Wave goodbye to your delivery guy

Stephen McBride | Editorial
September 23, 2019

This article appears courtesy of RiskHedge, LLC.

When my daughter was born, Greg stopped by my house almost every day for two weeks.

He dropped off her crib, stroller, and all the other baby “gear” my wife and I ordered online.

As you might guess, Greg is my UPS delivery guy.

He pulls up to my driveway in a big brown truck... hops out wearing a brown uniform... and places a brown box or two on my stoop.

I’ve known Greg for years now. He’s a friend. He always stops to chat and ask how my daughter is doing. I even gave him a key to my gate.

Amazon (AMZN) kicked off the internet shopping boom in the 90s when it started shipping books. These days, you can click a button and get almost anything delivered to your door. Amazon sold $164 billion worth of stuff on its website this year.

If there were a stock market hall of fame, Amazon would be first in line. It has handed early investors 90,000% gains, as you can see here.

But Amazon didn’t disrupt shopping alone. Baby gear can’t ship itself.

America’s two largest delivery companies—UPS (UPS) and FedEx (FDX)—got all that “stuff” from sellers to buyers.

It won’t surprise you to learn the online shopping boom has been wonderful for their businesses. Their revenues have almost tripled since 2000, to a combined $140 billion.

So surely their stocks have handed out big gains. Right?

Nope.

UPS and FedEx stocks have flatlined for years, as you can see here:


Source: Washingtonstatewire.com

Those are cargo planes with “Prime Air” written on the side.

They’re AMAZON cargo planes.

No company in the world spends more on shipping than Amazon.

It spent $27 billion to ship stuff last year!

And it’s one of UPS’s largest customers, making up roughly 10% of its sales.

But over the past couple of years, Amazon has been working on a project that should terrify UPS and FedEx...

It has quietly blanketed America with its own delivery web.

Today, Amazon operates almost 400 distribution warehouses in the US alone. And these are no run-of-the-mill post offices.

Many span millions of square feet. Inside, swarms of “Pegasus” robots whizz around carrying stacks of items.

And did you know Amazon has built up a 20,000 strong fleet of delivery vans?

It also owns 60 cargo planes like the ones you see above.

And 60% of Amazon parcels are now delivered by Amazon drivers.

As I mentioned, UPS only gets around 10% of its sales from Amazon. While FedEx counts on Amazon for less than 2% of its business.

So many folks conclude Amazon’s creation of its own delivery service won’t hurt these companies too much.

These folks don’t know their Amazon history.             

Back in 2000, Amazon was on its way to dominating online shopping. As its website exploded in popularity, so too did its need for computing power.

So it started renting giant warehouses and packing them full of supercomputers. Its stated intention was to “supplement” its internal need for computing power.

Today that has morphed into Amazon Web Services (AWS)—the world’s largest cloud computing business. Which, in short, involves selling computing power to other companies.

If you’ve been reading RiskHedge, you know giant companies like Uber (UBER) and Netflix (NFLX) run on Amazon’s cloud services.

Last year, AWS raked in $26 billion. And get this… it made up 60% of Amazon’s profits!

Sure, Amazon will first take care of its own delivery needs.

But I’ll bet anything that Amazon will soon start selling its delivery services to others—just like it did with its cloud business.

In fact, Amazon now calls UPS and FedEx competitors in its annual report.

Amazon recently launched its new “Shipping with Amazon” service. In short, Amazon’s drivers will now pick up packages from “third-party sellers” who sell stuff on Amazon. It will then deliver that stuff to buyers, cutting out the need for delivery services like FedEx or UPS.

What are the chances Amazon opens up “Shipping with Amazon” to everyone in a year or two?

For my money, it’s a dead certainty.

It’s bad enough that the most disruptive company in history is invading UPS and FedEx’s turf.

It’s even worse that many of America’s most powerful companies are following suit.

The world’s largest retailer, Walmart (WMT), now runs over 6,000 of its own delivery trucks. It has spent over $2.5 billion on its “logistics wing” in the past two years.

Home improvement superstore Home Depot (HD) is investing billions into delivering its own products, too.

UPS and FedEx have a big problem: They are the ultimate “middlemen.”

As RiskHedge readers know, middlemen can always be cut out.

As I mentioned last week, disruption has wrecked middlemen jobs like stockbrokers and travel agents.

Realtors are next in line.

Now disruption is coming for delivery guys, too.

Don’t be surprised if your UPS guy begins stopping by a lot less...

And delivery guys from Amazon, Walmart, and Home Depot start stopping by a lot more.

Does your delivery driver know Amazon is getting into his business? Ask him and then tell me at stephen@riskhedge.com.

Stephen McBride
Editor, Disruption Investor

Stephen McBride is editor of the popular investment advisory Disruption Investor. Stephen and his team hunt for disruptive stocks that are changing the world and making investors wealthy in the process. Go here to discover Stephen’s top “disruptor” stock pick and to try a risk-free subscription.

     
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This article appears courtesy of RiskHedge, LLC. RiskHedge publishes investment research and is independent of Mauldin Economics. Mauldin Economics may earn an affiliate commission from purchases you make at RiskHedge.com

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