📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report
Tuesday, June 16, 2026
7:00 AM CST
📊 Top-Line Summary
On Tuesday, June 16, 2026, the domestic spot market continues its upward momentum, with total available loads rising 3.7% overnight to 165,824, and the market average rate ticking up to $3.04/mile. High operating costs persist as the national AAA diesel average sits at $5.185/gallon, establishing a rigid cost floor that limits carrier deadhead and keeps capacity highly localized. Peak summer produce harvests in the Southeast and West Coast are driving intense temperature-controlled demand, while severe flash flooding in Texas and river flooding in the Midwest disrupt major transit corridors like I-80 and I-35. For freight brokers, these regional capacity imbalances and the widening spread between posted and paid rates across flatbed, reefer, and heavy-haul sectors present high-margin arbitrage opportunities.
⛽ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Flash Flood Warning (South Texas (TX, Southeastern Jackson County and Duval County)): Heavy rain and flash flooding may disrupt local freight movements and delay transit along regional routes. Saturated soils will lead to quick runoff, potentially flooding low-lying areas and highways.
- River Flooding (Midwest (IL, IA, IN, KS, MO, including Peoria, Bureau, and LaSalle counties)): Minor to moderate river flooding is occurring and forecast to continue, impacting bottomlands and low-lying roads near major corridors like I-80 and I-74. This could force open-deck and dry van equipment to take lengthy detours, tightening regional capacity.
- Rio Grande Flooding (South Texas and Louisiana (TX, LA, OK, near Laredo and Calcasieu)): Minor flooding is forecast for the Rio Grande at Laredo, with the river expected to rise above flood stage. This could disrupt cross-border freight operations and delay shipments along the critical I-35 corridor.
- High Wind Warning (Southeast Wyoming (WY, North Snowy Range Foothills, Laramie Range)): West winds of 30 to 40 mph with gusts up to 65 mph are expected along Interstate 80 between mile markers 240 and 290. These strong crosswinds pose a severe hazard to light weight or high-profile vehicles, including tractor-trailers, and may lead to localized closures or delays.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Midwest flooding risk rises again Wednesday
River flooding around Illinois and adjacent Midwest markets is not a one-day disruption. Conditions briefly improve this afternoon, but another round of heavy storms Wednesday is likely to refresh high water and extend detours near low-lying approaches to I-74 and I-80. The biggest exposure is on flatbed, heavy haul, and time-definite reefer freight, where a short route change can quickly turn into a missed delivery window or per mit reset.
- Quote Midwest open-deck freight with an extra half-day of transit cushion through Thursday.
- Per mit loads moving through Illinois, Indiana, and Missouri should be routed and filed earlier than normal.
Weather Insight
South Texas turns into a timing market, not a weeklong shutdown
Flash flooding around South Texas is most likely to disrupt pickup and first-leg linehaul today, with rain easing and hotter, drier conditions returning by Wednesday in the Laredo corridor. The operational drag will come less from ongoing rainfall and more from residual backups at border facilities, local road restrictions, and missed appointment windows that ripple into tomorrow's reloads.
- Cross-border freight near Laredo is more likely to see velocity loss through midweek than outright closure.
- Recoveries will favor carriers already positioned in-market, since high diesel costs still discourage long deadhead into South Texas.
Weather Insight
Wyoming wind risk matters for transcon reload planning
High-profile and lightweight freight moving across southeast Wyoming faces a real chance of delay along I-80 today as crosswinds gust toward 65 mph. Even short closures or escorted traffic can break team schedules and push western reloads into tomorrow, which matters for brokers counting on precise turn times into Utah, Colorado, or the Midwest.
💰 Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Diesel futures have eased slightly following the announcement of a US-Iran interim peace deal, which has put downward pressure on global crude oil markets. However, retail diesel prices remain high at $5.185/gallon, maintaining a high cost floor for carriers.
- Carrier Financial Health: Carrier financial health remains under pressure due to high operating costs, particularly fuel. While spot rates have firmed, the high cost of diesel is squeezing margins, leading to continued capacity consolidation and a reduction in active owner-operators.
- Economic Indicators: Economic indicators show steady demand, with retail inventory replenishment and peak summer construction activity driving robust freight volumes. Importers continue to pull cargo volumes forward to preempt potential tariffs, maintaining strong port activity.
