Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Holiday deliveries in the billions

On-time rates topped 94% for big 3 shippers, data shows

- KELLY YAMANOUCHI

ATLANTA — UPS, FedEx, the U.S. Postal Service and other carriers pressed through a record crush of holiday shipments to deliver most packages in time for Christmas — but more than 2 million parcels did not arrive before the big day, according to new data.

Logistics data firm ShipMatrix said the on-time delivery rate for UPS was 97.6% for packages scheduled for delivery between Dec. 20-26, while FedEx came in at 96.5% and the Postal Service at 94.7%.

Because of the large volumes of packages being moved, even those small percentage­s of delayed deliveries can affect millions of packages.

It’s still better than many feared during a peak period that had unpreceden­ted holiday season demand piled on top of pandemic home deliveries and urgent vaccine shipments. Shipping firms delivered more than 3 billion packages throughout the full peak holiday period, which typically starts the day after Thanksgivi­ng.

But some deliveries were made on Christmas Day, and hundreds of thousands of packages were delayed by several days, according to ShipMatrix president Satish Jindel. He expects that will result in more return shipments.

UPS said in a written statement that it “delivered one of the best peak seasons ever for our customers,” because of preparatio­n, coordinati­on with retailers and employees, and the use of technology.

UPS did not share delivery performanc­e data, but it referred to ShipMatrix’s industry estimates.

Industry observers have warned for months that parcel delivery firms could become overloaded during the holiday season and urged people to order early to get items in time. Longer delivery times persisted through much of the year — and UPS and FedEx have both waived on-time service money-back guarantees because of the pandemic.

The U.S. Postal Service has an alert on its website warning that it is “experienci­ng unpreceden­ted volume increases and limited employee availabili­ty due to the impacts of covid-19.” The Postal Service’s on-time delivery performanc­e earlier in 2020 declined significan­tly compared with 2019, according to quarterly data. Delivery delays also raised concerns for mail-in ballots.

Jindel said before Christmas that consumers had heeded advice about delays, resulting in lower online order volume to help with on-time delivery performanc­e. Ontime delivery rates improved for Christmas week compared with the week before.

One factor that helped UPS and FedEx keep shipments moving was refusing to take excess packages, forcing retailers to find alternativ­es such as the Postal Service. The Postal Service had to handle an extra few million parcels a day not accepted by UPS and FedEx, according to Jindel.

UPS chief sales and solutions officer Kate Gutmann said before the wave of online holiday orders hit, the company went into more in-depth discussion­s with retail executives than in years past.

“We actually determined collective­ly — both us and they — how many orders they would release from each of their distributi­on centers by day,” Gutmann said. So for Cyber Week, the big online shopping period that follows Thanksgivi­ng, “We had a certain limit.”

“That amount was reached,” Gutmann said. “We then mutually agreed that the next packages, the next loads, would feather in the following two days. And that was all by plan.”

Competitor FedEx took a similar approach. Overall, peak period on-time performanc­e was up slightly for UPS and FedEx compared with 2019, according to ShipMatrix. But by rejecting packages, the two private carriers further strained the Postal Service.

“I’ve never seen capacity controlled as tightly as it has been this peak season,” said John Haber, CEO of Atlantabas­ed supply chain consulting firm Spend Management Experts. He added that since UPS CEO Carol Tome took the helm at the shipping giant last year, there’s “a different philosophy with the new regime.”

Tome, a former chief financial officer at Home Depot, has emphasized that “bigger is not necessaril­y better… [so] they’re not going to build out tons of capacity and then try to fill it out by offering very aggressive pricing,” Haber said.

 ?? (AP/David Zalubowski) ?? A FedEx delivery vehicle makes a U-turn near the Denver Pavilions in late December , in downtown
Denver.
(AP/David Zalubowski) A FedEx delivery vehicle makes a U-turn near the Denver Pavilions in late December , in downtown Denver.

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