FedEx and UPS face a new pricing threat from an old rival
FedEx (FDX) and UPS spent half a century as the only two names that mattered in American package delivery.
They built the aircraft fleets, sorting hubs and delivery routes that turned next-day shipping into a routine promise.
The company that once filled those planes and trucks with its own packages is now trying to take its rivals other customers, too.
Amazon Shipping is offering corporate shippers simplified pricing, waived residential surcharges and rates that can run up to 30% below comparable FedEx and UPS pricing, according to a Supply Chain Dive report.
The push expands a service that once focused narrowly on small packages headed to metro areas into a broader challenge for corporate shipping contracts of every size, putting real volume at risk for both incumbents.
Amazon's discounts hit at a vulnerable moment
Logistics platform Loop has seen shippers save as much as $6 per package by shifting eligible residential volume from FedEx and UPS to Amazon Shipping, according to Loop's Matt Sumowski.
One large retail client using FedEx cut its annual shipping costs by more than 33% after routing most of its distribution through Amazon instead, a shift that shows how quickly volume can move once price becomes the deciding factor.
Related: Delivery giant closes facility, cuts 100s of workers
The pressure extends beyond the two incumbents. Amazon Shipping is even undercutting the U.S. Postal Service on packages under a pound, according to Hannah Testani, chief executive of freight audit firm Intelligent Audit.
Amazon's vice president of supply chain go-to-market, Jeff Helbling, said the momentum tells the company "businesses see the value it already offers" in comments to Supply Chain Dive.
Wall Street has already priced in the threat
UPS and FedEx shares were already sliding Thursday after Morgan Stanley analyst Ravi Shanker warned clients that Amazon's growing delivery reach threatens both carriers, Bloomberg reported.
Amazon still lacks overnight delivery, Shanker wrote, but he believes it's "likely not long before that becomes an option as well."
Both stocks surrendered their gains and slipped into negative territory later that day once the pricing specifics circulated, according to a Seeking Alpha report.
It was the second such selloff this year: FedEx fell 9% and UPS dropped 10% in a single May session when Amazon first launched Amazon Supply Chain Services as a bundled enterprise offering, according to a 24/7 Wall St report.
FedEx and UPS still control the premium lane
Neither carrier has ceded its highest-margin business yet. FedEx grew fiscal third-quarter revenue 8% to $24 billion and raised its full-year adjusted profit guidance to a range of $16.05 to $16.85 per share, helped by a 5% rise in U.S. domestic package volume, the same 24/7 Wall St report noted, giving FedEx a cushion heading into the price fight.
UPS has taken a different path, deliberately shedding lower-margin Amazon volume to protect pricing elsewhere.
Chief executive Carol Tomé has told investors that 2026 will mark "an inflection point" once that pullback finishes running its course.
UPS eliminated roughly 48,000 positions and closed 93 facilities in 2025 as part of the shift, and its U.S. domestic average daily volume fell 8% in the first quarter of 2026, a trade-off aimed at protecting margins over market share.
Testani argues that dynamic still favors the incumbents for now. Overnight and healthcare shipments command premium pricing that Amazon Shipping, currently limited to two-to-five-day ground delivery, cannot yet match.
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The shipping industry's price floor keeps shifting
This isn't Amazon's first adjacency play. AWS reshaped enterprise computing and Amazon Pharmacy pushed into drug distribution before Amazon Supply Chain Services set its sights on the parcel duopoly's most reliable customers.
Each expansion rattled incumbent stocks before settling into an uneasy coexistence.
Whether FedEx and UPS can defend their premium lane the way other incumbents eventually did will depend on how long they can keep express and healthcare shipments insulated from the same price compression already reshaping e-commerce delivery.
The real test comes if Amazon Shipping ever adds overnight service, the one gap FedEx and UPS still don't have to worry about closing themselves.
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This story was originally published July 11, 2026 at 1:33 PM.