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.