📰 Impactful News Analysis
-
Amazon Opens Internal Less-Than-Truckload Network to External Shippers 🔗:
Amazon's confirmation that it will open its internal LTL network to external shippers represents a major competitive shift in the LTL sector, directly challenging established giants like Old Dominion Freight Line. For brokers, this could introduce a highly efficient, tech-driven capacity source, potentially disrupting traditional LTL pricing models. Brokers should monitor how this impacts regional LTL capacity and prepare to integrate Amazon's network into their sourcing strategies to offer competitive rates to shippers.
-
Intermodal Drayage Exposed as Weak Link Amid Rising Freight Demand 🔗:
While rising intermodal demand is not breaking the rail network, drayage fleets are struggling to find enough drivers to handle the cargo, exposing a critical bottleneck at the end of the trip. Drayage capacity was cut significantly during the recent freight downturn, and the sudden surge in demand is creating localized congestion. Brokers should expect delays at major rail ramps and advise customers to build extra lead time into their intermodal shipments, while proactively securing drayage capacity.
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Global Crude Prices Ease Following US-Iran Peace Deal; Export Duties Hiked 🔗:
The announcement of a US-Iran interim peace deal has caused global crude oil prices to slip, though retail fuel prices remain unchanged for now. Concurrently, some governments have hiked export duties on diesel, which could impact global supply dynamics. For brokers, the potential reopening of the Strait of Hormuz could eventually lower fuel surcharges, but the immediate impact is a highly volatile pricing environment. Brokers should maintain flexible fuel surcharge agreements with carriers and keep shippers informed of potential cost shifts.
News Insight
Amazon's LTL entry is most disruptive on dense retail lanes first
The near-term pressure will be concentrated on short- and medium-haul freight moving between major population centers, where network density and dock efficiency matter more than custom handling. That makes this more of a margin story for brokers in metro-heavy LTL freight than an immediate threat across the full market, especially on irregular freight, accessorial-heavy moves, and shipper-specific handling requirements.
- Expect incumbents to defend core accounts with selective discounts before any broad market repricing shows up.
- Service consistency, claims handling, and appointment per formance will decide adoption as much as linehaul price.
News Insight
Drayage friction will keep spilling freight into truckload
The practical read-through from rail-ramp and port drayage strain is that more import freight will convert to short-fuse truckload when dwell charges start to outweigh intermodal savings. That dynamic especially supports Southeast dry van demand around Savannah and inland relay markets like Charlotte and Atlanta, where shippers will pay up for speed once containers stop moving cleanly.
🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis
📍 Primary Region Focus: Southeast US
The Southeast US is currently the most strategically important region for freight brokers, driven by the collision of peak summer produce harvests and a surge in import volumes at major ports like Savannah. Sourcing temperature-controlled equipment is exceptionally difficult, with carriers commanding significant premiums. Additionally, regional weather disruptions, including localized flooding, are complicating routing and tightening open-deck capacity. This high-volatility environment creates excellent arbitrage opportunities for brokers who can secure reliable capacity.
🛣️ Key Lane Watch
Atlanta, GA → Miami, FL: This lane is experiencing high volume as peak summer produce from Georgia and South Carolina moves south into Florida's major consumer markets. Sourcing reefer capacity is highly competitive, with carriers prioritizing local agricultural runs over long-haul outbound trips. Dry van capacity is more accessible but still faces upward rate pressure due to high fuel costs. The return trip out of Florida remains soft, making the inbound leg highly lucrative for carriers.
Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC: This critical Southeast corridor is seeing a surge in volume driven by strong import activity at the Port of Savannah, as shippers pull inventory forward to preempt potential tariffs. Flatbed and dry van demand are both elevated, with flatbed capacity further constrained by regional construction projects. Sourcing drayage and truckload capacity out of the port is increasingly difficult due to localized driver shortages.
Regional Insight
Savannah premiums sit in speed, not just linehaul
On Savannah-to-Charlotte freight, the strongest pricing leverage is in same-day port pulls, transload execution, and dependable appointment recovery when containers miss their first window. Carriers that can clear the port and turn quickly will keep winning over cheaper trucks, so the most defensible broker margin is attached to execution-heavy freight rather than commodity linehaul alone.
