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📊 Daily Market Intelligence Report

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

7:00 AM CST


📊 Top-Line Summary

The spot market is experiencing a profound structural divergence today, with total available loads surging 12.6% to 207,767, driven almost entirely by massive volume spikes in open-deck and heavy haul sectors. Conversely, enclosed trailer volumes (van and reefer) have contracted sharply, yet carriers in these sectors are commanding aggressive rate premiums, highlighted by an extraordinary $0.42/mile paid-over-posted spread in the reefer market. This complex environment is being heavily influenced by severe, ongoing flooding across the Midwest and Gulf Coast that is fracturing major corridors like I-70, I-44, and I-10, trapping specialized equipment and forcing extensive detours. With the national diesel average holding at a punishing $5.65/gallon, carriers are strictly limiting deadhead and demanding substantial premiums to operate in weather-impacted or high-fuel-cost regions.

Insight

Lower van and reefer counts are overstating any sense of relief

The pullback in enclosed load counts looks more like a velocity problem than a demand collapse. Flood detours, late-day weather holds and high fuel costs are keeping carriers on tighter reload triangles, so fewer posted loads are still clearing at a premium. For brokers, the risk is treating softer volume as softer pricing and waiting until the afternoon to cover freight that carriers have already repriced around delay and fuel exposure.

Daily market overview

⛽ Diesel Price Analysis

Price Trend Over Time

Diesel Price Trend Chart

Diesel Historical Price Comparison

Diesel Historical Price Comparison Chart

🌦️ Weather & Seasonal Intelligence

U.S. freight weather impact map

Current Major Weather Events:

Weather Affected Corridors:

I-70
Interstate70
Severe
States
Hazards
Flood Warning, Flood Watch, Freeze Warning
Alert Count
10
I-64
Interstate64
Severe
States
Hazards
Flood Warning, Flood Watch
Alert Count
3
I-44
Interstate44
Severe
States
Hazards
Flash Flood Warning, Flood Watch
Alert Count
4
Weather Insight

I-44 gets a narrow dispatch window before storms reload later this week

The heaviest rain near northeast Oklahoma is concentrated this morning, with conditions easing to mostly cloudy later today and a quieter Wednesday. That should create a short recovery window for Kansas City–Oklahoma City and other I-44-linked moves, but Thursday rain and a renewed thunderstorm threat Friday argue against assuming the lane is fully normalized.

Weather Insight

Reefer tightness has a longer shelf life in the Rockies than in the Dakotas

Protect-from freeze demand is not likely to fade quickly across the interior West. Colorado stays in a snow and near-freezing pattern through midweek, which keeps reefers and temp-controlled straight trucks tied up on defensive freight even as the northern Plains moderate briefly. That means brokers moving food, beverage or pharmaceutical freight across the Rockies should expect the reefer premium to remain elevated through at least midweek, even if spot load counts stay light.

💰 Financial Market Indicators

📰 Impactful News Analysis

  1. Carriers Altering Routes to Exploit Regional Fuel Price Disparities 🔗:
    With diesel prices remaining punishingly high, fleets and even local operators are actively crossing state lines to secure cheaper fuel, as seen with operators in Washington routing into Idaho. For brokers, this means carriers may reject loads that force them to fuel in high-tax states like WA or CA, or demand significant premiums to do so. Brokers should factor these fuel-routing preferences into their lane pricing and carrier negotiations.
  2. Regulatory Pushback on Autonomous Vehicles Signals Sustained Capacity Constraints 🔗:
    Industry groups like OOIDA are actively challenging driverless truck exemption requests, highlighting that autonomous capacity relief remains a distant prospect. Brokers must continue to build deep relationships with traditional owner-operators and small fleets, as the human-driven capacity pool will remain the sole source of reliable equipment for the foreseeable future, especially in complex, weather-impacted environments.
News Insight

Fuel-sensitive carriers are now pricing the next reload, not just the current move

On expensive-fuel or weather-impacted lanes, carriers are increasingly valuing reload certainty more than the headline linehaul. A mediocre outbound into a high-cost state can still cover if the follow-on load is pre-identified, while a decent rate without an exit plan is being rejected. Brokers that can pair the primary move with a likely reload or a preferred fuel corridor will win coverage faster and often cheaper than simply raising the rate.

🗺️ Regional & Lane Analysis

📍 Primary Region Focus: Midwest

The Midwest is currently the epicenter of freight market volatility, driven by a massive 20.8% surge in flatbed volumes colliding with severe, widespread river flooding across Missouri, Kansas, Illinois, and Indiana. This infrastructure disruption is fracturing major east-west arteries, particularly I-70 and I-44, trapping specialized equipment and forcing carriers to execute lengthy, inefficient detours. Consequently, capacity is exceptionally tight, and carriers are leveraging the operational friction to command strong rate premiums. The situation is further complicated by the $5.65/gallon diesel average, which is making carriers highly reluctant to accept deadhead miles into flood-prone zones without significant financial compensation.

🛣️ Key Lane Watch

St. Louis, MO → Indianapolis, IN: This critical I-70 corridor segment is currently severely compromised by flooding along the Blackwater River and surrounding waterways. Flatbed and heavy haul demand is surging, but capacity is actively avoiding the route due to the high risk of delays and detours. The combination of infrastructure friction and high diesel costs is driving spot rates significantly above historical averages.

