๐ Daily Market Intelligence Report
Thursday, June 04, 2026
7:00 AM CST
๐ Top-Line Summary
The spot market is experiencing a structural shift today as record-high carrier premiums collide with peak summer produce harvests and localized weather disruptions. Real-time spot market data shows total available loads holding strong at 198,916, with the national average spot rate firming at $3.04/mile. A landmark Supreme Court ruling on broker liability (Montgomery v. Caribe Transport II) is forcing brokers to aggressively tighten carrier qualification standards, effectively shrinking the usable carrier pool and driving dry van carrier premiums to an extraordinary $0.36/mile. This compliance-driven capacity contraction is exacerbated by severe river flooding in the Midwest and South, which has disrupted key corridors like I-29 and I-35, while AAA diesel at $5.394/gallon maintains a rigid cost floor for carriers.
Insight
Partial freight growth is starting to reinforce truckload pricing
The rise in LTL and partial volume is an early sign that flexible shippers are breaking up truckload demand instead of chasing todayโs van and reefer premiums. That keeps total load counts from falling sharply, but it does little to ease pressure on true truckload freight with hard delivery windows, which is why spot pricing can stay firm even when headline availability still looks healthy.
- Dense Southeast lanes are likely to lose easy fill-in freight first.
- Stable load counts should not be read as a sign of loosening truckload conditions.
โฝ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Midwest River Flooding (Midwest States (KS, MO, SD)): Slow-moving thunderstorms and excessive rainfall have triggered severe flooding, particularly affecting low-lying areas and major freight corridors like I-29 and I-35. This could delay transit times, force detours, and temporarily restrict open-deck and flatbed capacity as drivers avoid flooded routes.
- Southern River Flooding (Southern States (TX, AR, GA)): Minor to moderate river flooding is occurring along the Nueces River and other southern basins, threatening local roads and agricultural zones. This may disrupt regional freight movement and delay loading/unloading at facilities near flooded lowlands along the I-10 and I-95 corridors.
- Pacific Northwest River Flooding (Washington State (WA, Chelan County)): Minor flooding on the Stehekin River is inundating local access roads. While localized, this could delay specialized and regional deliveries in north-central Washington.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Midwest flooding looks more like a rolling disruption than a one-day event
Flood-related delays across Kansas, Missouri and South Dakota are unlikely to clear cleanly after today. Kansas is taking the most immediate rainfall, South Dakota gets a brief improvement window Friday, and Missouri turns more active again late weekend into Monday, which should keep detours, missed appointments and open-deck routing friction elevated on north-south freight.
- Friday into early Saturday is the cleanest recovery window for repositioning.
- Sunday and Monday are the next likely pressure points for I-29 and I-35 planning, especially on flatbed and oversize freight.
๐ฐ Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Diesel futures remain highly volatile due to geopolitical tensions in the Middle East affecting crude supplies, keeping retail diesel prices elevated at $5.394/gallon and maintaining high fuel surcharges.
- Carrier Financial Health: Smaller carriers and owner-operators are facing extreme financial pressure from the combination of high operating costs and stricter broker vetting standards following recent liability rulings. This is accelerating market consolidation as capacity shifts toward larger, well-capitalized fleets.
- Economic Indicators: Strong agricultural exports and reshoring-driven industrial manufacturing continue to inject steady volume into the domestic freight network, offsetting broader consumer retail softness.
๐ฐ Impactful News Analysis
-
Broker Liability Ruling Triggers Structural Shift in Carrier Vetting and Spot Rates ๐:
The Supreme Court's refusal to shield brokers from negligent hiring claims (Montgomery v. Caribe Transport II) has fundamentally altered risk management. Brokers must immediately tighten carrier qualification standards, which is restricting the active carrier pool and driving spot rates to record highs. To mitigate risk, brokers should avoid last-minute spot sourcing, prioritize highly vetted carriers, and clearly communicate to shippers that compliance-driven capacity comes with a premium.