- Morning port pulls should tighten first as drayage fleets protect driver hours and chassis turns.
- Drop-trailer and transload options can outperform pure truckload bids when shippers are trying to avoid demurrage.
📰 Breaking Down: Amazon Opens LTL Network to Shippers
Amazon's official entry into the external less-than-truckload (LTL) market is the most significant structural development in the trucking industry this year. By opening its massive, highly optimized internal LTL network to external shippers, Amazon is positioning itself as a direct competitor to established LTL giants like Old Dominion Freight Line. This move leverages Amazon's unparalleled logistics infrastructure, advanced routing technology, and massive terminal footprint, potentially offering shippers lower transit times and highly competitive pricing.
For freight brokers, this development is a double-edged sword. On one hand, it introduces a highly efficient, tech-enabled capacity source into a traditionally consolidated and rigid LTL market. Brokers who can quickly integrate Amazon's LTL network into their sourcing platforms may gain a significant competitive advantage, offering their customers lower rates and better visibility. On the other hand, Amazon's entry could trigger a pricing war, compressing margins for traditional LTL carriers and brokers who rely on established carrier relationships.
In the short term, brokers should expect traditional LTL carriers to defend their market share aggressively, potentially leading to short-term rate discounts or enhanced service offerings. Shippers will likely be eager to test Amazon's network, meaning brokers must be prepared to discuss this new option. The long-term impact will depend on how quickly Amazon can scale its external operations and whether its network can handle the diverse, non-standardized freight that traditional LTL carriers specialize in. Brokers must stay agile, monitor regional LTL capacity shifts, and begin exploring integration opportunities with Amazon's logistics arm.
🚛 Reefer: Peak Summer Produce Collides with Regional Flooding
The temperature-controlled sector is currently experiencing its most volatile period of the year. The full summer produce harvest is underway, with peak volumes of blueberries, peaches, tomatoes, and watermelons moving out of California, Georgia, South Carolina, and Texas. This seasonal surge has pushed reefer demand to its maximum, with available loads holding steady at 7,881. Sourcing pre-cooled, reliable reefer equipment has become exceptionally difficult, driving a massive $0.24/mile carrier premium, with average paid rates reaching $3.39/mile against a posted average of $3.15/mile.
This seasonal capacity squeeze is being severely compounded by active weather disruptions. Severe flash flooding in South Texas (WX3BC48EBE) and ongoing river flooding in the Midwest (WXB37AAE80) are disrupting critical transit corridors like I-35 and I-80. These floods are forcing carriers to take lengthy detours, extending transit times and reducing the velocity of reefer equipment. When trucks are delayed by weather, they cannot return to shipping origins to pick up the next harvest, creating localized capacity vacuums.
For brokers, this collision of peak demand and weather-driven delays requires active capacity management. Shippers of perishable goods cannot afford delays, making them highly willing to pay premium rates to secure guaranteed capacity. Brokers should focus on securing carriers well in advance, verifying that equipment is pre-cooled, and routing shipments around active flood zones. Additionally, brokers can find high-margin opportunities by matching inbound reefer carriers with backhaul loads, as carriers are eager to return to high-paying produce origins.
📅 Mid-June Produce Transitions and End-of-Quarter Surges
As we cross the midpoint of June, freight brokers must prepare for a dual-force market tightening driven by seasonal produce transitions and the upcoming end-of-quarter shipping surge. Currently, the Southeast produce season is at its absolute peak, with Georgia and South Carolina shipping massive volumes of peaches and watermelons, while Michigan and New Jersey are beginning their blueberry harvests. In the West, California's Central Valley is shipping heavy volumes of tomatoes and stone fruit. This peak agricultural activity is keeping reefer capacity extremely tight and pulling dry van capacity into agricultural support roles.
Simultaneously, the industry is entering the final two weeks of the second quarter. Historically, the end of June brings a significant surge in dry van and LTL volumes as manufacturers, retailers, and distributors push to clear inventories and meet quarterly revenue targets. This volume influx will collide with already-tight capacity, driving spot rates upward and increasing tender rejection rates. The dry van sector, which currently shows a $0.07/mile broker advantage ($2.63 paid vs $2.70 posted), is highly likely to flip to a carrier premium by next week as this demand builds.
Brokers must act proactively to protect their margins. Over the next 7 to 14 days, spot market capacity will become increasingly expensive and difficult to source. Brokers should advise their contract customers to move high-volume shipments early in the week to avoid the Friday capacity crunch. Additionally, brokers should secure carrier commitments for the end-of-quarter push now, locking in rates before the spot market experiences its inevitable late-June spike.
🏗️ Drayage Bottlenecks and Intermodal Pressure Points
While the domestic truckload market dominates daily brokerage operations, non-driver capacity constraints are emerging as a critical bottleneck in the intermodal supply chain. A recent surge in import volumes—driven by shippers pulling cargo forward to preempt potential tariffs—is putting immense pressure on major U.S. ports and rail ramps. While the rail network itself is handling the volume without major disruptions, the drayage sector has emerged as a severe weak link. Drayage fleets, which were downsized significantly during the recent multi-year freight downturn, are now struggling to find enough drivers to handle the sudden influx of containers.
This drayage driver shortage is creating localized congestion at major coastal ports, particularly Savannah and Los Angeles/Long Beach, as well as inland rail hubs in Chicago and Atlanta. Containers are sitting on docks longer, leading to chassis shortages and increased demurrage fees. For brokers, these infrastructure constraints have direct downstream effects on the truckload market. When intermodal shipments are delayed at the port or rail ramp, shippers are forced to convert those loads to over-the-road (OTR) dry van or flatbed, driving sudden spikes in spot market demand.
To navigate these bottlenecks, brokers must expand their operational focus beyond simple OTR sourcing. Brokers should establish relationships with specialized drayage providers and monitor container dwell times at key ports. When quoting intermodal freight, brokers must build in extra lead time and account for potential chassis split fees and port congestion surcharges. By proactively offering transloading services—moving freight from ocean containers to OTR trailers near the port—brokers can bypass drayage constraints and provide faster, more reliable transit options for their customers.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Treat Midwest flooding as a through-Thursday routing problem, not a same-day weather event.
- South Texas cross-border freight should recover faster than Midwest river lanes, but only for carriers already positioned locally.
- Savannah and other import markets will keep feeding short-fuse truckload demand as drayage bottlenecks per sist.
- Reefer and flatbed remain the cleanest premium markets; dry van margins are better on execution-heavy import freight than on broad repricing.
🔑 Executive Signal Summary
The market is firmer, but not looser. Total available loads are 165,824, up 3.7% from 159,860, and the national average rate is $3.04/mile. That is a constructive spot signal, but it does not mean broad capacity relief. It means more freight is competing for localized trucks.
Dry van and LTL (Less Than Truckload)/partial are still your best buy-side windows this morning.
- Van: $2.70 posted vs. $2.63 paid = $0.07/mile broker advantage
- LTL/Partial: $1.73 posted vs. $1.64 paid = $0.09/mile broker advantage
Reefer and open-deck are premium execution markets, not bargain markets.
- Reefer: $3.15 posted vs. $3.39 paid = $0.24/mile carrier premium
- Flatbed: $3.54 posted vs. $3.74 paid = $0.20/mile carrier premium
- Heavy haul: $3.66 posted vs. $3.93 paid = $0.27/mile carrier premium
- Specialized: $3.20 posted vs. $3.20 paid = no spread, which is often a sign of a firm, disciplined market
Open-deck still controls where broker attention should go.
- Flatbed + heavy haul + specialized = 122,701 loads
- That is roughly 74.0% of all available loads
- Those same segments account for 42,858 moved loads today, about 80.4% of total moved freight
- Translation: truck positioning, service risk, and pricing power are concentrated in open-deck
Diesel at $5.185/gallon is still acting like a hard floor. Carriers are minimizing deadhead, protecting reloads, and pricing turn quality, not just linehaul miles.
Weather is reducing truck productivity more than it is reducing truck count.
- Midwest flooding is a through-Thursday routing problem
- South Texas is a timing and backlog problem
- Wyoming I-80 winds are a reload schedule problem
🧠 What the market is really saying
The headline load increase is not a broker-friendly loosening signal. One week ago, the market had 181,654 loads and an average rate of $3.03/mile. Today, loads are lower at 165,824, but rates are slightly higher at $3.04/mile. That tells you usable capacity is tighter than the raw board count suggests.
