Texarkana Gazette

UPS sinks after CEO’s plan crimps profit forecast

- By Thomas Black

United Parcel Service Inc. plunged as Chief Executive Officer David Abney said he would accelerate spending to speed deliveries and expand weekend service — a strategy he sees as essential to the courier’s future even though it will squeeze profit this year.

In its push to capture more e-commerce business, UPS is grabbing more business from Amazon.com after FedEx cut ties to the online retailer. But UPS’s investment­s in automation — designed to cut costs in the long term — are weighing on the 2020 outlook, which fell short of Wall Street’s expectatio­ns.

Parcel delivery companies are struggling to keep up with a flood of online shopping that requires faster deliveries seven days a week, as well as extended hours for retailers to ship packages. UPS is moving quicker to meet that demand. While those efforts will crank up costs and hurt profit in the short run, Abney said results will improve as soon as next year.

“The opportunit­ies are there. Shareholde­rs would expect us to take it,” the CEO said in an interview Thursday. “If the end number is a little bit less than what people were expecting, it’s an investment in the future, but the short-term future.”

The shares tumbled 6.5% to $108.27 at 9:37 a.m. after sliding as much as 7.3% for the biggest drop in nine months.

Adjusted earnings will be no more than $8.06 a share this year, the company said in a statement. That trailed the $8.07 average of analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

UPS has dealt with negative investor reaction before. Shares tanked when Abney introduce a three-year, $20 billion spending plan in 2018 to boost automation and purchase new aircraft. The strategy eventually won over investors after the company halted a long slide in profit margins.

UPS logged a third consecutiv­e quarter of gains in profit margins. That reversed a slide that began at the end of 2016, when rising e-commerce deliveries jacked up costs. Fourthquar­ter operating margin increased to 11.1% from 10.1% a year earlier as the courier emerged unscathed from another record holiday delivery season.

Automation helped drive down the cost to deliver a package by 3.2% on an adjusted basis, the company said. Volume for all products in the U.S. surged 9% in the quarter.

UPS’s next-day air volume jumped 26% in the quarter as the company got a boost from Amazon after it broke off business with FedEx last year. Amazon-related business rose to 11.6% of UPS’s revenue last year.

While deepening its ties with Amazon, the company also wants to expand sales with large U.S. retailers, Abney said. More than 90% of large retailers are already UPS customers, and the company is tailoring services to attract more business from them, including extending deadlines for picking up packages from stores for next-day shipment.

Lower costs for its internatio­nal operations drove a 3.6% gain in operating profit even as sales fell. Abney said he expects internatio­nal revenue to rise this year after the U.S., Canada and Mexico approved a revised trade pact and the U.S. and China stabilized tariffs in the first phase of a trade deal. It’s too early to gauge how the coronaviru­s outbreak may impact trade, Abney said.

UPS plans capital spending of about $6.7 billion this year as it builds more automated sorting hubs. Last year, spending was about $6.4 billion. Free cash flow, which is money left over after paying all bills, is expected to be $4.3 billion to $4.7 billion, an increase from $4.1 billion in 2019.

UPS posted fourth-quarter earnings per share of $2.11, compared with the $2.10 average of analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Revenue rose 3.6% to $20.6 billion, in line with estimates.

 ?? Bloomberg photo by Luke Sharrett ?? ■ Cargo jet tail sections are pictured during the afternoon sort at the United Parcel Service Inc. Worldport facility Tuesday in Louisville, Ky.
Bloomberg photo by Luke Sharrett ■ Cargo jet tail sections are pictured during the afternoon sort at the United Parcel Service Inc. Worldport facility Tuesday in Louisville, Ky.

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