San Diego Union-Tribune

UPS SAYS IT’S SLASHING 12,000 JOBS

Cuts are 5 months after union deal as revenue outlook disappoint­s

- BY MICHELLE CHAPMAN Chapman writes for The Associated Press.

UPS will cut 12,000 jobs and released a revenue outlook for this year that sent its shares down sharply.

The company also hinted that its Coyote truck load brokerage business may be put up for sale. UPS acquired the Chicago-based company for $1.8 billion in 2015.

The Teamsters in September voted to approve a tentative conamong tract agreement with UPS, putting a final seal on contentiou­s labor negotiatio­ns that threatened to disrupt package deliveries for millions of businesses and households nationwide. The contract includes pay raises for full- and part-time union workers, the creation of 7,500 full-time jobs and the filling of 22,500 open positions, allowing more part-timers to transition to full time.

On a conference call Tuesday morning, CEO Carol Tome said that by reducing the company’s headcount UPS will realize $1 billion in cost savings. The job eliminatio­ns are anticipate­d to be management roles and contractor­s, the company said.

UPS also said Tuesday that its board approved an increase of 1 cent in its quarterly dividend to shareholde­rs of record Feb. 20.

“We are going to fit our organizati­on to our strategy and align our resources against what’s widely important,” Tome said.

Tome said that UPS is ordering employees to return to the office five days a week this year.

United Parcel Service Inc. anticipate­s 2024 revenue in a range of approximat­ely $92 billion to $94.5 billion, short of Wall Street’s expectatio­ns for a figure above $95.5 billion.

Shares of UPS dropped nearly 8 percent on Tuesday.

Revenue also came up short in the fourth quarter, sliding 7.8 percent to $24.92 billion. That’s just shy of Wall Street projection­s for $25.31 billion, according to a poll of analysts by FactSet.

Profits for the quarter ended in December slid by more than half to $1.61 billion, or $1.87 per share, from $3.45 billion, or $3.96 per share. On an adjusted basis, quarterly earnings per share totaled $2.47, a penny above the average estimate, according to FactSet.

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