Posted-versus-paid spreads matter more than volume headlines today.
- Broker leverage exists in van and LTL/partial
- Carrier leverage exists in reefer, flatbed, and heavy haul
- Specialized is balanced on paper, but firm in practice
Carrier psychology is hyper-local right now. At $5.185 diesel, carriers are asking:
- Can I load and unload cleanly?
- Will weather slow my next turn?
- Is there a believable reload?
- How much unpaid repositioning is hidden in this move?
Shipper psychology is becoming dangerous in premium modes. Some customers will see load growth and assume trucks are easier to find. That is the wrong read. In reefer, flatbed, and heavy haul, delayed decisions are turning into higher same-day replacement costs.
OTRI (Outbound Tender Rejection Index) staying elevated in reefer and flatbed matters. Even without a percentage attached here, the directional signal is clear: contract freight is spilling into spot, and spot is being forced to absorb the overflow at premium pricing.
🚚 Mode-by-Mode Broker Playbook
🚛 Dry Van: Still the cleanest margin window, but likely a short one
What the numbers say
- 24,881 available loads
- 5,032 moved today
- $2.70 posted / $2.63 paid
- $0.07/mile broker advantage
What it means
- Dry van is still tradable this morning.
- But this is not a soft van market; it is a selectively buyable one.
- Import spillover, end-of-quarter shipping, and produce-related truck diversion can narrow this spread quickly.
What to do today
- Pre-cover regional outbound freight before lunch
- Favor dense reload markets over vanity one-ways
- Shorten quote validity on same-day freight
- Sell appointment quality to carriers instead of just chasing rate cuts
Best freight profile
- Regional
- Fast-turn
- Warehouse-to-warehouse
- Clean dock windows
- Strong reload visibility
What to avoid
- Do not sell the average paid rate like it applies to bad freight.
- Weak backhaul, poor appointment discipline, and weather-exposed stops will price above the average fast.
🧊 Reefer: Premium-first quoting only
What the numbers say
- 7,881 available loads
- 1,736 moved today
- $3.15 posted / $3.39 paid
- $0.24/mile carrier premium
What it means
- This is a tight, carrier-led market.
- Peak produce in California, Georgia, South Carolina, Texas, Michigan, and New Jersey is colliding with weather friction.
- The national spread understates lane-specific pain in produce-origin markets.
What to do today
- Quote reefer with replacement-cost logic
- Verify commodity, temperature, pre-cool requirement, and appointment tolerance before posting
- Offer carriers two-load visibility whenever possible
- Build transit cushion on Midwest flood exposure and South Texas border timing
Best margin source
- Not underpaying the first leg
- Avoiding claims
- Avoiding recoveries
- Matching carriers into return freight after produce delivery
Operational truth
- In reefer, the cheapest truck is often the most expensive outcome if it misses temp compliance, pre-cool timing, or delivery windows.
🪵 Flatbed: Strong demand, shrinking margin for mistakes
What the numbers say
- 71,883 available loads
- 25,675 moved today
- $3.54 posted / $3.74 paid
- $0.20/mile carrier premium
What it means
- Flatbed is the largest active premium market on the board.
- Construction, industrial freight, and flooding-related detours are all pushing turns slower.
- This is a mode where quoted miles and actual operational miles are drifting apart.
What to do today
- Quote routed miles, not ideal map miles
- Add weather and detention protection upfront
- Confirm securement, tarp needs, loading method, and crane/forklift availability before booking
- Push Midwest-exposed freight with extra transit cushion through Thursday
Where brokers lose money
- Under-scoped loading conditions
- Ignoring detours
- Assuming posted rate averages are executable
🏗️ Heavy Haul: Carrier-led and permit-sensitive
What the numbers say
- 32,563 available loads
- 11,072 moved today
- $3.66 posted / $3.93 paid
- $0.27/mile carrier premium
What it means
- Heavy haul is the strongest carrier-premium segment on the board.
- Midwest flooding is creating friction in routing, permits, escorts, and delivery scheduling.
- A bad quote here does not just miss margin; it creates downstream exception cost.