-
Strong Grain Exports and Fuel Costs Strain Agricultural Supply Chains ๐:
Record grain inventories in the western Corn Belt and a 12% year-over-year surge in exports are driving massive demand for rail, barge, and truck capacity. However, high diesel costs (averaging $5.394/gallon) are inflating freight expenses. Brokers should target grain-producing regions for backhaul opportunities but must prepare for intense competition for open-deck and hopper capacity as agricultural demand remains robust.
-
Montgomery v. Caribe Transport II: The New Reality of Freight Broker Liability ๐:
This landmark ruling exposes freight brokers to direct liability for negligent carrier selection. Brokers can no longer rely solely on active FMCSA authority; they must implement rigorous, multi-layered vetting processes (including safety ratings, SMS scores, and insurance verification). This operational adjustment will increase administrative costs but is essential to protect against catastrophic claims.
News Insight
The compliance premium will be widest on short-notice freight
The new liability environment is set to hit same-day tenders, weekend pickups and high-value shipments first, because those loads leave the least time to clear insurance, safety and identity checks. Posted board rates are becoming least reliable exactly where service urgency is highest, so the spread between the cheapest visible option and the usable carrier is likely to widen most on late-booked freight.
- Lane-specific benches of already-vetted carriers are becoming more valuable than large generic carrier lists.
- Speed-sensitive freight will increasingly carry a compliance premium on top of the normal spot premium.
๐บ๏ธ Regional & Lane Analysis
๐ Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast is currently the most lucrative region for freight brokers due to the convergence of peak summer produce harvests (blueberries, peaches, watermelons in GA, SC, FL) and localized flooding. This has created severe capacity imbalances and extreme rate volatility, allowing brokers to capitalize on wide spreads between posted and paid rates.
๐ฃ๏ธ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA โ Charlotte, NC: This high-volume regional corridor is experiencing intense volume pressure as outbound Georgia produce (peaches and blueberries) floods the market. Sourcing dry van and reefer capacity is highly competitive, with local carriers prioritizing short-haul agricultural runs over interstate lanes. Sourcing is further complicated by strict broker vetting standards, which has sidelined several unrated carriers.
Savannah, GA โ Memphis, TN: This critical port-to-inland corridor is seeing a surge in import volumes, driving strong demand for dry van and flatbed equipment. However, regional flooding in Georgia and neighboring states has disrupted standard routing, forcing carriers to take longer, more expensive paths.
Regional Insight
Atlanta-Charlotte is being driven by produce velocity more than weather
With Georgia weather relatively stable into early next week, this laneโs tightness is coming from produce turns, not storm-related capacity loss. That usually creates a sharper pricing split by time of day: morning pickups compete with fresh agricultural freight, while late-afternoon reloads tend to find trucks that have finished local harvest and delivery cycles and are ready to reposition north.
- Morning tenders will price against short-haul produce alternatives.
- Late-day pickups and round-trip commitments back into Georgia should buy better acceptance.
Regional Insight
Savannah-Memphis favors front-loaded departures before the next inland weather turn
The port side of this lane is workable today and Friday, but inland conditions become less forgiving as Arkansas and Missouri turn wetter again late weekend into Monday. Freight that clears Savannah before Saturday should see better transit reliability and fewer detention surprises than loads that sit into the next storm cycle moving toward the Memphis side.
- Thursday and Friday departures carry the lowest weather risk on this corridor.
- Keep routing flexible on the westbound inland leg if weekend congestion starts building through Arkansas.
๐ฐ Breaking Down: The Broker Liability Crisis and Tightening Carrier Vetting
The recent Supreme Court ruling in Montgomery v. Caribe Transport II has sent shockwaves through the freight brokerage industry, fundamentally shifting the risk landscape. By greenlighting negligent hiring claims against brokers, the court has effectively ended the era of quick, unvetted carrier onboarding. Real-time market data reflects this structural shift: dry van paid rates have surged to $2.95/mile against a posted average of $2.59/mileโa massive $0.36/mile carrier premium. This premium is not just a reflection of seasonal demand; it is a 'compliance tax.' Brokers are aggressively tightening their carrier qualification standards, sidelining unrated, marginal, or newly registered carriers to mitigate catastrophic liability risks.
