Amazon Overtakes UPS
and FedEx in Delivery
Amazon is eclipsing both
carriers, and the gap is growing
·
The
Seattle e-commerce giant delivered more packages to U.S. homes in 2022 than
UPS, after eclipsing FedEx in 2020.
·
U.S.
Postal Service is still the biggest parcel service by volume; it handles
hundreds of millions of packages for all three companies.
· Amazon’s figures include only packages that Amazon shipped from beginning to end.
·
In
2018, Amazon launched a program where entrepreneurs could start their own
franchise delivering Amazon packages for as low as $10,000.
·
Early
in the pandemic, Amazon saw a pivotal moment to expand its e-commerce reach.
The company opened hundreds of new warehouses, sorting centers
and other logistics facilities, almost doubling the size of its network between
the start of the pandemic and late 2021.
·
While
Amazon has surpassed both companies on residential delivery, it has yet to
replicate their global coverage or the flip side of their operations.
·
Amazon
is very good at the one-way network, delivering goods at faster speeds but it
doesn’t have the same level of pick-up and delivery coverage.
Amazon.com
has grabbed the crown of biggest delivery business in the U.S., surpassing both
UPS and FedEx in parcel volumes.
The
Seattle e-commerce giant delivered more packages to U.S. homes in 2022 than
UPS, after eclipsing FedEx in 2020, and it is on track to widen the gap this
year, according to internal Amazon data and people familiar with the matter.
The U.S. Postal Service is still the biggest parcel service by volume; it
handles hundreds of millions of packages for all three companies.
A
decade ago Amazon was a major customer for UPS and
FedEx, and some executives from the incumbents and analysts mocked the notion
that it could someday supplant them. Amazon’s outsize growth combined with
strategy shifts at FedEx and UPS have changed the balance.
Before
Thanksgiving this year, Amazon had already delivered more than 4.8 billion
packages in the U.S., and its internal projections predict that it will deliver
around 5.9 billion by the end of the year, according to documents viewed by The
Wall Street Journal. Last year Amazon shipped 5.2 billion packages.
Amazon’s
figures include only packages that Amazon shipped from beginning to end. UPS
and FedEx include packages they hand off to the postal service for final
delivery in their tallies.
UPS
has said that its domestic volume this year is unlikely to exceed last year’s
5.3 billion, which includes packages delivered to customers through the postal
service. In the first nine months this year, UPS handled around 3.4 billion
parcels domestically.
FedEx’s
domestic Express and Ground parcel volume reached around 3.05 billion for the
fiscal year ended May 31, 2023.
As
Amazon’s share of deliveries has increased, FedEx and UPS have said in recent
years they weren’t in a race for volume and were instead focused on delivering
more profitable parcels. FedEx parted ways with Amazon in 2019. Amazon accounts
for about 11% of UPS’s revenue.
The
logistics milestone came without any fanfare from Amazon, which is the subject
of a lawsuit from the Federal Trade Commission over the way it competes.
“There’s
not a lot of perceived value in chest thumping on being the biggest,” said a
former senior Amazon logistics executive about the milestone. Instead of a
celebration marking the jump on the leaderboard,
Amazon executives high-fived and got back to work, one recalled.
Overall
parcel volume has dipped this year, as consumers cut back on spending on goods
and diverted their expenditure to services, travel and entertainment.
Amazon’s
rise to the top carrier was once viewed as farcical by logistics CEOs. In 2016,
FedEx’s then-CEO Fred Smith dismissed the notion of Amazon becoming a threat to
the logistics giant as “fantastical.” “In all likelihood, the primary
deliverers of e-commerce shipments for the foreseeable future will be UPS, the
U.S. Postal Service and FedEx,” Smith said at the time.
At
the time of Smith’s comments, Amazon was in a distant third place behind UPS
and FedEx. But the company in the subsequent years made up the ground, building
out one of the largest logistics networks in the world.
In
2018, Amazon launched a program where entrepreneurs could start their own
franchise delivering Amazon packages for as low as $10,000. It has similarities
to FedEx’s Ground unit, which also uses a contractor model for local routes.
The Amazon program has around 200,000 drivers in the U.S., helping the company
rapidly accelerate the number of packages it was able to deliver each day, say
former executives.
Early
in the pandemic, Amazon saw a pivotal moment to expand its e-commerce reach.
The company opened hundreds of new warehouses, sorting centers
and other logistics facilities, almost doubling the size of its network between
the start of the pandemic and late 2021. The build out was led largely by
Amazon’s former CEO of consumer, Dave Clark, who before that role was a major
architect of Amazon’s logistics network.
Amazon
has moved to regionalize its logistics network to reduce how far packages
travel across the U.S. in an effort to get products to customers faster and
improve profitability. “These delivery speed improvements have been a key
driver of growth and are resulting in increased purchase frequency by our Prime
members,” said Amazon CFO Brian Olsavsky in a
recording of a companywide meeting earlier this month heard by the Journal.
An
Amazon spokeswoman said its delivery progress is due in large part to the route
franchise program. The company will continue to work with other delivery
partners and carriers to help handle additional capacity, she added.
FedEx
said it is focused on the e-commerce market beyond Amazon. “Our strategy is to
democratize e-commerce,” said a spokeswoman from FedEx. She added that FedEx
has taken market share in segments of the U.S. domestic package market this
calendar year.
In
recent years, UPS leaned into higher-margin parcels from other customer
segments, including healthcare and smaller businesses, and has pared back
capacity for less-profitable deliveries to residential addresses. A UPS
spokesman said, “Amazon is an important customer and our relationship is
mutually beneficial.”
While
Amazon has surpassed both companies on residential delivery, it has yet to
replicate their global coverage or the flip side of their operations. “Amazon
is very good at the one-way network, delivering goods at faster speeds but it
doesn’t have the same level of pick-up and delivery coverage,” said Brian Ossenbeck, an analyst at JP Morgan.