๐ Daily Market Intelligence Report
Monday, April 13, 2026
7:00 AM CST
๐ Top-Line Summary
The national spot freight market is kicking off the week with a robust 6.9% surge in available volume, pushing total loads to 162,429 and driving the market average rate to a firm $2.76/mile. Severe Midwest flooding continues to fracture transcontinental routing, creating localized capacity vacuums and driving significant detour premiums. Meanwhile, the punishing $5.643/gallon national diesel average remains a critical structural barrier, forcing carriers to strictly prioritize high-yield freight and aggressively negotiate fuel surcharges. Flatbed continues its seasonal dominance with nearly 73,000 available loads, while reefer and van sectors are seeing double-digit volume increases as spring shipping patterns accelerate.
โฝ Diesel Price Analysis
Diesel Historical Price Comparison
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence
Current Major Weather Events:
- Widespread River Flooding (Midwest (MI, IA, IL, MO, MN, ND, IN)): Extensive river flooding is threatening major transcontinental corridors including I-80, I-90, and I-72. This is expected to create significant routing delays, force extended detours, and tighten regional capacity as carriers avoid the hazard zones or demand substantial premiums.
- Dam Release Flash Flooding (Northern Michigan (MI, Alcona and Oscoda counties)): A dam floodgate release on the Mio Dam is causing immediate flash flooding along the Au Sable River. This poses severe risks to local infrastructure and will likely shut down secondary routes, requiring immediate rerouting for any local freight.
- Heavy Winter Storm Watch (Washington Cascades (WA)): A late-season winter storm threatening 10 to 20 inches of snow and 35 mph wind gusts is expected to make travel very difficult through the Cascades. This will likely disrupt the I-90 corridor, tightening outbound Pacific Northwest capacity and driving up rates.
- Minor Lake Flooding (Upstate New York (NY, Tompkins County)): High water levels on Cayuga Lake are causing minor flooding along the shoreline. While major interstates are largely unaffected, local delivery routes and facility access near the lake may experience minor delays.
Weather Affected Corridors:
Weather Insight
Midwest flooding risk extends beyond the current closures
Repeated rain and thunderstorms across Illinois, Indiana and Michigan through Thursday will slow drainage and keep secondary roads unreliable even where water begins to recede. That makes the disruption more of a rolling network problem than a one-day event, with detention, missed appointments and extra out-of-route miles likely to stay elevated through midweek.
Weather Insight
Cascade capacity will tighten before the heaviest snow arrives
Outbound Washington pricing can firm a full day ahead of the mountain impacts as carriers avoid committing to passes that may deteriorate Tuesday into Wednesday. The practical effect is fewer trucks willing to accept eastbound reloads late Monday and early Tuesday, especially on freight that cannot absorb a one-day slip.
๐ฐ Financial Market Indicators
- Diesel Futures: Global geopolitical instability continues to put upward pressure on energy markets, suggesting the current $5.643/gallon diesel average may persist or climb, forcing carriers to maintain strict pricing discipline.
- Carrier Financial Health: The combination of extreme fuel costs and weather-related operational delays is severely straining cash flow for small to mid-sized fleets, accelerating market consolidation and reducing the pool of reliable marginal capacity.
- Economic Indicators: Sustained high transportation costs are beginning to ripple through the broader economy, with shippers facing increased pressure to balance inventory carrying costs against surging spot market premiums.
๐ฐ Impactful News Analysis
-
Global Instability Drives Diesel Prices Higher, Squeezing Local Fleets ๐:
With diesel prices remaining punishingly high due to geopolitical conflicts, brokers must recognize that carriers have zero margin for error. Negotiations must account for these hard costs; attempting to force below-market rates will result in dropped loads and service failures. Brokers should use this to justify higher rates to shippers, emphasizing the cost of reliable capacity.
-
USPS Implements Fuel Surcharge, Signaling Broader Logistics Pricing Shifts ๐:
The USPS implementing an 8% fuel surcharge to offset transportation costs is a major signal that institutional shippers are capitulating to fuel realities. Brokers can use this development in customer conversations to validate the necessity of flexible fuel pricing and to defend rate increases on contract lanes.
-
FMCSA Highlights Distracted Driving Risks for Commercial Fleets ๐:
As the FMCSA pushes safety awareness, carriers may face increased scrutiny and potential out-of-service violations for cab distractions. Brokers must ensure strict carrier vetting and tracking compliance, as safety crackdowns inherently reduce available capacity and delay transit times.
