FedEx Corporation (FDX)
- Previous Close
226.12 - Open
223.10 - Bid 223.18 x 800
- Ask 223.53 x 900
- Day's Range
222.48 - 224.67 - 52 Week Range
194.30 - 313.84 - Volume
591,591 - Avg. Volume
2,035,800 - Market Cap (intraday)
53.607B - Beta (5Y Monthly) 1.38
- PE Ratio (TTM)
14.07 - EPS (TTM)
15.90 - Earnings Date Jun 24, 2025
- Forward Dividend & Yield 5.52 (2.44%)
- Ex-Dividend Date Mar 10, 2025
- 1y Target Est
277.23
FedEx Corporation, together with its subsidiaries, provides transportation, e-commerce, and business services in the United States and internationally. It operates through FedEx Express, FedEx Ground, FedEx Freight, and FedEx Services segments. The FedEx Express segment offers express transportation, small-package ground delivery, and freight transportation services; and time-critical transportation services. The FedEx Ground segment provides small-package ground delivery services. The FedEx Freight segment offers less-than-truckload freight transportation services. The FedEx Services segment provides sales, marketing, information technology, communications, customer service, technical support, billing and collection, and back-office support services. In addition, the company offers supply chain management solutions; and air and ocean freight forwarding and cargo transportation, specialty transportation, customs brokerage, third party logistics and supply chain, and document and business solutions, as well as provides trade management tools and data. The company was founded in 1971 and is headquartered in Memphis, Tennessee.
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Performance Overview: FDX
Trailing total returns as of 5/20/2025, which may include dividends or other distributions. Benchmark is S&P 500 (^GSPC) .
YTD Return
1-Year Return
3-Year Return
5-Year Return
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Statistics: FDX
View MoreValuation Measures
Market Cap
54.18B
Enterprise Value
86.07B
Trailing P/E
14.23
Forward P/E
10.98
PEG Ratio (5yr expected)
0.93
Price/Sales (ttm)
0.63
Price/Book (mrq)
2.03
Enterprise Value/Revenue
0.98
Enterprise Value/EBITDA
8.13
Financial Highlights
Profitability and Income Statement
Profit Margin
4.46%
Return on Assets (ttm)
4.88%
Return on Equity (ttm)
14.76%
Revenue (ttm)
87.81B
Net Income Avi to Common (ttm)
3.91B
Diluted EPS (ttm)
15.90
Balance Sheet and Cash Flow
Total Cash (mrq)
--
Total Debt/Equity (mrq)
--
Levered Free Cash Flow (ttm)
4.11B
Research Analysis: FDX
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View MoreLarge Cap US Pick List - May 2025
This pick list highlights constituents of the Morningstar US Large Cap Index that we believe offer investors the best risk-adjusted return prospects. Stocks of large-cap companies where neither growth nor value characteristics predominate. Stocks in the top 70% of the capitalization of the U.S. equity market are defined as large cap.
Poised to deliver growth
FedEx Corp. is a leading international provider of package delivery, e-commerce and related services. Its business segments are FedEx (comprising the Express and Ground business) and FedEx Freight. The company has approximately 725 aircraft, more than 82,000 motorized vehicles, and more than 300,000 employees. The shares are a component of the S&P 500.
