Tag: FedEx

FedEx report first loss in 11 years

FedEx Corp. posted its first quarterly loss in 11 years and projected earnings that fall short of analysts’ estimates as fuel costs rise and a slowing economy curbs demand. The shares dropped 2.1 percent.
The report from FedEx, considered a proxy for the U.S. economy, suggests fuel costs and declining demand will continue to erode prospects in industries ranging from shipping to airlines. Economists have cut their U.S. growth forecasts for later this year and next as job losses, food and fuel prices and tougher lending rules hurt consumers.
FedEx and UPS typically have a two-month lag in recovering fuel expenses through surcharges. Crude oil, from which gasoline and jet fuel are derived, averaged USD 115 a barrel in the three months ended May 31, up from USD 63 in the same period a year earlier.
FedEx’s fuel bill for the fourth quarter surged 54 percent, to USD 1.39 billion. Jet-fuel costs jumped 80 percent from a year earlier, Graf said on a conference call with investors and analysts.
The surcharges that FedEx has been able to add so far have hurt demand for express shipments, as some customers downgrade to cheaper options such as two-day shipping or freight. FedEx’s fuel surcharge on express packages is 28 percent, up from 18.5 percent in March, according to its Web site. The surcharge will jump to 32.5 percent in early July.
FedEx’s results underscore concerns among economists that higher energy and raw-materials expenses will squeeze profits in more industries as consumers resist price increases.

Read More

FedEx F3Q:08 Preview

FDX F3Q:08 Preview – Likely More of the Same

FDX TO REPORT F3Q (FEB) QTR ON THURS, MARCH 20TH. With the potential for pre-reports prior to a competitor’s conference this Wed., followed by FDX’ report on Thurs, we suspect this could be a tumultuous week for the transports. We have little insight into FDX report, but expect more of the same with recent reports from FDX where they beat low expectations but on-going numbers move downwards.

WE REMAIN BELOW CONS. Our unchanged USD 6.28 and USD 6.54 EPS estimates for F08 and F09 remain 1% and 8% below current Cons. of USD 6.33 and USD 7.13. We believe we are generally below Cons. mostly as a result of our expectations for increased drags on Ground costs related to on-going and unforeseen new issues related to the contractor model. We assume only 3% EBIT growth for Ground for F09 and we suspect Cons. assumes closer to 20% Ground EBIT growth.

FUEL LIKELY A DRAG BUT NOTHING LIKE LAST QUARTER. We estimate roughly that net fuel impact (higher y-o-y fuel costs net of higher y-o-y surcharge rev) will represent about a USD 0.04 net drag on EPS during F3Q, much less of a drag than the estimated USD 0.29 drag in F2Q y-o-y, but not the net benefit we had expected earlier in the qtr.

MORE VISIBILITY INTO THE FREIGHT ECONOMY. UPS recently noted that after relatively solid Dec. and Jan. months that Feb. and early March dom. package vols. weakened once again. It will be interesting to see if FDX experienced similar trends, or whether UPS’ trends were accented by its Teamsters contract ratification (see ATA data below). Our sense is FDX likely showed similar trends with relative strength most of the qtr. Int’l vols. remain solid.

WE REMAIN ON THE SIDELINES. Despite FDX’ seemingly appealing valuation at 13x our low end forward EPS, we continue to see risk from FDX’ contractor model going forward. FDX tends to update legal and tax issues related to its contractors during its 10Q filings right after earnings reports, so we believe there remains risk around earnings periods.

INVESTMENT CONCLUSION: FDX stock has remained under pressure with the rest of the market the past week and since UPS warned last Wednesday during its analysts meeting of slowing domestic volumes over the past six weeks. For the full year to date FDX is now down 5% compared to UPS down 2% and the S&P 500 down 12%.

FDX is currently trading at 13.3x and 5.6x our forward twelve month EPS and EV/EBITDA estimates. This compares to UPS at 15.7x and 8.6x . This also compares to FDX’ 1, 3 and 5 year averages of 14.1x, 15.3x and 16.6x and 6.0x, 6.3x and 6.6x . While valuation for FDX seems compelling, and we continue to believe we are close to a point where domestic operations are at a bottom relative to the economy, we continue to have longer term concerns about FDX’ Ground contractor model and FDX need to spend money to attempt to show less control over its franchisees. As a result gradually over the next five years we expect FDX past ten year Ground volume CAGR of 10% to decelerate towards 5%-6%, while we expect UPS to see its past ten year Ground volume growth CAGR of 2% to gradually increase to about 3%. For now we remain very comfortable on the side lines with a Peer Perform rating on FDX and an Outperform rating on UPS. We do not recommend playing FDX’ stock into the quarter one way or another as we expect solid earnings and continued tempered guidance, with the potential announcement of further legal, tax or operating changes around Ground in its release or 10Q filings. FDX remains rated Peer Perform.

Read More

Deutsche Post CEO says in no rush on Postbank

Postbank owner, Deutsche Post, is in no hurry to reach a decision on a possible sale of the German retail bank, Chief Executive Frank Appel told Reuters in an interview.

‘I don’t feel any rush or haste. I will decide according to what is best for Deutsche Post, but also for Postbank,’ Appel said on Saturday during a trip to China with German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier.

Postbank, the country’s biggest retail bank, is up for sale and its owner has invited expressions of interest. Sources familiar with the matter told Reuters last week that if offers are good enough, Deutsche Post will push ahead with a sale within weeks.

Deutsche Bank has flagged interest in Postbank, as have Allianz and Commerzbank, which are making a joint approach. They would plan to swallow Postbank into a newly created group that would include Allianz’s Dresdner Bank.

Asked about the possibilities on the table for Postbank, Appel said: ‘We are sounding out options and are not participating in any speculation.’

Appel was participating in a three-day trip with Steinmeier to China, where Deutsche Post’s delivery arm DHL express is moving to strengthen its foothold in the fast-growing market.

Read More

CEP carriers hike surcharges as fuel costs soar

Leading international express and parcel carriers are increasing their air and road fuel surcharges dramatically to the 20pct – 30pct range as soaring oil prices drive up operating costs and provoke transport industry protests across Europe and around the world.
Global integrators DHL, FedEx, UPS and TNT, European road-based parcel carrier GLS, and other express and parcel carriers around the world have all raised surcharges significantly this month to try to pass on higher fuel costs to their customers. The highest surcharges are generally in the USA, followed by Asia and then Europe.
The hikes come amid dramatic protests in Europe and other world regions by trucking companies angry about the impact of higher fuel prices. This week has seen strikes, blockades and other protests by tens of thousands of hauliers in Spain, Portugal, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Poland and other European countries. Two drivers were even killed in separate incidents in Spain and Portugal. In Asia, there have been demonstrations by truckers in South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand, India and other countries.
In the express and parcels industry, which is doubly impacted by higher operating costs for jet fuel and truck diesel, leading players have been gradually raising their surcharges over the last few months in line with various published jet fuel price indices. These surcharges have jumped significantly in June due to the surge in oil prices.

Read More

FedEx Express appoints new Managing Director

FedEx Express has appointed Indranil Sen as its Managing Director, Marketing for Middle East, Indian Sub continent and Africa.

At FedEx Express, Indranil will be responsible for driving the performance and profitability for the region and most importantly delivering the FedEx Purple Promise of enhancing customer experience.

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