News Insight
Fuel surcharge resistance is weakening across shipper segments
The broader significance of postal fuel surcharges is that fuel is no longer being treated as an exception cost by large transportation buyers. In a $5.643 diesel market, brokers that still bury fuel inside all-in linehaul quotes are more exposed to margin erosion than those separating linehaul, fuel and disruption-related accessorials in real time.
๐ Competitive Intelligence
- Digital Load Board Trends: Real-time data shows a massive 6.9% overnight surge in total available loads, with flatbed leading the charge. The spread between posted and paid rates in the van and specialized sectors indicates carriers are successfully negotiating up at the time of booking.
- Capacity Alerts: Capacity is critically tight in the Midwest due to widespread flooding, and in the Pacific Northwest ahead of the impending Cascade winter storm. Conversely, the Southeast is seeing a slight loosening as inbound freight outpaces immediate outbound agricultural demand.
- Technology Disruptions: The industry is seeing an accelerated adoption of automated fuel surcharge calculators integrated directly into TMS platforms, allowing brokerages to dynamically adjust quotes based on hyper-local fuel spikes rather than relying on weekly national averages.
๐ฅ Customer Sector Analysis
- Retail: Retailers are urgently repositioning spring and early summer inventory, driving the 13.1% surge in dry van volumes. Shippers are prioritizing speed over cost to avoid stockouts.
- Manufacturing: Industrial manufacturing is driving the massive 72,880 flatbed load count. Project cargo and heavy machinery movements are peaking, absorbing specialized equipment rapidly.
- Agriculture: The spring produce season is accelerating, reflected in the 16.6% jump in reefer volumes. Temperature-controlled capacity will become increasingly scarce as harvests move north.
- Automotive: Auto parts suppliers are facing routing challenges in the Midwest due to flooding, forcing them to rely on expedited and team transit to keep just-in-time assembly lines running.
๐บ๏ธ Regional & Lane Analysis
๐ Primary Region Focus: Midwest
The Midwest is currently the most volatile and opportunistic freight region in the country. Widespread river flooding across Michigan, Illinois, Iowa, and Missouri is severely disrupting major transcontinental corridors (I-80, I-90, I-72). This weather event is colliding with a massive surge in flatbed and van volumes, creating severe localized capacity shortages. Carriers are demanding significant hazard and detour premiums to operate in the region, while the $5.643/gallon diesel average prevents them from taking inefficient reroutes without compensation.
๐ฃ๏ธ Key Lane Watch
Chicago, IL โ Minneapolis, MN: This critical Midwest corridor is under severe pressure from widespread river flooding affecting I-90 and surrounding routes. Van and reefer volumes are surging, but capacity is hesitant to commit without significant premiums due to the risk of delays and detours. The high cost of diesel makes any out-of-route miles financially devastating for carriers.
Grand Rapids, MI โ Detroit, MI: Intra-state Michigan freight is being heavily disrupted by both general river flooding and the specific flash flood risks from the Mio Dam release. While a short haul, the operational complexity has skyrocketed, driving up localized spot rates. Flatbed demand for construction materials is particularly strong.
Regional Insight
Chicago-to-Minneapolis has a narrow recovery window
The lane is dealing with flood detours now, but the next timing risk is Friday, when rain and snow with stronger winds are forecast in Minnesota. That leaves Thursday as the cleanest recovery day for catch-up freight, so capacity for Thursday pickups will likely tighten earlier than normal as brokers and carriers try to clear backlog before the weather turns again.
- Buy Thursday capacity by Tuesday if service matters.
- Use wider delivery windows on Wednesday-Friday tenders into the Twin Cities.
๐จ Actionable Alerts
Rate Spike Warnings:
- Midwest transcontinental corridors (I-80, I-90) due to flooding
- Washington outbound lanes ahead of Cascade winter storm
- California outbound reefer lanes as produce season accelerates
Capacity Shortage Alerts:
- Flatbed capacity is critically short nationwide (72,880 loads available). Reefer capacity is rapidly vanishing in agricultural hubs, and overall capacity is fractured in the Midwest flood zones.