This capacity contraction is particularly acute in high-volume lanes where brokers are forced to compete for a smaller pool of highly vetted, 'gold-standard' carriers. Shippers are beginning to realize that the lowest-cost option on a load board often carries unacceptable legal risks. Brokers who proactively educate their customers on this new reality can transition conversations away from pure price and toward risk mitigation, securing higher margins by positioning their rigorous vetting processes as a premium service.
๐ Dry Van: The Surging Carrier Premium and Capacity Contraction
Today's load board data reveals an extraordinary anomaly in the dry van sector: while available loads dropped 2.3% to 27,532, the average paid rate climbed to $2.95/mile, representing a staggering $0.36/mile carrier premium over the posted average of $2.59/mile. Typically, a drop in available loads signals softening demand and falling rates. However, the current market is defying traditional dynamics. This divergence is driven by two primary factors: the rigid cost floor imposed by $5.394/gallon AAA diesel and the sudden contraction of the usable carrier pool due to stricter broker vetting.
Carriers are flatly refusing to accept posted rates that do not cover their elevated operating costs, and they are leveraging the tight supply of highly compliant trucks to demand significant premiums. This is creating a highly polarized market where unvetted carriers are left sitting without loads, while compliant carriers are commanding record-high rates. Brokers must adjust their quoting strategies immediately, using paid averages rather than posted rates to secure capacity, and advise shippers that dry van capacity is no longer a commoditized resource.
๐
Summer Produce Peak and Agricultural Capacity Squeeze
We are currently in the absolute peak of the summer produce season, with high-volume commodities like blueberries, peaches, tomatoes, and watermelons moving in massive quantities out of California, Georgia, South Carolina, and Texas. This seasonal surge is placing immense pressure on temperature-controlled capacity, driving reefer paid rates to $3.30/mile against a posted $3.04/mile. The reefer market is experiencing a classic capacity squeeze, as agricultural shippers monopolize local equipment, forcing non-agricultural shippers to pay steep premiums to secure temperature-controlled trucks.
Over the next 7 to 14 days, this produce pressure will migrate northward as harvests begin in North Carolina, Virginia, and the Midwest. This geographic shift will temporarily tighten capacity in transition zones, creating highly lucrative arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can strategically position equipment. Additionally, the massive grain inventories in the western Corn Belt and strong export demand are compounding the capacity squeeze, as agricultural movements compete with industrial freight for open-deck and flatbed capacity.
๐ Fuel Cost Floors and the Wholesale-Retail Spread
The national AAA diesel price of $5.394/gallon continues to exert a powerful, stabilizing force on the spot market. While diesel has eased slightly from its spring peaks, it remains high enough to act as an absolute floor for carrier rate negotiations. Small fleets and owner-operators, who typically purchase fuel at retail prices, are seeing their margins squeezed to the breaking point. This is driving a highly divergent carrier landscape, where larger fleets utilizing wholesale fuel networks enjoy a significant cost advantage over independent operators.
For freight brokers, this spread represents a critical operational lever. Strategically aligning with larger, asset-based carriers or mid-sized fleets with robust fuel-purchasing programs can unlock more stable capacity and negotiable rates. Conversely, relying on independent owner-operators on the spot market will require paying full-retail fuel premiums, compressing broker margins. Brokers must monitor these fuel dynamics closely, as any sudden spike in crude prices due to ongoing Middle East tensions will immediately translate into higher spot rate demands.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Quote off paid rates, not posted rates, on same-day van and reefer freight.
- Use Friday as the best reset window for Midwest open-deck and oversize moves before storm risk rebuilds late weekend.
