punished fastest.
- Van and reefer are not loose enough to price casually, especially where weather or timing erodes truck productivity.
- The winning brokers today will cover early, quote structurally, use diesel leverage selectively, and refuse to confuse posted rates with executable reality.
📅 This Day in History
1915: World War I: The use of poison gas in World War I escalates when chlorine gas is released as a chemical weapon in the Second Battle of Ypres.
1930: The United Kingdom, Japan and the United States sign the London Naval Treaty regulating submarine warfare and limiting shipbuilding.
1992: A series of gas explosions rip through the streets in Guadalajara, Mexico, killing 206.
💭 Quote of the Day
"Just because you are happy it does not mean that the day is perfect but that you have looked beyond its imperfections."
— Bob Marley