Opportunity Zones:
- Southeast inbound lanes where carriers are looking to position for early produce
- Short-haul intra-Midwest lanes where shippers are desperate for local solutions
๐ฏ Strategic Recommendations for Today
๐ผ For Customer Sales:
Narrative: Lead conversations with the reality of the market: $5.643 diesel and severe Midwest weather are creating unavoidable costs. Emphasize that ETA provides guaranteed execution in a fractured market, which is worth the premium over failed cheap routing.
Action: Proactively reach out to any customers with freight moving through MI, IL, IA, or MN to reset transit time expectations and adjust rates for necessary detours.
๐ For Carrier Reps:
Sourcing Focus: Prioritize securing flatbed capacity nationwide, and lock in reefer capacity in California and the Southeast before the weekend. Build deep networks of carriers willing to run the Midwest with proper compensation.
Negotiation Leverage: Use the high volume of available freight (162,429 loads) to offer carriers dedicated round-trips or multi-leg tours, providing them with the revenue certainty they desperately need in this high-fuel environment.
Strategic Insight
Price Midwest freight as a three-part quote, not a single linehaul number
The cleanest way to protect execution is to isolate linehaul from fuel and flood-related operating risk before the load is covered. Carriers are far more likely to stay committed when detour pay, revised appointment windows and detention expectations are spelled out upfront instead of reopened after dispatch.
- Prioritize carriers with reload options south or east of the flood zone; they have less incentive to reject after booking.
- For short-haul Michigan freight, verify dock access before pickup because facility constraints are now a bigger service risk than transit miles.
Strategic Takeaways
High-Signal Additions
- Expect Midwest detour and detention costs to remain sticky through at least Thursday, even if some water levels ease.
- Thursday is the best catch-up day on Chicago-to-Minneapolis before Friday weather threatens another service setback.
- Secure outbound Washington trucks before Tuesday, as carrier reluctance typically leads the actual pass conditions.
- Separate fuel, detention and detour pay from linehaul on volatile lanes to defend margin and reduce post-booking fallout.
๐ Executive Signal Summary
This is a real Monday firming move, not just a noisy load board bounce. Total available loads are 162,429, up 6.9% from 151,931, and the national average rate has climbed to $2.76/mile from $2.58/mile yesterday. More freight is showing and it is clearing at better money.
Execution strength is broader than it was yesterday. The biggest tell is the posted-versus-paid relationship:
- Van: $2.49 paid vs $2.46 posted
- Reefer: $2.78 paid vs $2.78 posted
- Flatbed: $3.11 paid vs $3.13 posted
- Heavy haul: $3.16 paid vs $3.21 posted
- Specialized: $3.30 paid vs $2.89 posted
- LTL/Partial (Less Than Truckload / Partial Truckload): $2.01 paid vs $1.80 posted
That is not a soft market profile. It says carriers are either getting the ask or beating it on the freight that matters.
Midwest weather is now a rolling reliability problem, not a one-closure problem. Flooding across key Midwest states is affecting major corridors like I-80, I-90, and I-72, but the more expensive failure point is now secondary roads, dock access, detention, missed appointments, and hours burn.
High diesel at $5.643/gallon is the marketโs hard floor. In this environment, carriers do not forgive bad routing, deadhead, or unpaid dwell. Cheap quotes fail faster when fuel is this expensive.
The best opportunity remains in open-deck and niche freight. Flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized combine for 124,586 loads, or about 76.7% of total available freight. If your desk is not leaning into industrial, project, machinery, building products, and odd-dimension freight today, you are underexposed to the strongest part of the board.
๐ What the market is really saying
Demand is not just up day over day; pricing is outperforming recent benchmarks.
- Today: 162,429 loads, $2.76/mile
- Yesterday: 151,931 loads, $2.58/mile
- 1 week ago: 162,083 loads, $2.71/mile
- 1 month ago: 146,242 loads, $2.38/mile
The most important comparison is week-over-week.
- Load count is basically flat versus one week ago: 162,429 vs 162,083
- But average rate is higher: $2.76 vs $2.71
Translation: the market is not merely busier; it is paying more for nearly the same visible freight volume. That is a stronger signal than a simple day-over-day jump.
The moved-load count confirms Monday urgency.
- Today moved: 26,439
- Yesterday moved: 9,736
That kind of jump usually means delayed freight, fresh tenders, and early-week repricing are all hitting at once.
OTRI (Outbound Tender Rejection Index) is rising in the Midwest and West Coast. That matters because it means contract freight is leaking into spot, especially where weather and produce are making spot freight more attractive than routed commitments.
