Boston Herald

FEDEX SCUTTLES AMAZON DEAL

Company to end ground deliveries for dotcom, pursue work with other retailers

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NEW YORK — FedEx will no longer make ground deliveries for Amazon as the online shopping giant builds its own fleet and becomes more of a threat to delivery companies.

The announceme­nt Wednesday comes two months after FedEx terminated its air delivery contract with Amazon. FedEx said dumping Amazon is part of its plan to go after more e-commerce deliveries from other companies.

Traditiona­l retailers like Walmart and Target want to sell more of their goods online, which in turn allows FedEx to distance itself from Amazon.com without suffering the same competitiv­e damage it might once have.

“This does not come as a surprise to us,” Citi Research analyst Christian Wetherbee said in a note to clients. “The company is clearly trying to move away from its partnershi­p with Amazon and we believe it is using this move as a selling point to win new non-Amazon business.”

At the same time, Amazon is growing its own fleet of air and ground transporta­tion, giving it more control of how its packages are delivered while reducing its reliance on FedEx, UPS and the U.S. Postal Service. The Seattle-based company has been leasing jets, building package-sorting hubs at airports and has launched a program that lets contractor­s start businesses delivering packages in vans stamped with the Amazon logo.

Last month, FedEx warned for the first time in a government filing that Amazon’s fledging delivery business could lower prices, hurt its revenue and “negatively impact our financial condition and results of operations.”

Amazon doesn’t say how much of its packages flow through FedEx, but it’s likely a much smaller amount compared to UPS and the U.S. Postal Service. FedEx said that Amazon made up just 1.3% of its total revenue in 2018, or about $850 million.

“Nothing but respect for FedEx but they were very small piece of our network and vice versa, we wish them nothing but the best (conscious uncoupling at its finest),” tweeted Amazon executive Dave Clark, who oversees the company’s warehouses and delivery business. “We have great strategic partners who are part of our long term plan and we appreciate what they do for customers.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? FLEET MANEUVERS: A FedEx driver returns to his truck in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., while an Amazon Prime staffer loads a delivery van in South Denver, Colo.
GETTY IMAGES FLEET MANEUVERS: A FedEx driver returns to his truck in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., while an Amazon Prime staffer loads a delivery van in South Denver, Colo.
 ?? THE DENVER POST FILE ??
THE DENVER POST FILE

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