Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

newsworthy

DHL's exit from U.S. domestic market could push rates up

The decision by DHL Express to pull out of the U.S. domestic express delivery market is likely to lead to higher rates for U.S. delivery services, as the low-priced competitor departs from the world's largest market, analysts say.

The decision by DHL Express to pull out of the U.S. domestic express delivery market will put 1.1 million daily shipments up for grabs. It's also likely to lead to higher rates for U.S. delivery services, as the low-priced competitor departs from the world's largest market, analysts say.

Parent Deutsche Post World Net announced Nov. 10 that DHL's U.S. air and ground services would be terminated by Jan. 30, 2009. All of the express carrier's 18 U.S. ground hubs and about 80 percent of its U.S. stations will close.


DHL will continue to offer international service to and from the United States, maintaining a network of 103 service centers as well as local ground services to shuttle air freight from the destination airport to end customers. The company currently is in talks with rival UPS Inc. to fly DHL's shipments within the United States.

DHL Express had been operating more than 20,000 delivery and linehaul vehicles, plus 450 ground hubs, service centers, and other facilities in the United States. By the time of the Nov. 10 announcement, the company had already dismissed more than 5,000 employees and had begun shutting down some of its stations. Executives said DHL Express would lay off another 9,500 people but would retain between 3,000 and 4,000 employees to serve international customers.

DHL handles 1.2 million daily shipments that touch U.S. soil. Of that, 1.1 million are strictly domestic. With DHL abandoning its domestic U.S. business, rivals such as UPS, FedEx Corp., the U.S. Postal Service, and expedited truckers are gearing up for market-share gains.

Thomas R.Wadewitz, analyst for JPMorgan Chase, estimates that based on 2007 figures, DHL generated about $2.8 billion in domestic air express revenue and controlled 12 percent of the overnight air delivery market. In a Nov. 10 note to clients,Wadewitz said the DHL announcement was a "significant long-term positive for FedEx and UPS" because DHL's exit "provides share gain opportunity and a better pricing outlook."

Edward Wolfe, head of a New York City transport-investment firm that bears his name, has said that he expects UPS and FedEx to divide up about 80 percent of DHL's U.S. domestic air business, 70 percent of its ground business, and 5 percent of its U.S. import and export traffic. Wolfe has estimated DHL's current annual U.S. domestic revenue at $2.6 billion, which includes $350 million in ground revenue. He also estimated DHL's remaining U.S. import and export revenue to be about $1.2 billion.

Wolfe says he expects UPS and FedEx to "benefit materially over the long term" from DHL's exit and that—assuming DHL's pricing formulas stay intact—the carrier's announcement bodes well for both rivals, even at current depressed pricing levels. Wolfe says his models do not take the possibility of firmer pricing into account.

DHL's U.S. operations, established in 2003 following the acquisition of Airborne Express, have lost an aggregate $3 billion in the past five years. They have also been a drag on the rest of the DHL Express global network, which generally has performed well. DHL Express reported that, excluding the United States, earnings before interest and taxes rose 11 percent year over year in the first nine months of 2008. Revenues outside of the United States grew 7.3 percent, and shipment volumes rose by more than 4 percent, Deutsche Post reported.

Underscoring the plight of the U.S. operations, DHL Express recorded a charge of $109 million through September as a cost of restructuring its U.S. business.

The Latest

More Stories

forklifts in warehouse

Demand for warehouse space cooled off slightly in fourth quarter

The overall national industrial real estate vacancy rate edged higher in the fourth quarter, although it still remains well below pre-pandemic levels, according to an analysis by Cushman & Wakefield.

Vacancy rates shrunk during the pandemic to historically low levels as e-commerce sales—and demand for warehouse space—boomed in response to massive numbers of people working and living from home. That frantic pace is now cooling off but real estate demand remains elevated from a long-term perspective.

Keep ReadingShow less

Featured

drawing of warehouse for digital twin

Kion Group teams with Accenture and Nvidia to design intelligent warehouses

German lift truck giant Kion Group will work with the consulting firm Accenture to optimize supply chain operations using advanced AI and simulation technologies provided by microchip powerhouse Nvidia, the companies said Tuesday.

The three companies say the deal will allow clients to both define ideal set-ups for new warehouses and to continuously enhance existing facilities with Mega, an Nvidia Omniverse blueprint for large-scale industrial digital twins. The strategy includes a digital twin powered by physical AI – AI models that embody principles and qualities of the physical world – to improve the performance of intelligent warehouses that operate with automated forklifts, smart cameras and automation and robotics solutions.

Keep ReadingShow less
person holding smartphone with freightcenter app for tracking shipments

3PL BlueGrace Logistics acquires FreightCenter

The third party logistics (3PL) provider BlueGrace Logistics has acquired FreightCenter, an online transportation solutions provider for freight logistics management, saying the move will expand BlueGrace’s customer base by integrating FreightCenter’s clients with BlueGrace’s suite of tools and services.

Following the deal, Palm Harbor, Florida-based FreightCenter’s customers will gain access to BlueGrace’s unified transportation management system, BlueShip TMS, enabling freight management across various shipping modes. They can also use BlueGrace’s truckload and less-than-truckload (LTL) services and its EVOS load optimization tools, stemming from another acquisition BlueGrace did in 2024.

Keep ReadingShow less
worker using sensors on rooftop infrastructure

Sick and Endress+Hauser say joint venture will enable decarbonization

The German sensor technology provider Sick GmbH has launched a joint venture with the Swiss measurement technology specialist Endress+Hauser to produce and market a new set of process automation solutions for enabling decarbonization.

Under terms of the deal, Sick and Endress+Hauser will each hold 50% of a joint venture called "Endress+Hauser SICK GmbH+Co. KG," which will strengthen the development and production of analyzer and gas flow meter technologies. According to Sick, its gas flow meters make it possible to switch to low-emission and non-fossil energy sources, for example, and the process analyzers allow reliable monitoring of emissions.

Keep ReadingShow less
noblelift forklift trucks

Noblelift North America names Pedriana as president

Material handling equipment provider Noblelift North America on Tuesday named Bill Pedriana as its new president, charging him with leading the Des Plaines, Illinois-based company into “a new era of innovation, growth, and customer-centric success.”

He replaces Loren Swakow, the company’s president for the past eight years, who built a reputation for providing innovative and high-performance material handling solutions, Noblelift North America said.

Keep ReadingShow less