๐งฎ Posted vs. paid: where brokers can and cannot get cute
๐ Dry Van
- Signal: $2.49 paid vs $2.46 posted = +$0.03
- Read: Van has moved from negotiable to selectively tight.
- Meaning: If you quote from the posted number and assume you can still buy it down, you will lose margin on time-sensitive freight, especially into or through flood-affected Midwest lanes.
๐ง Reefer
- Signal: $2.78 paid vs $2.78 posted = flat
- Read: The board is already honest.
- Meaning: There is very little discount room. In produce-linked or hard-appointment freight, hesitation is more expensive than paying fair market immediately.
๐ง Flatbed
- Signal: $3.11 paid vs $3.13 posted = -$0.02
- Read: Near-parity means real tightening.
- Meaning: Even with 72,880 loads, this is not a mode where you should assume big negotiating room. The market is large, but it is also absorbing capacity fast.
๐๏ธ Heavy Haul
- Signal: $3.16 paid vs $3.21 posted = -$0.05
- Read: Efficient market.
- Meaning: This remains a spec-driven quoting market, not a bluffing market. If your assumptions are wrong, your margin disappears after dispatch.
๐ช Specialized
- Signal: $3.30 paid vs $2.89 posted = +$0.41
- Read: This is todayโs biggest pricing trap and biggest opportunity.
- Meaning: Either the freight is being under-posted relative to actual execution, or brokers are discovering complexity late and paying to fix it. Do not quote specialized freight from the screen alone.
๐ฆ LTL/Partial
- Signal: $2.01 paid vs $1.80 posted = +$0.21
- Read: There is strong margin opportunity, but only if you control transit expectations.
- Meaning: Customers looking to avoid full truckload sticker shock will listen, but you must sell schedule flexibility upfront.
๐ Mode-by-mode playbook for the next 24โ72 hours
๐ Dry Van: treat ordinary freight differently from weather freight
๐ง Reefer: book earlier than your customer thinks is necessary
- Market reality: Reefer is at 7,609 loads, up 16.6%, with paid matching posted at $2.78/mile.
- Interpretation: Capacity is being pulled into produce and agricultural cycles, and Midwest disruption adds delivery-side risk.
- Broker move: Secure reefer coverage before noon on same-day must-covers and 24โ48 hours early on strategic lanes.
๐ง Flatbed: largest pond, but not a soft pond
- Market reality: 72,880 loads at $3.11 paid.
- Interpretation: Construction, manufacturing, and infrastructure freight are eating specialized trailer time and driver hours.
- Broker move: Separate easy flatbed from true premium flatbed:
- Easy: legal, no tarp, easy site, flexible unload
- Premium: tarp, jobsite delivery, crane timing, muddy yard, strict appointment, flood detour exposure
๐๏ธ Heavy Haul: margin lives or dies in preplanning
- Market reality: 34,457 loads at $3.16 paid.
- Broker move: Do not quote until you confirm:
- dimensions
- weight
- axle needs
- permit path
- escort requirements
- loading and unloading method
- detour sensitivity around Midwest water impacts
๐ช Specialized: most dangerous freight to underquote today
- Market reality: 17,249 loads at $3.30 paid, far above the $2.89 posted average.
Broker move: Ask the question lazy brokers skip: โWhat exactly makes this specialized?โ
- securement?
- dimensions?
- handling?
- permit?
- destination restriction?
- insurance requirement?
If you do not define the premium, the carrier will define it for you later.
๐ฆ LTL/Partial: a strong account-defense weapon
๐ฆ๏ธ Weather and lane strategy: where service risk will cost the most
๐ Midwest flood zone
๐ฃ๏ธ Chicago, IL โ Minneapolis, MN
- Current read: This lane is tight now, but the more important issue is the Thursday recovery window before another Minnesota weather risk develops Friday.
- Broker move: Start buying Thursday capacity now and finish no later than Tuesday for customers who actually care about service.
๐ Grand Rapids, MI โ Detroit, MI
- Current read: Short-haul Michigan freight looks easy on paper and is not easy in execution.
- Broker move: Verify dock access before pickup. On short-haul flood-affected freight, facility access is a bigger service risk than transit miles.
๐๏ธ Washington outbound
- Current read: Carriers will tighten before the Cascade weather fully arrives.
- Broker move: Secure eastbound Washington loads before Tuesday. Capacity usually reprices ahead of the actual pass deterioration, not after.
