New York, May 4, 2026, 12:01 (EDT)
- FedEx dropped roughly 9% late in the morning, hit by news that Amazon had rolled out its Amazon Supply Chain Services.
- Amazon is opening up its freight, warehousing, fulfillment, and parcel-shipping network to external companies.
- Just weeks ahead of FedEx’s scheduled June 1 spinoff of FedEx Freight, the selloff hit.
FedEx Corp. shares dropped Monday, reacting to Amazon.com Inc.’s decision to let outside firms use its logistics network—pulling the e-commerce heavyweight into more direct competition with FedEx and United Parcel Service across freight, warehousing, and package delivery.
Shares of FedEx were changing hands at $357.66 as of 11:46 a.m. EDT, off roughly 9.1% from yesterday’s finish. UPS dropped close to 9.7%. Amazon, on the other hand, edged up around 1.1%, market data showed.
That slide matters. Investors had been rewarding FedEx for slashing costs, seeing better U.S. package volumes, and its freight business split in the works. But Amazon’s move changes the equation: if one of the world’s top shippers starts selling excess logistics space to FedEx’s target business clients, just how much pricing muscle can FedEx really hold onto?
Amazon rolled out Amazon Supply Chain Services—ASCS for short—opening up its freight, distribution, fulfillment, and parcel-shipping network to companies in sectors ranging from healthcare to auto, manufacturing, and retail. Early clients include Procter & Gamble, 3M, Lands’ End, and American Eagle Outfitters, according to the company.
The service handles freight via ocean, air, ground, and rail, along with bulk storage, fulfillment, and parcel shipping. Amazon points to a network of over 80,000 trailers, over 24,000 intermodal containers, and more than 100 aircraft—assets originally scaled for Amazon’s retail business but now available to outside clients.
Amazon’s “infrastructure, intelligence, and scale” are now available to outside businesses, according to Peter Larsen, vice president of Amazon Supply Chain Services. The company pitched the rollout as a supply-chain counterpart to Amazon Web Services, which originally started as an in-house backbone as well.
Reuters reported the move “marks a potential shift” in the U.S. logistics space, where FedEx and UPS have long dominated. Equisights Research CEO Parth Talsania described it as “not immediate disruption,” yet “a structural warning shot” for the parcel giants, highlighting Amazon’s advantage on e-commerce-heavy lanes packed with its own volume and data. Reuters
Amazon’s footprint in the U.S. parcel space was already expanding. Back in December, Reuters highlighted that Amazon shipped 6.3 billion parcels in 2024—second only to the U.S. Postal Service, but surpassing both UPS and FedEx by total volume, based on figures from Pitney Bowes.
FedEx has been showing some progress in its figures lately. Back in March, the Memphis-based shipper posted fiscal third-quarter revenue of $24.0 billion and upped its full-year fiscal 2026 earnings forecast, crediting gains from stronger yields on U.S. domestic and international priority packages, cost-cutting moves, and a bump in U.S. domestic package volume.
Not the best moment for this. FedEx insists its FedEx Freight spinoff is still locked in for June 1. The freight arm specializes in less-than-truckload service—that is, shipments too bulky for parcel delivery, but not enough to fill an entire truck. Once on its own, FedEx says the unit will prioritize margin growth, free cash flow, and stricter capital discipline.
The Amazon risk isn’t straightforward or immediate. Big corporate shippers usually spread their bets across multiple carriers, weighing factors like service quality, geographic reach, claims processing, and reliability—not just price—when signing logistics deals. Should Amazon focus its network on soaking up excess capacity, FedEx could see targeted pressure in certain routes instead of feeling it across the board.
The risk gets more acute on the flip side. Should Amazon continue to bring in more freight and parcel business from third parties and leverage its scale to push costs down, FedEx and UPS face the threat of squeezed pricing in business-to-business shipping. These B2B routes, typically denser and less costly than sending packages to homes, are exactly where investors see the most value.
FedEx keeps its sizable global air and ground footprint, along with a hefty base of industrial clients and a restructuring plan underway. But Monday’s selloff was clear: Investors have stopped looking at Amazon as just another customer—or simply a last-mile delivery competitor. Now, they’re valuing it as a full-scale logistics rival.