What to do today
- Do not quote from averages alone
- Validate exact dimensions, weight, axle configuration, route restrictions, and site access
- File permits earlier than normal on Illinois, Indiana, and Missouri exposure
- Explain to customers that rate is now tied to route certainty, not just equipment class
Best broker posture
- Project manager first, price taker second
⚙️ Specialized: Balanced on paper, disciplined in reality
What the numbers say
- 18,255 available loads
- 6,111 moved today
- $3.20 posted / $3.20 paid
- No spread
What it means
- This is not a cheap market.
- A flat spread usually means neither side is blinking, and carriers are holding firm on well-scoped freight.
- In weather-affected regions, specialized can reprice fast if the scope is vague.
What to do today
- Only quote fully defined freight
- Require dimensions, weight, loading method, unload method, and site constraints
- Use known carriers over cold-board experimentation
- Pad weather-affected lanes with realistic transit expectations
What the numbers say
- 10,361 available loads
- 3,699 moved today
- $1.73 posted / $1.64 paid
- $0.09/mile broker advantage
What it means
- Partial remains one of the few places where brokers can still buy intelligently.
- It also protects truckload capacity by moving freight that does not truly need a full trailer.
What to do today
- Convert flexible 6-12 pallet freight out of truckload where possible
- Use partial on non-urgent replenishment freight
- Increase quote speed on metro-heavy lanes as Amazon’s LTL entry changes shipper expectations
- Use LTL/partial as a margin-preservation tool, not just a cheap option
🗺️ Regional Intelligence That Can Pay Today
🌴 Southeast: Still the best urgency market
Why it matters
- Peak produce is tightening reefer
- Savannah import activity is supporting van demand
- High diesel is keeping trucks regional
- Drayage bottlenecks are spilling short-fuse freight into truckload
What to do
- Buy capacity into Georgia and the Carolinas early
- Sell faster recovery and appointment discipline, not just linehaul
- Use inbound planning to secure outbound produce and port freight
🚢 Savannah, GA → Charlotte, NC: Execution lane, not commodity lane
What matters
- The value here is in same-day port pulls, chassis turns, transload coordination, and appointment recovery
- Drayage strain means some freight will convert into short-haul truckload at premium timing
What to do
- Prioritize morning pickups
- Use regional carriers that can turn quickly
- Offer drop-trailer or transload options where demurrage risk exists
- Protect margin through service design, not just rate markups
🌴 Atlanta, GA → Miami, FL: Quote the return problem on the front end
What matters
- Southbound Florida freight still pays best when you solve the northbound reload story first
- Reefer competition can indirectly tighten van availability into Florida
What to do
- Price the lane on round-trip economics
- Protect receiver appointments aggressively
- Pair southbound loads with reloads in North Florida, South Georgia, or central Florida whenever possible
Broker reality
- Florida is rarely a one-way pricing exercise; it is a network design exercise
🌧️ South Texas / Laredo: Timing market, not shutdown market
What matters
- Flash flooding should hurt pickups and first-leg movement more than the whole week
- The bigger issue is border backup, local road friction, and missed appointment ripple
What to do
- Cover cross-border freight with carriers already in-market
- Avoid selling aggressive same-day recovery
- Warn customers that Wednesday may feel tighter than the weather map suggests because of today’s backlog
🛣️ Illinois / Midwest Flood Zone: Quote through-Thursday friction now
What matters
- Flood warnings near the Illinois River and surrounding corridors are slowing freight beyond the warning box
- Open-deck, permit freight, and time-definite reefer are most exposed
What to do
- Add a half-day transit cushion to Midwest flatbed and heavy haul quotes
- Get route acknowledgment from carriers before dispatch
- Push shippers to tender early if they want anything close to standard pricing
🌬️ Wyoming I-80: Transcon reload risk
What matters
- High winds on southeast Wyoming I-80 matter less for total market volume and more for reload sequencing
- A delayed westbound or eastbound crossing can break a two-load plan
What to do
- Do not count on precision reload timing through this corridor today
- Use wider ETA (estimated time of arrival) ranges on freight depending on team turns or exact westbound transitions
💰 Where the best margin is actually hiding today
Dry van margin is in disciplined buying, not hero buying.