RatingPrice TargetOutlook for 2025: Tariff Uncertainty The market response to President Trump's
Outlook for 2025: Tariff Uncertainty The market response to President Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariff announcements on April 2, 2025, has been severe. Heading into Liberation Day, the S&P 500 was already down 8% from the all-time highs set in mid-February. Indeed, the first three months of the year balanced a wave of enthusiasm regarding potential de-regulation and lower taxes with growing concern regarding still-coalescing trade policy. The Liberation Day details shocked investors and sent the market into full-scale panic. From a close of 5,671 on April 2, the S&P 500 swooned to 4,983 by April 8 -- a decline of 12%. Investors were fearful that the tariffs as proposed along with retaliatory tariffs from trade partners could pitch the U.S. economy and perhaps the global economy into recession. As stocks tanked, the expected safe-haven trade in the U.S. Treasury market did not materialize. Instead, Treasury yields rose, and the dollar weakened -- signs that global investors were exiting U.S. asset classes formerly perceived as rock-solid. The market has since bounced back and, as of mid-April, the S&P 500 was trading near 5,425 -- up about by about 8% from the April 8 low but still 12% below its all-time high. The administration is seeking to make tariff-reducing deals with a multitude of nations. Various nations and product categories have been granted exemptions, typically for a few months. This has created a situation of flux whereby modeling the exact impact of all tariffs is nearly impossible. A blanket, one-size-fits-all tariff would enable companies to assess projected impacts and get on with business planning. The unsettled and ever-changing state of the tariff agenda is causing businesses and consumers to pause spending while awaiting clarity. The first quarter began with optimism but ended with investor foreboding, which has not dissipated in the second quarter. Tariffs have taken a toll on markets, and they have decimated consumer sentiment. Tariffs are not the only factor in the economy, however. Exiting the first quarter, the U.S. economy still appears to be on a solid foundation, given a healthy employment situation and prospects for EPS growth this year. The economy will need this foundation as the country and the world adjust to the developing trade war. Perspective on the Year Ahead In 2023, the stock market rallied over 20% on signs that inflation was falling, the Fed would wrap its rate-hiking campaign, and the supply chain would normalize. In 2024, stocks again rallied more than 20% as economic growth strengthened, earnings growth accelerated, and jobs growth remained hearty. The 2025 year began with uncertainty but also optimism that the new administration would be more business-friendly and would quickly move to lower taxes. Investors have turned pessimistic primarily on tariff policy, but also on concerns about possible ripple effects across the heartland from DOGE job cuts and the re-ordering of international relations with friends and foes alike. In a hangover from 2024, inflation remains stalled in the 'last mile' between 3% and 2%. For the past three years, investors have been attuned to monetary policy as the Fed sought to reduce inflation. The focus of investors in 2025 has been shifting to fiscal policy given the administration's pledge to cut taxes further. The major geopolitical event of 2023 -- the war between Israel and Hamas -- continued into 2024. The hostage-exchange program and uneasy peace treaty reached in 2025 appears to be fraying. President Trump is discovering that ending the war in Ukraine is not going to be easy. Europe has stiffened its resolve to defend Ukraine following the Mr. Trump's more-accommodative treatment of Russia's Vladimir Putin and U.S. statements regarding Greenland, Canada, and the Panama Canal. Economic activity in China, the world's second-largest economy, has warmed from post-COVID lows, but remains mixed. The government's ambitious fiscal-stimulus program to spur economic recovery has been muted by demographic factors. Triple-digit tariffs levied by the U.S. and by China against one another threaten to effectively end all trade between the world's two biggest economies. The two sides may be able to negotiate tariff rates down from these impossible levels, but any final tariffs are likely to remain prohibitively high. The global macro-environment had appeared moderately positive for U.S. stocks. Liberation Day tariffs and reciprocal response to U.S. tariffs from trading partners threaten to unleash a difficult and prolonged trade war. Although some of the challenges facing U.S. stocks in 2025 reflect disruption from new policies coming out of Washington, we currently do not expect policy shifts to tip the economy into recession. Measures of the commercial and industrial economy -- including manufacturing PMIs, durable goods orders, and industrial production -- have moderated but remain consistent with ongoing, if muted, growth. Sentiment indicators such as small-business confidence surged on Donald Trump's election but have since turned lower. Sentiment is an unreliable predictor of future activity and can shift rapidly. Weariness with inflation and high financing rates continued to weigh on consumer confidence in 2024. High and prolonged tariffs risk pushing inflation higher, potentially causing already strapped consumers to pull back from big-ticket purchases. Tariffs threaten multi-year progress in curbing inflation but could have a muted impact on overall price trends depending on future negotiations among nations and also on the willingness of companies to absorb rather than pass on higher costs. We expect the U.S. economy to continue expanding in 2025, remaining on a narrow growth path in line with subdued population growth and higher productivity. Following 2.9% year-over-year GDP growth in 2023 and 2.8% GDP growth for 2024 (both revised), Argus as of mid-April 20205 is modeling 2025 GDP growth of 1.3%. That target was recently reduced from 2.0%. The Fed successfully reduced inflation growth, although getting to the Fed's 2% target has proven to be challenging. The federal funds rate was 4.25%-4.5% as of April 2025, unchanged from year-end 2024, while the core PCE Inflation Index was up 2.8% on an annual basis. Based on the Fed's revised 'dot plot' from March 2025, we continue to expect two rate cuts in 2025, back-loaded to the second half. Argus currently expects short-term yields to move gradually lower from current levels and long yields to widen their relative premium to short yields. Early in April, Fed Chair Jerome Powell warned that President Trump's sweeping tariffs could reverse inflation progress and induce 'stagflation.' Those concerns could keep the Fed on the sidelines in 2025. At the sector level, key drivers for 2025 earnings are likely to include strong growth in Healthcare earnings and improved performance from sectors (Energy, Materials, and Industrials) that dragged on 2024 earnings. Energy prices have been volatile in recent years. We look for better balance in the supply-demand equation to keep energy prices relatively stable in 2025. Our current forecast for S&P 500 earnings from continuing operations is $276, implying full-year EPS growth of 12%. We will revise our estimate as needed once first quarter 2025 earnings season is concluded. For 2026, our S&P 500 earnings estimate is $307, which assumes EPS growth of 11%. Our 2025 and 2026 EPS estimates could be subject to revision based on impacts from tariffs Our stock/bond barometer is signaling that stocks, following their year-to-date selloff, are trading approximately at equilibrium with bonds. Stocks are trading at 0.17 sigma, in line with the 0.13 sigma long-term average, and remain attractive given solid EPS growth, lower inflation, and the decline in long yields. Conclusion We have expressed our concern that tariffs could hit differently in 2025 than in 2017. Consumers have been battered by inflation for the past several years, and many may be at the edge of their spending limits. In 2017, by contrast, consumers were coming off a decade of below-trend inflation; the CPI grew at a 1.5% CAGR between 2008 and 2017. Businesses and consumers in that earlier period were better able to absorb tariff-induced price increases, and U.S. GDP grew in the 2.5%-3.0% range annually right up to the pandemic year. The period following 2017 included the supply-chain crisis and a global pandemic, and by contrast has been characterized by withering inflation. Between 2018 and 2024, the U.S. CPI grew at a 3.6% CAGR. The second Trump administration may be basing its trade policies on the relatively benign impact of that first round of tariffs. But many consumers, particularly in lower economic tiers, seemingly are tapped out and likely unable to absorb further price hikes. For 2025, our base case outlook calls for GDP growth to slow to below 2%; corporate earnings to grow in high-single to low-double-digit percentages; employment growth to moderate but remain positive; and core inflation to approach but remain above the Fed's 2% target range. One takeaway from the year-to-date 2025 sector map is impressive breadth, which bodes well in a challenging market for traditional leaders. We believe the healthy rotation toward rate-sensitive, defensive, and cyclical categories will continue in 2025. Despite the challenging start to the year, we think the S&P 500 can advance from year-opening levels in 2025.
Tariffs' Threat to FedEx' Retail and Industrial End Markets a Key Factor to Watch
FedEx pioneered overnight delivery in 1973 and remains the world's largest express package provider. In its fiscal 2024, which ended in May, FedEx derived 47% of revenue from its express division, 37% from ground, and 10% from freight, its asset-based less-than-truckload shipping segment. The remainder came from other services, including FedEx Office, which provides document production/shipping, and FedEx Logistics, which provides global forwarding. FedEx acquired Dutch parcel delivery firm TNT Express in 2016, boosting its presence across Europe. TNT was previously the fourth-largest global parcel delivery provider.
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