WS Investor
04 May 2026, 18:06
Amazon Opens Its Logistics Doors — and UPS Pays the Price
May 4, 2026
Shares of United Parcel Service (NYSE: UPS) are down around 9% today, hit by a double blow of a fierce new competitive threat and a weak earnings backdrop.
Amazon announced the launch of Amazon Supply Chain Services on Monday, opening its logistics network — including 80,000 trailers, 24,000 intermodal containers, and 100 aircraft — to businesses beyond its own operations. This is particularly damaging for UPS given that Amazon is already ramping down the packages it sends via UPS by more than 50% by mid-2026, and now Amazon is actively targeting the very third-party shippers that UPS had been counting on to replace that lost volume. (Investing*com)
The announcement compounds a difficult Q1 2026 earnings backdrop. Although UPS beat pro forma estimates, GAAP earnings were $1.02 per share — down more than 27% year over year — with a 4.0% domestic operating margin weighed down by $350 million in one-time costs related to closing 50 facilities. (Investing*com)
UPS did reaffirm its full-year 2026 revenue guidance of approximately $89.7 billion and a non-GAAP adjusted operating margin of about 9.6%, targeting roughly $3 billion in cost savings for the year. (Stocktitan)
For now, Amazon's bold move into third-party logistics has investors questioning whether UPS's second-half recovery story can still materialize as promised.
May 4, 2026
Shares of United Parcel Service (NYSE: UPS) are down around 9% today, hit by a double blow of a fierce new competitive threat and a weak earnings backdrop.
Amazon announced the launch of Amazon Supply Chain Services on Monday, opening its logistics network — including 80,000 trailers, 24,000 intermodal containers, and 100 aircraft — to businesses beyond its own operations. This is particularly damaging for UPS given that Amazon is already ramping down the packages it sends via UPS by more than 50% by mid-2026, and now Amazon is actively targeting the very third-party shippers that UPS had been counting on to replace that lost volume. (Investing*com)
The announcement compounds a difficult Q1 2026 earnings backdrop. Although UPS beat pro forma estimates, GAAP earnings were $1.02 per share — down more than 27% year over year — with a 4.0% domestic operating margin weighed down by $350 million in one-time costs related to closing 50 facilities. (Investing*com)
UPS did reaffirm its full-year 2026 revenue guidance of approximately $89.7 billion and a non-GAAP adjusted operating margin of about 9.6%, targeting roughly $3 billion in cost savings for the year. (Stocktitan)
For now, Amazon's bold move into third-party logistics has investors questioning whether UPS's second-half recovery story can still materialize as promised.