Even After FedEx Shares Plunge 45%, There's Still No Bottom In Sight

 | Sep 19, 2019 11:15AM ET

The world’s largest parcel-delivery service, FedEx Corporation (NYSE:FDX), has flagged some alarming news to investors. In its 1Q 2020 earnings statement on Sept. 17, the company slashed its profit forecast for the year as a worsening economic environment, triggered by the U.S.-China trade spat, took its toll on the company’s Express delivery business — which is widely considered a proxy for the global economy.

The Memphis, Tennessee-based transportation giant now expects per-share earnings to fall between 16-29% in the current fiscal year, compared with the forecast of a mid-single-digit percentage decline issued in June. FedEx also lowered its revenue outlook.

Blaming increasing trade tensions and policy uncertainty, Chief Executive Officer Fred Smith said in a conference call: “The global economy continues to soften and we are taking steps to cut capacity.”

The profit warning comes after the company posted an 11% drop in fiscal first-quarter profit, driven by the Express unit's weakness, which delivers packages by jet and is especially vulnerable to global trade disruption.

h2 Ominous Sign for Industrial Stocks/h2

That continuing drag sent FedEx shares tumbling yesterday, falling almost 13% to $150.91, their lowest level in more than two years. The stock is down about 45% from the record high it reached in early 2018 when it hit $274.66 a share.

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