Tag: Deutsche Post

Austria Post says no cooperation plans with Deutsche Post's DHL Express Austria

Austria Post AG has dismissed as ‘rumours’ media reports that it plans to launch a joint venture with the Deutsche Post AG unit DHL Express Austria, the Austrian press agency APA reported.

Chief executive Anton Wais told APA that the Austrian postal services group’s logistics unit trans-o-flex will launch its own same-day delivery service in September.

According to Wais, trans-o-flex Austria could account for 50 pct of the group’s overall parcels business in the medium-term.

Citing the trade publication KEP Meldungen, the Viennese daily Der Standard had earlier reported that Austria Post was pursuing a partnership with DHL-Express Austria.

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Deutsche Post World Net and Daimler AG give go-ahead for the first hybrid truck in Europe

Deutsche Post World Net is the first logistics company in Europe to trial hybrid trucks in its operations. The go-ahead for the largest fleet test in the company’s history was given on January 29, 2008 during the World Mobility Forum in Stuttgart. Andreas Renschler, member of the Board of Management of Daimler AG and Head of Daimler Trucks, today handed over the first two vehicles, a Mercedes-Benz Atego BlueTec Hybrid and a Mitsubishi Fuso Canter Eco Hybrid, to Deutsche Post World Net.

The trial will initially include DHL Express operations in the UK as well as mail transport in Germany. In the coming months further Daimler hybrid vehicles will be integrated into the DHL fleet.

DHL can already draw on past experiences with hybrid vehicles in Japan where DHL has been successfully using the Fuso Canter Eco Hybrid since July 2006.

Deutsche Post World Net is currently working on a comprehensive climate protection program for the entire Group. One point of focus is the use of alternative drives, such as electric, gas and hybrid engines. With its DHL Innovation Center, opened in March 2007, the Group thus is leading in technologies and innovations. It is facing up to its responsibility as the world’s market leader in logistics and helping to limit greenhouse gas emissions.

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Deutsche Post to become main sponsor of car racing in Germany

Deutsche Post has signed a sponsoring contract for the two-year partnership with the Deutsche Tourenwagen-Masters (DTM), a touring car racing series based in Germany. Furthermore, DHL plans to provide express and logistics services for the touring car races in future.

The sponsoring services of Deutsche Post include perimeter advertising, equipping the grid girls as well as promotion activities targeted at end-consumers during the race weekends.

At the same time, Deutsche Post will also use its presence in DTM events as a business platform to extend and intensify important business contacts.

“As the world’s most popular touring car series, DTM stands for speed, dynamic and team spirit and is therefore an ideal partner for us,” said Jürgen Gerdes, company Board Member LETTER and PARCEL Germany, explaining the new involvement of Deutsche Post in motor-racing.

“DTM offers its sponsors great opportunities to increase their overall presence on the market. With this cooperation with Germany’s racing series No 1 we underline our reputation of being the post for Germany – and get through to a broad public”, he added.

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Deutsche Post reviews its U.S. road map

Earlier this decade, Deutsche Post AG vowed to blanket the U.S. with its yellow DHL trucks and make big inroads against express-delivery giants United Parcel Service Inc. and FedEx Corp.

Since then, the deep-pocketed German company has signed up few customers and spilled lots of red ink on U.S. soil. Now, after investing billions of dollars, the company is considering a variety of options to turn around its U.S. express-package-delivery business. One of them, say people familiar with the matter, is a retreat. In an interview, Chief Financial Officer John Allan said Deutsche Post intends to retain “a significant presence in the U.S.,” but he wouldn’t rule out any other scenarios, such as giving up a controlling stake in its U.S. express business. “We’ve got a very open mind,” he said. He said Deutsche Post is exploring several options, some of which are “more straightforward and easy” and others that could require more time.

Still, there should be clarity in “a matter of months,” he added. Analysts speculate management could seek extreme steps such as rolling back or even selling its ground network and other parts of the U.S. business. But some industry insiders question whether large rivals such as FedEx, UPS and the U.S. Postal Service would be interested. Deutsche Post, UPS and FedEx declined to comment on possible talks. A postal-service spokesman said he was unaware of any discussions. Last week, Deutsche Post disclosed it is writing down EUR 600 million (USD 887 million) of its fixed U.S. assets. Its U.S. package-delivery business is saddled with annual losses of nearly USD 1 billion and a market share that remains below 10pct.

The U.S. woes represent a rude awakening for Deutsche Post, which over the past decade has transformed itself into a globe-trotting delivery-and-logistics behemoth. During the first nine months of 2007, it rang up about 60pct of its EUR 46.55 billion in revenue outside Germany. The international express-parcel business, flying under the DHL banner, is active in more than 200 countries and enjoys leading positions in Europe and Asia.

In 2003 the former state monopoly made a big bet on the U.S., paying a bit more than USD 1 billion to acquire Seattle-based Airborne Express, giving it a significant presence in the country overnight. Data on U.S. market share are difficult to parse out because the companies look at different measures; Deutsche Post cited industry estimates that it has about 7pct to 9pct of the U.S. air and ground package deliveries, trailing UPS and FedEx by a wide margin. But it has struggled to integrate Airborne with its DHL network. The company lost about a tenth of its U.S. customer base in late 2005, when time-sensitive packages sat on runways as it transferred traffic from its main DHL air hub in Kentucky to Airborne’s Ohio hub.

Deutsche Post has spent heavily to expand the thin ground network it inherited, an attempt to build up in a few years what UPS and FedEx developed over decades. After initially predicting its U.S. express would turn profitable in late 2005, Deutsche Post recently said it no longer expects to reach its latest break-even target next year. The losses in the U.S. have weighed on Deutsche Post’s share price, which has budged little since its initial public offering in 2000.

“It’s a problem that doesn’t seem to go away. Now I think they’re finally addressing that,” said Per-Ola Hellgren, an analyst in Mainz at Landesbank Baden-Württemberg. Much of the push appears to be from Mr. Allan. Since succeeding Deutsche Post’s longtime chief financial officer in October, he has moved to cut costs and mend ties with investors who criticized the company for focusing too much on empire-building at the expense of profits.

Deutsche Post also recently said it plans to raise EUR 1 billion from real-estate sales and inked an information-technology-outsourcing deal with Hewlett-Packard Co. to save another EUR 1 billion. Finding a solution for the U.S

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