- Time Atlanta-area pickups for late afternoon when produce trucks start looking for interstate reloads.
- Build lane-specific vetted carrier pools now; after-hours and weekend sourcing will get more expensive first.
๐ Executive Signal Summary
This is a usable-capacity crunch, not a demand washout. Total available loads are 198,916, up 1.5% day over day, yet the national average spot rate is $3.04/mile. The board still looks full, but the executable truck pool is shrinking because of stricter carrier vetting, high diesel, produce season, and flood-related routing friction.
Dry van is the clearest compliance-premium story on the board. Van paid rates are $2.95/mile versus $2.59/mile posted, a massive +$0.36/mile spread. That is not normal market noise. It means cheap visible capacity is not the same thing as safe, usable capacity.
Reefer remains an urgency market. Reefer paid is $3.30/mile versus $3.04/mile posted, a +$0.26/mile spread on just 8,576 loads. With June produce moving hard out of Georgia, South Carolina, Texas, California, and New Jersey, replacement cost can jump quickly once a truck commits elsewhere.
Open-deck freight is still steering the whole network. Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized account for 148,928 of 198,916 available loads, or about 74.9% of the board, and 54,085 of 64,525 loads moved, or about 83.8% of todayโs execution. When open-deck stays active, it distorts positioning for everyone else.
LTL (Less Than Truckload) and partial are growing because shippers are adapting, not because truckload is loosening. LTL/Partial loads are 13,880, up 6.4%, with paid rates at $1.84/mile versus $1.69/mile posted. Flexible freight is being broken up to avoid full truckload premiums, which actually helps keep truckload pricing firmer for appointment-sensitive freight.
Diesel at $5.394/gallon is still a hard floor. It keeps deadhead unattractive, punishes detention, and makes the closest qualified truck more valuable than a cheaper truck farther away.
๐ What the tape is really saying today
The headline load count is hiding the real shift.
- Total loads at 198,916 are broadly stable.
- Van loads fell to 27,532 and reefer loads fell to 8,576.
- But paid rates rose faster than posted rates, especially in van and reefer.
- That combination usually means screen rates are lagging actual buy rates.
This is a productivity shock layered on top of seasonal demand.
- Flooding on and around I-29 and I-35 reduces daily truck turns.
- Produce freight shortens the decision window for reefer capacity.
- Liability-driven vetting reduces how many carriers brokers are actually willing to use.
- High diesel reduces willingness to reposition.
The market is structurally firmer than a week-to-week glance suggests.
- One month ago, total loads were 158,800 with an average rate of $2.75/mile.
- Today, loads are 198,916 and the average rate is $3.04/mile.
- That is a materially tighter revenue environment even if the past week looks โstable.โ
Posted rates are now negotiation traps in truckload.
- Van: $2.59 posted / $2.95 paid
- Reefer: $3.04 posted / $3.30 paid
- Flatbed: $3.58 posted / $3.73 paid
- Heavy haul: $3.68 posted / $3.78 paid
- Specialized: $3.10 posted / $3.21 paid
- LTL/Partial: $1.69 posted / $1.84 paid
- The lesson is simple: quote off paid reality, not posted optimism.
๐ Mode-by-mode broker playbook
๐ Dry Van
โ๏ธ Reefer
- Market read: 8,576 loads, $3.04 posted, $3.30 paid, +$0.26 spread.
What matters:
- This is still a carrier-led market.
- Produce freight is competing with grocery, foodservice, and pharma cold-chain.
- Every missed appointment is more expensive because reefer trucks have strong alternative reload options.
Best broker move:
- Cover early in the day.
- Lock the full operating package before booking:
- Commodity
- Temperature setpoint
- Pre-cool requirement
- Washout status
- Pallet count
- Seal expectations
- Detention terms
- Receiver firmness
- Sell customers on replacement-cost risk, not just linehaul.