- Buy earlier
- Buy reload-friendly
- Buy operationally clean freight
Reefer margin is in certainty.
- Pre-cool confirmation
- Tight commodity scope
- Delivery integrity
- Return-freight planning
Flatbed and heavy haul margin is in preventing exceptions.
- Better scope
- Better routing
- Better permit timing
- Better transit honesty
Savannah-area import freight offers execution-heavy arbitrage.
- When drayage or rail timing breaks, customers will pay for speed and clean recovery
- That is a better margin source than generic truckload repricing
LTL/partial is your pressure-release valve for the next 72 hours.
- Every shipment you appropriately convert out of full truckload protects your truckload buying power elsewhere
📰 Competitive Dynamics You Should Not Ignore Today
🛡️ Risk Controls That Protect Margin Today
Carrier verification is not optional in premium modes.
- Verify authority
- Verify insurance
- Verify identity match
- Verify equipment match
- Verify dispatch contact
Weather acknowledgment should be built into the tender.
- Require carrier acknowledgment of:
- route plan
- transit expectation
- detention and layover assumptions
- site-access constraints
Reefer scope should be documented before rate agreement.
- Commodity
- Temperature
- Pre-cool
- Load time
- Receiver tolerance
Heavy haul and specialized should never be quoted from partial information.
- Missing scope is where margin disappears fastest
Fraud risk rises when markets get tighter.
- Premium freight plus weather disruption creates urgency
- Urgency creates sloppy onboarding
- Sloppy onboarding creates loss events
📈 24–72 Hour Outlook
Base case — 55%
- Dry van buy-side room narrows
- Reefer stays premium
- Flatbed and heavy haul remain carrier-led
- Midwest routing friction lasts through Thursday
- Best outcome for brokers who buy van early and reprice special-handling freight honestly
Stress case — 30%
- Midwest storms refresh flood problems
- South Texas backlog lingers longer than expected
- Replacement costs jump on reefer and open-deck
- Most pain lands on brokers who quoted from averages without operational buffers
Opportunity case — 15%
- Savannah and other import markets create short-haul truckload wins
- LTL/partial conversions free enough truckload capacity to improve margin mix
- Best brokers are the ones who move fastest on local dislocations
✅ Priority Stack for Today
Lock regional dry van capacity early
- Focus on clean appointment freight with reload visibility
Quote reefer at premium-first levels
- Do not wait for the customer to create urgency before pricing correctly
Treat flatbed and heavy haul as execution projects
- Quote routed miles, weather risk, and detention exposure
Use LTL/partial aggressively where service allows
- Protect your truckload buying power
Lean into Savannah execution freight
- Same-day port pulls and transload support are stronger margin plays than basic linehaul
Build Midwest weather buffers into every open-deck promise
- Through Thursday, not just today
Cover South Texas with positioned carriers only
- Avoid long deadhead assumptions at $5.185 diesel
Re-verify every new or rushed carrier setup
- Especially on reefer, heavy haul, and weather-affected lanes
🏁 Bottom Line
This is a stronger spot market, but it is not a forgiving one.
- Dry van and LTL/partial still offer usable broker leverage
- Reefer, flatbed, and heavy haul are clearly carrier-premium markets
- Specialized is balanced in spread, but still demands tight scope discipline
- Diesel at $5.185/gallon keeps capacity local and reduces tolerance for deadhead
- Weather in the Midwest, South Texas, and Wyoming is hurting turn time, route reliability, and reload sequencing
The brokers who win today will not be the ones who quote the cheapest. They will be the ones who:
- buy early where leverage still exists
- price premium modes honestly
- use operational precision to create margin where the board alone cannot
💡 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
1911: IBM founded as the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company in Endicott, New York.
1955: In a futile effort to topple Argentine President Juan Perón, rogue aircraft pilots of the Argentine Navy drop several bombs upon an unarmed crowd demonstrating in favor of Perón in Buenos Aires, killing 364 and injuring at least 800. At the same time on the ground, some soldiers attempt to stage a coup but are suppressed by loyal forces.
1972: The largest single-site hydroelectric power project in Canada is inaugurated at Churchill Falls Generating Station.
💭 Quote of the Day
"Successful people appreciate where they have come from, but they don't let their past set the tone for their future."
— Steve Harvey