Amazon Is the Next Step in FedEx’s Bold Turnaround

After FedEx Corp. and Amazon.com Inc. went through a noisy divorce in 2019, it was a bit jarring to hear Brie Carere, FedEx’s chief customer officer, welcome back volume from the e-commerce giant with such open arms.

United Parcel Service Inc., FedEx’s larger rival, is going in the opposite direction with Amazon, announcing at the beginning of the year that it was accelerating its “glide down relationship” to shed about $5 billion of business with the company that’s not very profitable.

The new Amazon volume is only part of a self-help push by FedEx to boost annual revenue by as much as 6% in a soft package market, Carere said in a conference call last week. Best Buy Co., the electronics retailer, just named FedEx as its primary national carrier, she said.

FedEx is winning market share and expanding margins. This is the fruit of the transformation plan introduced by Raj Subramaniam in June 2022 soon after the company’s founder, Fred Smith, installed him as chief executive officer. The full impact of this strategy is muddied by the post-pandemic downturn for package delivery and now the shake-up of the market from tariffs and the demise of the de minimis exemption, which had allowed packages with a value of $800 or less to enter the US duty free. Until the noise from the tariffs changes subsides, it will be difficult to tell how profitable this new business is.

marginal improvement

Both UPS and FedEx are cutting costs to cope with the soft market, but the efforts are unequal. UPS, which has historically operated more efficiently because of its expensive unionized workforce, doesn’t have as much fat to cut to cope with higher costs. The workforce became much more expensive after a five-year labor contract was reached in 2023 and the Teamsters won concessions on costly items such as adding air conditioning to new delivery vehicles.