UPS could keep outpacing FedEx as e-commerce delivery market dims
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[October 24, 2022] By
Lisa Baertlein and Shivansh Tiwary
(Reuters) - United Parcel Service investors
want to see this week how the delivery giant is managing through the
bursting e-commerce delivery bubble better than rival FedEx.
The global shipping downturn has been a margin drag for most operators
in the sector, but UPS, when it reports quarterly results on Tuesday,
will offer insight into how it has sheltered profits and whether it can
find new business to offset any pain.
Shares in UPS are down roughly 20% so far this year, versus the 40%
decline in FedEx stock. Last month, FedEx pulled its full-year guidance,
blaming a steep drop in global demand.
"They're better business people, they execute better, (and) they're
consistently, significantly more profitable than FedEx," Dean Maciuba, a
former FedEx sales executive turned industry advisor, said of UPS.
UPS seems to have done a better job spotting and responding to the
slowdown that hammered FedEx, which had too many planes in the air and
trucks on the road, analysts and investors said.
They pointed to Atlanta-based UPS keeping its financial outlook for the
year unchanged even though FedEx's warning gave them cover to make a
change.
At the same time, the UPS sales team has been working to drum up new
business. One recent win came at the expense of FedEx, according to two
people familiar with the matter.
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The company logo for United Parcel
Service (UPS), is displayed on a screen at the New York Stock
Exchange (NYSE) in New York, U.S., October 22, 2019. REUTERS/Brendan
McDermid
Lego, the $7.3 billion Danish maker of colorful plastic bricks used
to build everything from UPS delivery trucks to Hogwarts Castle of
Harry Potter fame, switched from FedEx to UPS, according to the
sources, who asked not to be identified.
None of the companies involved would comment on the deal. FedEx said
it is not unusual for customers to move from carrier to carrier
based on specific needs.
UPS is on track to report in-line third-quarter earnings, supported
by stable domestic volumes and cost controls, UBS analysts said in a
recent note.
Still, there are significant challenges ahead.
Global air and ocean import cargo volumes, a gauge of demand for
logistics companies like UPS and FedEx, are slumping.
Customer response to Amazon.com's pre-holiday sale this month was
tepid - suggesting muted delivery demand from UPS's largest customer
as inflation and recession worries temper expectations for the
year-end festive season.
And analysts have downbeat expectations for the U.S. economy next
year, when the contract between UPS and its unionized drivers and
package handlers expires - exposing the company to the risk of a
work stoppage and higher employee costs.
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles and Shivansh Tiwary in
Bengaluru; Editing by Ben Klayman and Nick Zieminski)
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