Best tactical angle:
- Target reefers delivering into produce regions for outbound backhauls after produce unloads.
- Offer late-day reloads where carriers finishing short agricultural turns are looking to reposition.
๐ชต Flatbed
- Market read: 85,029 loads, $3.58 posted, $3.73 paid, +$0.15 spread.
What matters:
- Flatbed is active enough that routing friction matters almost as much as price.
- Flooded secondary roads, wet yards, loading delays, and daylight constraints can quietly erase margin.
Best broker move:
- Quote full-turn economics, not just loaded miles.
- Price in:
- Tarping
- Securement time
- Wet-yard delays
- Detours
- Missed crane/crew windows
- Use Friday into early Saturday as your best repositioning window before weather risk rebuilds.
Where to be careful:
- North-south freight touching Kansas, Missouri, South Dakota, Iowa, and Nebraska.
- Freight that looks straightforward on the map but relies on vulnerable local access roads.
๐๏ธ Heavy Haul
- Market read: 40,788 loads, $3.68 posted, $3.78 paid, +$0.10 spread.
What matters:
- Heavy haul is not just a rate market; it is a route-feasibility market.
- Flooding can invalidate the cheapest route and trigger permit changes, escort adjustments, and lost time.
Best broker move:
- Confirm route and permit feasibility before finalizing price.
- Ask carriers specifically what route assumptions are embedded in the quote.
- Build written expectations for reroute, layover, and revised permit timing into the file.
โ๏ธ Specialized
- Market read: 23,111 loads, $3.10 posted, $3.21 paid, +$0.11 spread.
What matters:
- Stable, but not loose.
- Thin-looking spreads can disappear fast if dimensions, loading method, or destination conditions are vague.
Best broker move:
- Use relationship carriers.
- Tighten freight details before posting.
- Avoid โfigure it out on siteโ project freight unless margin is clearly there.
๐ฆ LTL / Partial
- Market read: 13,880 loads, $1.69 posted, $1.84 paid, +$0.15 spread.
What matters:
- This is not cheap capacity; it is adaptive capacity.
- More shippers are using partial and consolidation to dodge truckload premiums.
- That helps keep truckload firmer by stripping out flexible freight first.
Best broker move:
- Convert freight that is:
- Dock-high
- Palletized
- Non-urgent
- Low claim risk
- Flexible on delivery windows
- Tighten accessorial assumptions and appointment rules.
- Use partial most aggressively in dense Southeast lanes, where carriers can still optimize trailer utilization.
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather and routing: where the next 72 hours can bite you
๐บ๏ธ Lane tactics that can make money today
๐ Atlanta, GA โ Charlotte, NC
Best read:
- This lane is being tightened more by produce velocity than by broad weather trouble.
- Morning pickups are competing with short-haul agricultural alternatives.
Best broker posture:
- Favor late-afternoon pickups when local produce cycles start to clear and trucks look north.
- Sell round-trip logic if you can bring carriers back into Georgia.
- If the shipper insists on morning pickup, quote against produce competition, not against generic regional van assumptions.
Practical edge:
- A late-day tender here can buy better acceptance than an early-day tender at the same mileage.
๐ข Savannah, GA โ Memphis, TN
Best read:
- The port side is workable now, but inland risk rises as weather deteriorates again into the weekend.
- Loads that leave before Saturday should have better transit reliability.
Best broker posture:
- Front-load departures today and Friday.
- Keep westbound routing flexible through Arkansas if congestion or flood-related slowdowns build.
- Avoid underpricing detention on loads that sit too long before departure.
Practical edge:
- This is a good lane to win with certainty and timing, not with the cheapest rate.
โ๏ธ Compliance is now a pricing variable
The liability ruling changes dispatch behavior, not just legal language.
- Same-day freight, after-hours freight, and high-value freight now carry a compliance premium in addition to a spot premium.
- The faster the shipment needs to move, the more valuable your already-vetted carrier bench becomes.
