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Businesses Transportation United States

FedEx is Ending Ground-Delivery Contract With Amazon (cnbc.com) 68

FedEx said Wednesday it will end its ground-delivery contract with Amazon and won't renew it at the end of the month. From the report: "This change is consistent with our strategy to focus on the broader e-commerce market, which the recent announcements related to our FedEx Ground network have us positioned extraordinarily well to do," a FedEx spokesperson said. Shares of FedEx and Amazon were down at least 1% in premarket trading. Amazon was not immediately available to comment. FedEx announced in June that it is ending its express U.S. shipping contract, which only affected air services. At the time, FedEx said it was a "strategic decision" that would not affect its other contracts with Amazon. At the time, FedEx said less than 1.3% of total revenue was attributable to Amazon during the 12-month period ended Dec. 31.
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FedEx is Ending Ground-Delivery Contract With Amazon

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  • by mschaffer ( 97223 ) on Wednesday August 07, 2019 @10:55AM (#59057354)

    I cannot recall the last time FedEx delivered something I ordered from Amazon. It's either UPS or Amazon's non-flying drones.

  • Then the rest will follow and Amazon will deliver those too.

  • by acroyear ( 5882 ) <jws-slashdot@javaclientcookbook.net> on Wednesday August 07, 2019 @10:59AM (#59057376) Homepage Journal

    Dear CNBC: Shares of EVERYBODY were down 1% this morning at the opening bell. Mentioning those two here makes it seem like it is only them and somehow magically related to this announcement, but the whole market dropped by that much, in which case the announcement was utterly irrelevant to the 1% drop and therefore it shouldn't have even been mentioned.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      But it's fun to make stories -

      shares of MSFT down 1% because year of the linux desktop
      shares of SpaceX down because tardigrades land on the moon!
      shares of Apple down because Oranges!

    • It's CNBC. The fastest way to go broke is to actually believe anything they say.

    • makes it seem like

      At this point, both left [youtube.com] and right view *NBC as "fake news". Slashdot is diminished by linking to their content.

      Here's a Yahoo! Finance piece:

      https://finance.yahoo.com/news... [yahoo.com]

  • Amazon's starting their own freight delivery service and in any case pays ridiculously low contract rates with Fedex, why would Fedex want to continue to support a customer that's building their own replacement?

    https://www.cnbc.com/2019/02/1... [cnbc.com]

  • I find new respect for FedEx who is throwing away part of their business, albeit business that comes from a soon to be competitor. How foresighted.. FedEx is playing long ball here, that bodes well for their future success.

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      Perhaps FedEx has finally woken up. It needs to replace delivering Amazon orders with it's own retail web site, selling the same products Amazon does, and handling logistics direct from the producer to the end using customers. Amazon is not a retail company, it is a logistics company, it enables that logistics via it's retail web site where it sells the products it handles logistics for, from the producer to the end user customer. As for Amazon so for FedEx and in fact any logistics company, that retail web

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Amazon is only out for Amazon, there is no win-win for them.

  • Great. Now our packages will probably be delivered by the same backward driving scum bags that deliver the shopping rags I keep throwing away.
  • Just the other day a Memphis paper had an article how the amount of cargo at Memphis FedEx has dropped 6%. With dropping Amazon, it could even be more even though most was ground shipping. IMO, there must be more to the story than just Amazon is creating their own competing delivery service.

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