๐ฌ Customer-facing strategy: how to sell the market without sounding defensive
- Best message: โThis market is coverable, but not safely coverable at old assumptions.โ
What customers need to understand:
- Diesel at $5.643/gallon means out-of-route miles are not absorbable
- Weather is increasing execution cost, not just transit time
- The cheapest all-in quote is often the quote most likely to fail
Best pricing structure today:
- Linehaul
- Fuel
- Detour / disruption
- Detention / layover assumptions
Why this works psychologically: Customers resist a big unexplained number. They accept higher cost more readily when you show which component is market-driven and which can be reduced by giving more lead time or wider windows.
Best asks from customers today:
- Earlier tenders
- Wider appointment windows
- Permission to reroute
- Written approval for fuel and disruption surcharges on volatile lanes
๐ค Carrier procurement strategy: how to win trucks without buying dumb
Prioritize positioned carriers, not theoretical carriers.
- A truck near the freight matters more than a truck with a low rate 100+ miles away in a $5.643 diesel market.
Sell the week, not just the load.
- Carriers respond better right now to:
- round trips
- reload visibility
- multi-leg tours
- consistent lane families
Use smart reload logic in the Midwest.
- Prioritize carriers with reload options south or east of the flood zone.
- They are less likely to reject or re-trade after booking.
Tighten carrier compliance on critical freight.
- With cash-flow stress rising for small fleets, same-day identity drift, truck swaps, and dispatch confusion become more common.
- Reconfirm:
- assigned driver
- truck number
- pickup contact
- authority status
- cargo coverage
- routing commitment
๐ก๏ธ Biggest risks to margin today
Risk 1: burying fuel inside linehaul
- Fix: Separate fuel on every volatile lane.
Risk 2: underpricing specialized freight
- Fix: Quote from specs and execution complexity, not from the post.
Risk 3: treating Midwest freight as a miles problem
- Fix: Price for time, access, detention, and appointment risk.
Risk 4: overpromising on LTL/Partial
- Fix: Sell savings only where the customer accepts schedule elasticity.
Risk 5: chasing cheap replacement capacity after fallout
- Fix: On must-cover freight, buy conviction early instead of buying rescue later.
๐ฎ Probability-weighted outlook for the next 24โ72 hours
Base case โ 60%
- Rates stay firm
- Midwest disruption holds through midweek
- Reefer remains difficult
- Open-deck stays strong
- Best posture: Cover early, separate surcharges, protect appointments
Stress case โ 25%
- Flood detention and missed appointments spill into more spot freight
- Washington weather tightens western reload patterns
- Specialized and flatbed reprice faster than customers expect
- Best posture: Build backup trucks and widen ETA commitments
Relief case โ 15%
- Some lanes briefly soften as weekend-positioned trucks get flushed onto the board
- Best posture: Buy standard freight hard where routing is clean, but do not discount Midwest, reefer, or Washington outbound risk
โ
Todayโs highest-value broker moves
- Pre-book Midwest service-sensitive freight before the board gets thinner.
- Quote flood-affected lanes in separate components: linehaul, fuel, and disruption.
- Treat specialized freight as a live negotiation, not a posted-rate buy.
- Lean into flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized because they represent about 76.7% of total visible freight.
- Lock reefer early and stop assuming discounts are available.
- Call facilities directly on Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Missouri, and Minnesota freight touching flood zones.
- Secure Washington outbound before Tuesday if transit integrity matters.
- Protect detention, layover, and detour language before dispatch, not after the first delay.
๐ง Bottom line
Todayโs market rewards conviction, not optimism.
The brokers who win the day will be the ones who:
- pay fair early on real risk
- stay disciplined on clean freight
- separate cost components clearly
- verify facilities and carrier identity aggressively
- use network design, not just rate shopping, to cover freight
This is not a cheap market. It is a selective execution market with expensive consequences for hesitation and sloppy quoting.
๐
This Day in History
1960: The United States launches Transit 1-B, the world's first satellite navigation system.
2013: Salam Fayyad resigns as Prime Minister of the Palestinian National Authority following an ongoing dispute with the President Mahmoud Abbas.
2025: Rory McIlroy wins the Masters Tournament, becoming just the sixth person to complete the Grand Slam in golf.
๐ญ Quote of the Day
"Zen insists that the whole trouble is just our failure to realize that there is no problem."
โ Bruce Lee