Does Amazon have its sights set on FedEx and UPS?
It’s pretty clear that Amazon (AMZN), and in particular its Amazon Prime free shipping program, has been a boon to the likes of UPS and FedEx. With an estimated 7.2 billion items being sold this year, those packages have to get from the warehouse to the customer somehow.
To date, Amazon appears to have been content to let its partners deliver the packages the final mile, if not the final several hundred miles. But times seem to be changing as the e-tailer looks to shrink the delivery more and more. The company now leasing planes and building out distribution hubs, and it looks like the company could be setting its sights directly at UPS and FedEx core capabilities by opening up its logistics hubs and much the way it opened its cloud computing platform with its Amazon Web Services, offering those services to other businesses.
Others believe that Amazon will make a business out of its delivery network, as it did with Amazon Web Services, thereby challenging the world’s leading shipping companies. “I fully expect Amazon to build out a logistics supply chain that others can use,” says John Rossman, a former Amazon executive who’s now a managing director at the restructuring firm Alvarez & Marsal. “Over the next five years? I doubt it. Over 10 or 15 years? Oh yeah.”
Source: Will Amazon Kill FedEx?