FedEx Vs. UPS: Which Delivery Service Is A Better Bet Right Now?

 | Dec 09, 2020 07:58

E-commerce is booming during the pandemic and so are the companies that deliver shipments to millions of consumers stuck in their homes.

The demand for delivery services has been so strong this holiday season that United Parcel Service (NYSE:UPS) imposed shipping restrictions on some large retailers like Gap Inc (NYSE:GPS) and Nike (NYSE:NKE) last week, the Wall Street Journal reports .

This unexpected shift in consumer purchasing trends has already immensely benefited the parcel delivery rivals FedEx (NYSE:FDX) and UPS. Their shares, after fully recovering from the March dip, are up about 96% and 43% this year, respectively.

So, if you’re looking to add one of these players to your portfolio right now, you have to decide between these two competitors and their growth prospects. Let’s take a deeper look.

h2 FedEx: Early Preparations Making The Difference/h2

FedEx’s business restructuring—which was planned before the pandemic—proved to be a great differentiator in this new environment. Before COVID-19 spread across the globe, the company had already moved to seven-day service, expanded capacity for larger packages, introduced new routing software and began pushing more express packages into the lower-cost ground network.

The company’s latest quarterly earnings also showed it is well-prepared to take advantage of this new situation. In September, FedEx reported the highest adjusted operating margin for its fiscal first quarter since 2017.

Revenue climbed more than 13% to $19.3 billion, a quarterly record for the company, and earnings-per-share about doubled what analysts had been anticipating.

Said CEO Fred Smith:

“Our earnings growth underscores the importance of our business initiatives and investments over the last several years and, in many ways, the world has accelerated to meet our strategies.”

Before the pandemic, FedEx was struggling to win investors' confidence. The biggest concern keeping them on the sidelines was the ongoing trouble its European business faced after its costly takeover of Dutch courier service TNT in 2015. That deal failed to unlock the value investors were hoping to see.

The integration challenges and the slowing European economy had raised doubts about the benefits of the TNT deal, with some analysts questioning the wisdom behind this massive undertaking. But the global health crisis has changed the dynamics, giving management a window of opportunity to turn around the business.