Route map for St. Louis, MO → Indianapolis, IN

Kansas City, MO → Oklahoma City, OK: Connecting the Midwest to the Southern Plains, this lane is currently battling flash flood warnings along the I-44 corridor. While van volumes have softened slightly, the demand for specialized and heavy haul equipment remains robust. Carriers are leveraging the immediate weather risks to push rates higher.

Route map for Kansas City, MO → Oklahoma City, OK
Regional Insight

The St. Louis-Indianapolis problem is shifting from rainfall to network drag

Even where rain tapers, the lane is unlikely to snap back quickly because river flooding outlasts the storm itself and keeps detours, per mit workarounds and missed appointments in place. Add strong crosswinds across Illinois and Indiana today to the flood disruption, and transit times for flatbed, step deck and light empty trailers become less predictable than routing software will suggest.

📊 Breaking Down the $0.42 Reefer Anomaly

Today's real-time load board data reveals a startling anomaly in the temperature-controlled sector: despite a 12.6% drop in available reefer loads (down to 8,998), carriers are commanding a massive $0.42/mile premium, with paid rates hitting $3.46/mile against $3.04/mile posted. This extreme divergence between falling volume and skyrocketing rates indicates a severe, localized capacity vacuum rather than a broad demand surge. The data suggests that the combination of late-season freeze warnings in the Northern Plains (requiring PFF) and accelerating southern produce harvests has effectively bifurcated the reefer fleet. Carriers are clustered in high-yield produce markets, leaving northern and midwestern shippers starved for temperature-controlled equipment. Consequently, when a reefer load must move in these depleted zones, brokers are forced to pay exorbitant deadhead premiums to pull capacity out of their preferred lanes, driving the national average paid rate to extreme highs despite the overall drop in load counts.

🏗️ Flooding Fractures Key Corridors, Trapping Open-Deck Assets

The explosive 20.8% surge in flatbed volumes (91,683 loads) and 26.2% surge in heavy haul (41,621 loads) is directly correlated with the severe infrastructure degradation currently plaguing the Midwest and Gulf Coast. Active NWS alerts confirm significant flooding along the Blackwater, Calcasieu, and Vermilion rivers, directly threatening the I-70, I-44, and I-10 corridors. This is not merely a weather delay; it is a structural capacity constraint. Open-deck and specialized equipment, which operate under strict routing and permitting guidelines, cannot easily detour onto secondary roads. As a result, specialized assets are effectively trapped or forced into massive out-of-route miles, artificially shrinking the available capacity pool. The $3.48 to $3.51/mile paid rates in these sectors reflect the hazard pay and detour compensation carriers are demanding to operate in these fractured infrastructure environments.

🌐 Fuel Disparities Dictating Carrier Routing Behavior

The national diesel average remains anchored at a punishing $5.65/gallon, but regional disparities are beginning to heavily influence carrier behavior and lane preferences. As highlighted by today's news of commercial fleets crossing state lines to avoid high fuel taxes (e.g., Washington to Idaho), independent owner-operators are executing similar strategies on a macro scale. Carriers are actively rejecting loads that terminate in high-fuel-cost states unless the outbound rate guarantees a lucrative exit, or they are demanding massive upfront premiums. This dynamic is visible in the persistent carrier premiums across the van ($0.10/mile) and specialized ($0.08/mile) sectors. Brokers must recognize that at $5.65/gallon, fuel is no longer just a line-item expense; it is the primary determining factor in a carrier's load acceptance algorithm, requiring highly strategic pricing on lanes that traverse expensive fueling regions.

Strategic Takeaways

High-Signal Additions

🧭 Savvy Broker's Playbook

🔑 Executive Signal Summary


🧠 What the board is really saying


🚚 Mode-by-mode broker playbook

🚛 Dry Van

🧊 Reefer

🏗️ Flatbed

🏋️ Heavy Haul

🔧 Specialized

📦 LTL / Partial


🌦️ Weather-driven tactics for the next 24–72 hours


💵 What to change in your quoting and negotiation today


⚠️ Risk controls that matter most today


🎯 Highest-value broker moves today

  1. Reprice all reefer freight immediately using paid-rate reality, not posted-rate assumptions.
  2. Cover Midwest van and flood-exposed open-deck freight before late-day repricing widens.
  3. Use the late-today-to-Wednesday I-44 lull to lock trucks before the next weather cycle.
  4. Sell reload visibility aggressively to fuel-sensitive carriers.
  5. Break transit-risk pricing out separately on flatbed, heavy haul, and specialized freight.
  6. Use LTL/Partial early when customers resist truckload pricing.
  7. Push operations to verify facilities, not just routes.

🔭 Probability-weighted outlook for the next 24–72 hours


🧾 Bottom line

Today’s winners will be the brokers who buy certainty early, package freight cleanly, and price disruption honestly before the market punishes delay.

📅 This Day in History

1848: Mexican–American War: Mexico ratifies the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, thus ending the war and ceding California, Nevada, Utah and parts of four other modern-day U.S. states to the United States for US$15 million.
1959: The North Vietnamese Army establishes Group 559, whose responsibility is to determine how to maintain supply lines to South Vietnam; the resulting route is the Ho Chi Minh trail.
1963: The New York Post Sunday Magazine publishes Martin Luther King Jr.'s Letter from Birmingham Jail.

💭 Quote of the Day

"True knowledge exists in knowing that you know nothing."

— Socrates