Minimum operating standard today:
- Active authority verification
- Current insurance verification
- Current safety review
- Identity consistency across dispatch contacts
- Route/weather acknowledgment on affected lanes
- Time-stamped load file
Why this matters commercially:
- Shippers still anchored to posted rates need to understand that the cheapest visible truck may be the least defensible truck.
- Brokers who explain this well can protect margin without sounding opportunistic.
Best customer framing:
- โWe are not paying for the lowest visible truck; we are paying for legally defensible execution.โ
๐ง Shipper and carrier psychology: how to win the conversation
๐ฐ Margin strategy: where brokers can actually win today
Best margin pockets
- Short-notice van freight where customers are still anchored to posted rates and you can educate them using the +$0.36/mile paid-posted spread.
- Reefer backhauls into or out of produce regions where you can match a truckโs next move.
- Flatbed/heavy haul loads where competitors underquote linehaul but ignore route disruption, tarp time, or permit friction.
Lowest-quality margin
- Freight won by buying cheap off a board with incomplete vetting.
- Weather-affected loads with vague detention terms.
- Weekend loads without a pre-cleared carrier backup plan.
Smart segmentation
- Larger or mid-sized fleets: best for flood-affected, compliance-heavy, detour-prone, and oversize freight.
- Already-vetted smaller carriers and owner-operators: best for short, clean, regional turns with strong reload visibility.
- The goal is not โcheapest truck.โ It is lowest risk-adjusted total cost.
๐ 24โ72 hour operating plan
Before 10 AM
- Cover reefer first, then same-day van, then weather-exposed open-deck.
- Call core vetted carriers before broad posting.
- Reprice any stale customer quote using paid rates, especially van and reefer.
Midday
- Convert flexible truckload shipments into LTL/Partial where service permits.
- Audit any freight touching I-29 or I-35 for appointment slack and route assumptions.
- Build Friday repositioning plans for flatbed and heavy haul.
Afternoon
- Target late-day Atlanta pickups for northbound reload opportunities.
- Lock Savannah westbound departures before weekend weather risk expands inland.
- Stop selling morning assumptions on loads that still are not covered.
End of day
- Pre-book tomorrow morningโs priority freight tonight.
- Clean up every compliance-sensitive file with time-stamped vetting notes.
- Identify which customers need a proactive explanation of the posted-vs-paid gap before they tender tomorrow.
๐ฏ Best broker moves right now
- Price van off $2.95/mile, not $2.59/mile.
- Price reefer off $3.30/mile, not $3.04/mile.
- Use Friday as the reset window for Midwest open-deck and oversize positioning.
- Push flexible freight into LTL/Partial before truckload urgency makes it more expensive.
- Time Atlanta-area pickups later in the day when produce turns are clearing.
- Move Savannah-origin freight before the weekend weather turn inland.
- Treat same-day and weekend freight as compliance-premium freight.
- Sell execution quality and legal defensibility, not just linehaul.
๐ Bottom line
- The market is tighter than the load count looks.
- Dry van has become the clearest compliance-premium mode.
- Reefer is still a timing market first and a price market second.
- Open-deck activity continues to steer national truck positioning.
- Flooding is reducing productivity in ways customers will underestimate.
- Diesel at $5.394/gallon keeps deadhead discipline high and replacement capacity expensive.
- The brokers who win today will cover earlier, vet harder, and quote off paid reality instead of posted fiction.
๐ก 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.
๐
This Day in History
1855: Major Henry C. Wayne departs New York aboard the USS Supply to procure camels to establish the U.S. Camel Corps.
1913: Emily Davison, a suffragette, runs out in front of King George V's horse at The Derby. She is trampled, never regains consciousness, and dies four days later.
1979: Flight Lieutenant Jerry Rawlings takes power in Ghana after a military coup in which General Fred Akuffo is overthrown.
๐ญ Quote of the Day
"Innovation distinguishes between a leader and a follower."
โ Steve Jobs