UPS Surges After 2022 Forecasts Top Wall Street’s Estimates

(Bloomberg) — United Parcel Service Inc. rose the most since mid-2020 after higher prices and robust deliveries spurred the courier to issue forecasts that topped analysts’ expectations. 

UPS projected revenue of about $102 billion this year and an adjusted operating margin of 13.7%. The company previously hadn’t expected to reach those targets until 2023. Analysts had estimated 2022 revenue would be $100 billion.

Since Carol Tome took over as chief executive officer in June 2020, the company has given priority to boosting profit margin over increasing volume. That’s meant raising prices and focusing on small customers, who typically don’t get the discounts negotiated by big users.

“The execution of our strategy is delivering positive financial results and driving strong momentum as we move into 2022,” Tome said in a statement Tuesday. 

Fourth-quarter adjusted earnings jumped to $3.52 a share. Analysts had projected $3.10 for the latest period, based on the average of estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Sales increased 12% to $27.8 billion, while Wall Street expected $27.1 billion.

UPS jumped 13% at 9:45 a.m. in New York, easily topping the S&P 500. The shares earlier climbed 15%, the most intraday since July 2020. The stock had dropped 5.7% this year through Monday while the S&P 500 declined 5.3%.

The company faced increased expenses to hire seasonal workers and for keeping workers safe from Covid-19. The courier was able to weather the U.S. labor shortage because its unionized drivers and warehouse workers earn the most in the parcel industry. That helped the Atlanta-based company achieve an on-time delivery performance of 97% during the peak holiday season while FedEx Corp. logged 88%, according to ShipMatrix.

Sales at the U.S. domestic unit rose 12% in the quarter, helped by an 11% increase in revenue per piece. International sales jumped 13% as revenue per piece rose 16% while volume fell.

The company’s adjusted operating profit margin, which had been declining before the pandemic as a boom in e-commerce spurred deliveries to homes, surged to 14.2% in the fourth quarter from 11.5% a year earlier.

Amazon.com Inc., the courier’s largest customer, accounted for 11.7% of total revenue last year, Tome said on a conference call with analysts. That was down from 13.3% in 2020 when lockdowns caused a surge in online shopping but in line with 2019.

UPS stands to benefit this year from more business activity and the return of office workers if precautions from the Covid-19 pandemic subside. Business parcels are more profitable than residential service because drivers travel less between customers and tend to drop off more packages at each stop.

The company raised its quarterly dividend by 49% to $1.52 a share and plans to repurchase at least $1 billion of shares this year. UPS projected $5.5 billion in capital spending for this year, while analysts have been expecting $4.96 billion.

(Updates with Amazon revenue in 10th paragraph)

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