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UPS forecasts upbeat annual revenue on shift to higher-value shipments

By Thomson Reuters Jan 27, 2026 | 5:16 AM

Jan 27 (Reuters) – United Parcel Service on Tuesday beat Wall Street estimates for quarterly results in the all-important holiday period and forecast a surprise rise in annual revenue, as a ‍pivot to higher-margin shipments pays off.

The company in January last year said it would accelerate a plan to slash millions of low-profit deliveries for Amazon.com, its largest customer and a growing delivery rival, calling the business “extraordinarily dilutive” to margins.

“Looking ahead, upon completion of the Amazon glide-down, 2026 will be an ‌inflection point in the execution of our strategy ‌to deliver growth and sustained margin expansion,” UPS CEO Carol Tome said in a statement.

Shares of the company were up 3.7% in premarket trading, while rival FedEx gained about 1%.

Meanwhile, UPS is also looking to rebuild its profitability ​and stabilize volumes following the end of U.S. duty-free, “de minimis” low-value, e-commerce shipments.

The company recorded a non-cash, after-tax charge of $137 million related ‍to writing off the MD‑11 fleet ​following a deadly crash. UPS said it completed the ​retirement of the fleet in the fourth quarter.

Fifteen people, including three crew ‍members, were killed in a November crash of one of its MD-11 cargo jets at the Louisville International Airport.

UPS projected 2026 revenue to be $89.7 billion, compared to the $88.7 billion it reported last year. Analysts on average had expected revenue of $87.94 billion, according to data compiled ‍by LSEG.

It forecasts adjusted operating margin of 9.6% for 2026.

HOLIDAY QUARTER BEAT

UPS reported fourth-quarter consolidated revenue of $24.5 billion, above estimates of $24 billion.

The peak holiday shipping ‍season, which runs ‍from late November into early January, is critical for ​parcel carriers as their average daily volumes can ​double, with ⁠companies often adding seasonal surcharges.

Revenue per piece in ‌the company’s U.S. domestic segment rose 8.3% despite lower volumes, while international revenue per piece increased 7.1%, benefiting from the company’s push toward higher-margin shipments.

On an adjusted basis, UPS reported a profit of $2.38 per share, for the quarter ended December 31, above estimates of $2.20.

(Reporting by Abhinav Parmar in Bengaluru; Editing ⁠by Sriraj Kalluvila)