Tag: Courier/Express/Parcels

Arkansas Best Corporation

Arkansas Best Corporation (ABFS-$27.45-Peer Perform)

Signs of Hope Drive Stock

IN-LINE REPORT. ABFS reported 4Q EPS generally in-line with expectations (4% below Cons. but well above our low end expectation and with some puts & takes) Rev, EBIT and EPS changed y-o-y by +2%, -5% and -4%, a big acceleration on much easier comps from -5%,-40% and -45% in 3Q. We roughly estimate that ABFS benefited by $0.09 y-o-y from higher fuel rev. net of costs.

TONNAGE LESS WORSE THAN EXPECTED. ABFS reported daily tonnage declines less worse (-1.5%) than exp. in 4Q into easier comps and improved traction with its RPM rollout. Importantly Mgmt noted Dec and Jan tonnage were modestly + y-o-y. Mgmt will not break out how much of this tonnage improvement is related to the increasing traction in the roll out of their next day product, but we suspect most, if not all of it.

REPORTED YIELDS ALSO BETTER THAN EXPECTED. ABFS reported yields up 2.5% y-o-y compared to -0.2% in 3Q. Our rough estimate is that about 3.5pp-4pp of this is related to fuel surcharges which are up 42% over a yr ago and that actual pricing remains down. This would explain the in-line report despite better than exp. reported tonnage, yields, gains on sales & tax rate.

SO, WHY WAS THE STOCK UP 17%? We suspect a combination of short covering into the report, 2 of our competitors defensive upgrades in the morning, as well as the recent rush to own early cyclicals into the news that tonnage had likely bottomed into easier comps. Also we suspect some investors may misinterpret reported yields and arguably temporary benefits from the fuel surcharge, with real pricing improvement.

WHAT TO DO WITH THE STOCK? The truck stocks are en fuego into the Fed’s recent more aggressive stance and signs that 4Q reports were not a total disaster. We noted when we upgraded the sector two weeks ago that we expected the stocks to be very volatile and present many trading opportunities up and down during 2008. Our sense is the group, including ABFS has likely gotten ahead of itself in the near term.

INVESTMENT CONCLUSION: ABFS was up 17% on Friday (compared to -1.6% for the S&P 500 and 2.6% for our LTL Index ex-ABFS) after reporting an in-line 4Q, but noting that tonnage trends had improved in December and January.

We have raised our estimates for C08 and C09 from $2.20 and $2.20 to $2.32 and $2.42 (compared to prior Cons of $2.33 and $2.59), respectively. ABFS is currently trading at 11.8x and 3.3x our upwardly revised forward year rolling EPS and EV/EBITDA estimates, respectively, although our sense is that ABFS will need continued high fuel surcharges relative to a year ago to make these numbers. This compares to its 1, 3 and 5 year averages of 11.9x, 11.2x, and 11.6x and 3.9x, 4.0x and 4.2x, respectively. We note if we add in an estimated $825M in pension liability that it would cost ABFS to exit its multi-employer to its current EV and add about $17M back to EBITDA as a rough estimate of potential savings from a single employer plan, ABFS’ EV/EBITDA would be a much higher than historical 7.7x. We retain our Peer Perform rating on ABFS.

What does ABFS’ report mean for other LTL providers? We were not sure as we have noted previously in preview notes, whether the LTL providers would continue to make money on fuel surcharges net of higher fuel costs in a rising fuel environment, given a recent more competitive rate environment and some customers capping fuel surcharges. Our sense is that ABFS’ report is likely evidence that they did benefit in a rising y-o-y fuel scenario and others should also. We suspect ABFS reported in-line despite better than expected tonnage and yields because pricing is very weak but fuel surcharges helped stem some of that negative drag. Below we estimate that ABFS benefited about $0.09/share in 4Q from higher fuel surcharge net of higher fuel costs. We would expect the other LTL providers to also benefit in 4Q and assuming current diese

Read More

Deutsche Post seeks FedEx partnership to stem DHL Express US losses – report

Deutsche Post is reportedly in talks with FedEx over a partnership with DHL Express designed to reduce its heavy losses in the USA. The report, which follows news of the planned EUR 600m writedown of US assets, has not been confirmed.

The Financial Times Deutschland reported today that DPWN executives want FedEx to take over DHL Express’ domestic US operations. In exchange, DHL Express would provide services in Europe for FedEx. Talks are taking place with FedEx chairman Fred Smith, the newspaper said, citing sources close to the company. DPWN CFO John Allan told the newspaper: “We have several options.”

News agencies cited DPWN spokespersons as saying that no decisions have yet been made about the future of the US express business. Talks with FedEx were not confirmed.

The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung’s online website cited Allan on Friday as saying that it was “ very, very unlikely” that the domestic US business would be given up due to the strategic importance of the market. The priority was to reduce the US losses “as quickly as possible and very substantially”. But this did not necessarily mean having to make a profit in the USA since a substantial amount of international business was generated there, he noted.

Influential analysts recently called on DPWN to downscale its US express operations significantly to reduce long-running heavy losses. Last November, due to the increasing impact of the slowing US economy, DPWN scrapped the target of achieving a breakeven in the USA by 2009.

Read More

DHL denies sale to FedEx

A DHL spokesman says parent company Deutsche Post World Net has no plans to sell its U.S. Express delivery service to its Memphis-based rival FedEx Corp.

“There is no question about our exiting the U.S. business, a withdrawal can be completely ruled out,” DHL spokesman Jonathan Baker said in a phone interview with Memphis Business Journal, a Courier sister paper, Friday morning.

Baker said he’d been fielding calls from news media across the country after a story about a possible deal appeared in Financial Times Deutschland, a German business newspaper, Friday morning.

That report said Deutsche Post World Net was in talks with FedEx founder, chairman, president and CEO Frederick Smith about the possibility of a buyout or a partnership.

In return, Deutsche Post World Net would give FedEx a larger presence in the European market, according to the report.

DHL is the main customer for ABX Air, based in Wilmington. DHL has spent billions of dollars to build up its domestic presence. Nonetheless, U.S. operations lost USD 900 million last year and analysts don’t foresee a profit this year.

The company has said it will take an USD 874 million writedown of the value of its struggling DHL Express business in the Americas. Baker said that move was more about accounting than sales and said DHL’s problems were industrywide.

“Just like everyone else, (our problems) are a result of economic conditions that have affected the industry as a whole,” he said. “We’re continuing improvement in our U.S. business and are dedicated to serving our customers.”

Read More

German Cartel Office says new rules will help Deutsche Post 'cement' monopoly

The minimum wage in the German postal-services industry and plans to maintain a sales tax exemption for Deutsche Post AG will help the company ‘cement’ its monopoly, the head of the German Cartel Office told Sueddeutsche Zeitung.

Imposing a minimum wage on the industry was a ‘regulatory sin’ and plans to only grant a sales tax exemption for postal services to companies that provide country-wide services will subdue burgeoning rivals, German antitrust regulator Bernhard Heitzer said in an interview with the newspaper.

‘We shouldn’t make the same mistakes that were made in the energy industry, where the market was liberalised without providing for the right competitive framework,’ Heitzer said.

Read More

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

P&P Poll

Loading

What's the future of the postal USO?

Thank you for voting
You have already voted on this poll!
Please select an option!



Post & Parcel Magazine


Post & Parcel Magazine is our print publication, released 3 times a year. Packed with original content and thought-provoking features, Post & Parcel Magazine is a must-read for those who want the inside track on the industry.

 

Pin It on Pinterest