The Commercial Appeal

Fedex posts strong 1Q results amid delivery demand surge

- Max Garland

Fedex saw strong results driven by increased demand this past quarter, and the company plans to spend more to keep up with the growth in volume, the Memphis logistics giant reported Tuesday.

Fedex posted $19.3 billion in revenue for the 2021 fiscal year's first quarter, up from $17 billion the yearbefore quarter. Net income was an adjusted $1.28 billion, up 60% from fiscal 2020's first quarter. The quarter ended Aug. 31.

“Our earnings growth underscore­s the importance of our business initiative­s and investment­s over the last several years, and, in many ways, the world has accelerate­d to meet our strategies,” said Chairman and CEO Fred Smith in a statement. “I would like to thank our team members whose efforts during this time have helped keep the world's health care, industrial and at-home supply chains moving despite the challenges of the global pandemic.”

In a regulatory filing, Fedex said it saw “unpreceden­ted demand for our residentia­l delivery services, rivaling our peak holiday season traffic.” Fedex Ground's average daily package volume skyrockete­d from 8.8 million the year-before quarter to 11.6 million this quarter, an increase of 31%.

Demand for Fedex's more profitable commercial delivery services “improved sequential­ly” as businesses continued to reopen amid Covid-19-related shutdowns, Fedex said.

Fedex Express, which leans on commercial shipments, made a major rebound in the quarter. Operating income at Express increased nearly 150% from the year before.

In a news release, Fedex said it's raising its capital spending forecast to $5.1 billion, an increase of $200 million, due to “initiative­s to support increased volume levels.”

“While business demand improved in the first quarter, continued uncertaint­ies cloud our ability to forecast full-year earnings,” said CFO Alan Graf in a statement. “However, we expect to continue to benefit from our strong position in the U.S. and internatio­nal package and freight markets, yield improvemen­t opportunit­ies and cost management initiative­s.”

Fedex reported adjusted earnings per share of $4.87 for the quarter, which smashed Wall Street expectatio­ns. Investment research firm Zacks predicted earnings per share of $2.54 earnings prior to earnings.

“This was the second straight quarter of solid execution from Fedex, which, paired with much stronger-than-expected shipment volumes, led to earnings well above expectatio­ns,” said Matt Arnold, an analyst at Edward Jones, in a note. “We believe Fedex is making the right moves by expanding its service offerings to benefit from e-commerce demand growth, including the addition of Sunday deliveries.”

Fedex's strategy to lean into the growth of online shopping hasn't changed, President and COO Raj Subramania­m said, pointing to initiative­s such as Fedex Ground home delivery expanding to seven days a week. The timing of forecasted ecommerce trends, however, did.

“The growth that we expected to see over a period of three to five years happened in a period of three to five months,” he said.

Fedex riding high amid COVID-19 demand spike

The strong quarterly results come as Fedex stock has been trading at highs not seen since 2018. Industry analysts have been impressed by surging home delivery volumes at Fedex Ground, and Fedex Express is seeing newfound demand with the grounding of passenger planes limiting air cargo alternativ­es.

Fedex Express, Fedex's largest company, has been busier at its World Hub in Memphis and its pilots have encountere­d flight demand comparable to the holidays.

Express made $9.6 billion in revenue and $710 million in operating income this past quarter. That's up from the year-before quarter's $8.9 billion in revenue and $285 million in operating income.

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