×

FedEx shares slide after margin drop, company eyes 11% rise in 2026 revenue

By Thomson Reuters Jun 23, 2026 | 3:06 PM

June 23 (Reuters) – FedEx margins in its core delivery segment dropped in the latest quarter from a year earlier, and shares fell 6% in extended trading on Tuesday even though the company ​beat profit estimates and projected 11% revenue growth this ‌year.

The operating margin in the Federal Express segment fell to 7.7% from 8.4% a year earlier as costs climbed for employee salaries and benefits, outsourced transportation and fuel. That matters because FedEx on June 1 spun off its trucking segment, FedEx ‌Freight, ​to focus on that delivery business.

Investors are closely ⁠watching how much the ⁠slimmed-down company can boost profits by growing its high-profit services, including delivering temperature-controlled medicines, while also keeping a tight lid on costs.

During the Memphis-based company’s earnings call, one analyst noted that relative growth in ​the fiscal fourth quarter was a bit lower than what analysts were expecting to see over the coming several months.

Chief Financial Officer ⁠Claude Russ said margins would improve as ⁠compensation-related burdens decline.

Global tariffs imposed by U.S. President Donald ​Trump have weakened demand for delivery services by FedEx and rival UPS. ​Evolving U.S. trade policies, including the end of U.S. duty-free “de ‌minimis” low-value e-commerce shipments from China-linked discount retailers such as Shein and Temu, have weighed on volumes.

FedEx forecast earnings per share of $16.90 to $18.10 for the year, as it shifts its fiscal year to align with ⁠the calendar year, from its previous May year-end. Analysts have not yet built models that enable comparisons with the new forecast, which includes just its ⁠delivery operations.

Adjusted profit for ‌the fourth quarter that ended May 31 rose to $6.31 ⁠per share, topping the analysts’ average estimate of $5.96, ​according to ‌data compiled by LSEG.

Quarterly revenue climbed 12.6% to $25 ​billion, topping ⁠expectations of $24.04 billion, helped by strong domestic demand.

The quarterly results include the trucking business FedEx spun off this month.

FedEx also said it would buy back shares worth up to $1 billion in 2026.

(Reporting by Nandan Mandayam in Bengaluru and Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; Editing by Vijay Kishore, Rod Nickel ​and David Gregorio)