UPS has a new risk factor: Amazon

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United Parcel Service Inc. has long boasted about its diverse customer base, and had been mum about who its largest customers were, but on Thursday the package delivery giant seemed to embrace the fact that Amazon was the largest customer it’s had in years.

“UPS experienced growth from a number of large and [small and medium business] customers, with the growth led by UPS’s largest customer, Amazon,” the company stated in its fourth-quarter earnings report.

And that’s not all. For years, UPS UPS, -6.70%  has been saying in its annual reports that no single customer accounted for 10% or more of consolidated revenue. “We do not believe the loss of any single customer would materially impair our overall financial condition or results of operations,” the company stated in the “Risk Factors” section of its last seven 10-K filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Before that, UPS stated for years, at least going back to 2007, that “no countries outside of the United States, or any individual customers, provided 10% or more” of consolidated revenue.

But in Thursday’s post-earnings conference call with analysts, Chief Financial Officer Brian Newman said that has changed, as UPS took advantage of the structural changes in the market, such as the “rapid adoption of faster delivery” driven by e-commerce.

“UPS was able to increase our business with Amazon AMZN, +0.68%  through competitive wins and the structural shift to next day delivery,” Newman said on the call. “When combined with the revenue declines in the international and supply chain and freight segments, Amazon’s percentage of total company revenue rose to 11.6% for the year.”

Basically, UPS has taken a much different approach than its rival FedEx Corp. FDX, +0.14%, which has had a rocky relationship with Amazon, ending its contracts for FedEx Express domestic and ground deliveries.

Don’t miss: Amazon blocks sellers from using FedEx Ground for Prime shipments.

Investors can expect some new wording in the “Risk Factors” section of UPS’s 2019 annual report, which can be expected by the end of February.

The stock fell 6.7% Thursday to close at the lowest level since July 23. Over the past three months, UPS shares have shed 6.2%, while the Dow Jones Transportation Average DJT, -0.66%  has gained 3.2% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, +0.43%  has advanced 6.7%.

“UPS continues to transform their business to meet customer demand for shipping more packages, at a faster speed, and for less money,” analyst Helane Becker at Cowen wrote in a note to clients. “The way to make that type of dynamic profitable is through increased density of transit lanes.”

Q4 adjusted profit matches Wall Street views, but revenue misses

UPS also reported that it swung to a net loss of $106 million, or 12 cents a share, from income of $453 million, or 52 cents a share, in the same period a year ago.

Excluding non-recurring items, such as a $1.8 billion mark-to-market pension charge, the company reported adjusted earnings per share came to $2.11, matching the FactSet consensus.

Revenue rose 3.6% to $20.57 billion, but was below the FactSet consensus of $20.67 billion. U.S. domestic revenue grew 6.6% to $13.41 billion, shy of the FactSet consensus of $13.48 billion, while international revenue fell 1.7% to $3.76 billion, just below expectations of $3.80 billion.

Volumes increased nearly 8%, as more than 1.6 billion packages were delivered during the quarter.

For 2020, UPS said it expects adjusted EPS of $7.76 to $8.06, surrounding the FactSet consensus of $8.03.

“We’re embracing the e-commerce structural shift of faster delivery which brought a surge in Next Day Air volume of more than 22% in 2019, an increase we were well-equipped to handle with greater efficiency,” Chief Executive David Abney said on the post-earnings call.

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