Christmas Creep adds stress for delivery firms.
Fedex Corp. and United Parcel Service Inc. are girding for their biggest test yet in the e-commerce era, with “Christmas Creep” pushing the holiday shopping season ever earlier and stretching the limits of shipping networks already strained by the pandemic.
Promotions by Amazon.com Inc. and rivals that began this week are forecast to spur $10 billion in sales, accelerating holiday purchases and outstripping last year’s post-thanksgiving Cyber Monday spree.
With legions of consumers staying away from stores this year, the parcel carriers already are handling record deliveries and bumping against capacity constraints.
“Prime Day will be a very good test,” said John Haber, founder of logistics consulting firm Spend Management Experts. “If they can handle all the packages coming out of the gate here and do that smoothly, that’s a good sign of things to come. If they have problems, those problems probably won’t go away.”
Fedex and UPS perform a peak
season balancing act every year that involves computer models and customer discussions. Adding too few resources can create havoc for retailers and customers, while beefing up payroll and capacity too much can dent couriers’ profits.
New consumption patterns this year fueled by the pandemic, plus signs that consumersplan to shopearlier than usual, have introduced a measure of guesswork into the planning.
The big couriers already have been hiring seasonal workers to handle higherthan-usual volume, stepping up earlier than they typically do. Fedex increased capacity by rolling out seven-day service to 95 percent of the U.S. population and introduced new routing software that lets it handle unusually large residential packages.
“Because we’ve had the resources on already and, over the top of that, we’re now adding on peak resources, I think we’re well positioned to handle the volume,” said Henry Maier, the chief of Fedex’s Ground unit. “We’d move aggressively to accommodate anybody who thinks they’re going to be shipping significantly higher than normal.”
Large retailers — who typically get volume discounts — must be more flexible on schedules. Fedex and UPS, for example, have increased weekend capacity for pickups and delivery. Shippers also will be pressed to prepare trailer loads of packages for delivery.
“It’s mostly large customers that will make those changes,” Maier said. “We’re making sure they understand where capacity is available in the network and on what days and what times, so we can do our best to fill their expectations at peak.”
Small retailers, which don’t get the big discounts like large shippers, won’t be as affected by the tight capacity, he said.
UPS’ network is ready for the volume generated by Prime Day and promotions by other retailers during peak season, spokesman
Glenn Zaccara said.
“We are working closely with our large and medium customers to steer volume to capacity and ensure the UPS network is reliable for all customers,” he said by email.
Preparations by Fedex and UPS notwithstanding, the shipping industry as a whole nearly is maxing out.
“Everybody — regionals and nationals alike — are at capacity and then some,” said Dick Metzler, the chief executive officer of Lone Star Overnight.
The Austin-based courier, which serves nine states, stopped taking big new ecommerce shippers about a month ago. Lone Star plans to hire individuals using their own cars to deliver packages if the company’s trucks are overwhelmed — a technique Amazon and UPS also use.
“My sense is there’s going to be a shortage of capacity, just based on the number of people that we couldn’t add,” Metzler said.
Higher volume and increased prices during the pandemic have helped FedEx and UPS weather increased expenses and the decrease in commercial business during early lockdowns. Sales at Fedex’s ground unit jumped 36 percent in the company’s latest quarter, pushing profit well above analysts’ estimates. UPS is set to report earnings Oct. 28.
Investors have been enthusiastic, sending Fedex jumping 80 percent this year through Tuesday and pushing UPS up 50 percent. The S&P 500 Index rose 8.7 percent during the same period.
The couriers, as well as the U.S. Postal Service, have added additional surcharges for the peak season to cover added expenses for surging volume. Smoothing out volume will be important and if forecasts about purchases creeping earlier in the season are correct, courier profits could be strong.
“The message we’ve given everybody in this is that you need to ship early,” said Maier, of Fedex. “The thing that is different this year is the extent to which you can pull that volume forward out of the first week of December.”