Airline Pilot Central Forums

Airline Pilot Central Forums (https://www.airlinepilotforums.com/)
-   Cargo (https://www.airlinepilotforums.com/cargo/)
-   -   Interesting FedEx Comments (https://www.airlinepilotforums.com/cargo/31449-interesting-fedex-comments.html)

Precontact 09-22-2008 06:04 PM

Interesting FedEx Comments
 
FedEx Pulls a Fast One

FedEx Pulls a Fast One
By Rich Smith (TMFDitty)
September 22, 2008

If FedEx (NYSE: FDX) left any surprises on shareholders' doorsteps with its latest quarterly report, the packages weren't necessarily welcome. By my count, this was the company's fifth consecutive quarter of falling year-over-year earnings. Even worse, customers will get stuck with a 5% price increase for no additional service.

Management delivered first-quarter earnings right in line with what investors were expecting. Profits landed at $1.23 per share while revenue rose 8%, missing $10 billion by a nose. Management also reiterated full-year guidance of roughly $5 per share, but it added that this year's second quarter will probably fall short of last year's. When will these year-over-year declines end?

Hard to say. CEO Fred Smith tells us that FedEx will take steps to "enhance the customer experience, gain market share, reduce expenses, [and] improve profits." Let's address these plans in some detail:

Improve profits: FedEx told us that average daily package volume in the FedEx Express and FedEx Ground segments grew 1% year over year. Yet companies that ship their goods to consumers using FedEx, such as Blue Nile (Nasdaq: NILE) and J.Crew (NYSE: JCG), expect soft consumer-spending trends to linger. Will volume growth, which ultimately leads to profit growth, really be able to pick up?

Reduce expenses: Cutting costs while holding revenue constant implies that profit margins must rise. To get moving on that front, FedEx is cutting its capital-expenditures budget yet again. The company promises to spend no more than $2.6 billion on capital improvements this year. But yes, Boeing (NYSE: BA), FedEx still wants to buy some gas-sipping 757s and 777s, if you could see your way clear to build 'em.

Enhance the customer experience while gaining market share: This is the tricky part. FedEx said it will increase shipping rates by an average of 6.9% for U.S. domestic and U.S. export services, to juice the growth rate. So how do you make customers happy with that kind of rate increase and persuade them to switch away from DHL and UPS (NYSE: UPS)? FedEx's answer is the ol' "give with one hand and take away with the other" gambit. While raising base rates, FedEx will give back 2% of its fuel surcharges. For FedEx, that works out to about a 4.9% revenue boost, if shipping volume holds firm.

Once upon a time, legendary businessman Warren Buffett told his corporate lieutenants at Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.B), "Widen the moat, build enduring competitive advantage, delight your customers, and relentlessly fight costs." As one-half of a globetrotting duopoly, FedEx has the moat and the advantage down pat. Head honcho Smith seems committed to fighting costs as well. But FedEx's customers are bound to figure out that in the middle of an economic slowdown, and with oil prices falling, FedEx is sticking them with a 5% price increase while they get nothing new in return.

Now, Fred, is that really any way to delight your customers?

AL E NEWMAN 09-22-2008 07:55 PM


Originally Posted by Precontact (Post 466693)
FedEx Pulls a Fast One

FedEx Pulls a Fast One
By Rich Smith (TMFDitty)
September 22, 2008

If FedEx (NYSE: FDX) left any surprises on shareholders' doorsteps with its latest quarterly report, the packages weren't necessarily welcome. By my count, this was the company's fifth consecutive quarter of falling year-over-year earnings. Even worse, customers will get stuck with a 5% price increase for no additional service.

Management delivered first-quarter earnings right in line with what investors were expecting. Profits landed at $1.23 per share while revenue rose 8%, missing $10 billion by a nose. Management also reiterated full-year guidance of roughly $5 per share, but it added that this year's second quarter will probably fall short of last year's. When will these year-over-year declines end?

Hard to say. CEO Fred Smith tells us that FedEx will take steps to "enhance the customer experience, gain market share, reduce expenses, [and] improve profits." Let's address these plans in some detail:

Improve profits: FedEx told us that average daily package volume in the FedEx Express and FedEx Ground segments grew 1% year over year. Yet companies that ship their goods to consumers using FedEx, such as Blue Nile (Nasdaq: NILE) and J.Crew (NYSE: JCG), expect soft consumer-spending trends to linger. Will volume growth, which ultimately leads to profit growth, really be able to pick up?

Reduce expenses: Cutting costs while holding revenue constant implies that profit margins must rise. To get moving on that front, FedEx is cutting its capital-expenditures budget yet again. The company promises to spend no more than $2.6 billion on capital improvements this year. But yes, Boeing (NYSE: BA), FedEx still wants to buy some gas-sipping 757s and 777s, if you could see your way clear to build 'em.

Enhance the customer experience while gaining market share: This is the tricky part. FedEx said it will increase shipping rates by an average of 6.9% for U.S. domestic and U.S. export services, to juice the growth rate. So how do you make customers happy with that kind of rate increase and persuade them to switch away from DHL and UPS (NYSE: UPS)? FedEx's answer is the ol' "give with one hand and take away with the other" gambit. While raising base rates, FedEx will give back 2% of its fuel surcharges. For FedEx, that works out to about a 4.9% revenue boost, if shipping volume holds firm.

Once upon a time, legendary businessman Warren Buffett told his corporate lieutenants at Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.B), "Widen the moat, build enduring competitive advantage, delight your customers, and relentlessly fight costs." As one-half of a globetrotting duopoly, FedEx has the moat and the advantage down pat. Head honcho Smith seems committed to fighting costs as well. But FedEx's customers are bound to figure out that in the middle of an economic slowdown, and with oil prices falling, FedEx is sticking them with a 5% price increase while they get nothing new in return.

Now, Fred, is that really any way to delight your customers?

No you are right..FRED start buying trucks!


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 06:29 PM.


User Alert System provided by Advanced User Tagging v3.3.0 (Lite) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2024 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.
Website Copyright ©2000 - 2017 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands