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Fedex Corp

Exchange: NYSESector: IndustrialsIndustry: Integrated Freight & Logistics

FedEx Corp. provides customers and businesses worldwide with a broad portfolio of transportation, e-commerce, and business services. With annual revenue of $90 billion, the company offers integrated business solutions utilizing its flexible, efficient, and intelligent global network. Consistently ranked among the world's most admired and trusted employers, FedEx inspires its more than 500,000 employees to remain focused on safety, the highest ethical and professional standards and the needs of their customers and communities. FedEx is committed to connecting people and possibilities around the world responsibly and resourcefully, with a goal to achieve carbon-neutral operations by 2040.

Did you know?

Capital expenditures decreased by 22% from FY24 to FY25.

Current Price

$392.69

+1.75%

GoodMoat Value

$1082.62

175.7% undervalued
Profile
Valuation (TTM)
Market Cap$92.33B
P/E20.59
EV$113.99B
P/B3.29
Shares Out235.12M
P/Sales1.00
Revenue$91.93B
EV/EBITDA11.03

Fedex Corp (FDX) — Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Apr 5, 202620 speakers8,394 words58 segments

AI Call Summary AI-generated

The 30-second take

FedEx reported a solid quarter with revenue growth, but faces significant challenges from changes in global trade rules. The company is focused on cutting costs and adapting its network to these new pressures, while also investing in technology and preparing to spin off its freight business. This matters because the trade changes are creating a large financial headwind that could impact profits for the full year.

Key numbers mentioned

  • Adjusted earnings per share for Q1 was $3.83.
  • Full-year adjusted EPS outlook is $17.20 to $19 per diluted share.
  • Transformation-related savings target for the year is $1 billion.
  • Global trade environment headwind to adjusted operating income is expected to be $1 billion for the full year.
  • Revenue growth for the full year is expected to be 4% to 6%.
  • Purple tail transpacific Asia outbound capacity was reduced by 25% year-over-year.

What management is worried about

  • The global trade environment, including the removal of the de minimis exemption, is creating a significant headwind to revenue and profit.
  • Continued weakness in the industrial economy is pressuring results at FedEx Freight.
  • The company faces a $1 billion headwind to adjusted operating income from the global trade environment for the full fiscal year.
  • There is continued pressure from the expiration of the U.S. Postal Service contract.
  • The dynamic economic conditions across geographies create a fluid and uncertain operating environment.

What management is excited about

  • The Network 2.0 rollout is progressing well, with positive customer feedback on the consolidated pickup experience.
  • The company is winning new business in high-value verticals like healthcare and small & medium businesses.
  • The Tricolor strategy is enabling the network to flex capacity to match demand and is driving growth in international priority and economy freight.
  • Data and AI are seen as a key strategic advantage, with the company leveraging its unique data assets to improve operations and explore new revenue models.
  • The spin-off of FedEx Freight remains on track for June 2026, which is expected to unlock stockholder value.

Analyst questions that hit hardest

  1. Scott Group (Wolfe Research) - Operating Leverage Disconnect: Management responded by reiterating the significant pressure from the $1 billion global trade headwind, explaining that flow-through is not as great given these pressures.
  2. Tom Wadewitz (UBS) - Understanding the $1B Trade Headwind: Management gave an unusually detailed breakdown, clarifying that the headwind is a combination of top-line revenue reduction and $300 million in direct trade-related expenses like customs clearance.
  3. Jonathan Chappell (Evercore ISI) - Revenue Acceleration Amid Intensifying Headwinds: The response was defensive, pivoting to list offsets like the end of the USPS contract headwind and new business onboarding to justify the revenue guidance.

The quote that matters

Our position at the intersection of global commerce gives us an unmatched view of physical supply chain patterns.

Rajesh Subramaniam — President and CEO

Sentiment vs. last quarter

Omit this section as no previous quarter context was provided in the transcript.

Original transcript

Operator

Good day, and welcome to the FedEx First Quarter Fiscal 2026 Earnings Call. Please note, this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to FedEx Vice President of Investor Relations, Jeni Hollander.

O
JH
Jenifer HollanderVice President of Investor Relations

Good afternoon, and welcome to FedEx Corporation's first quarter earnings conference call. The first quarter earnings release, Form 10-Q and Stat Book are on our website at investors.fedex.com. This call and the accompanying slides are being streamed from our website. During our Q&A session, callers will be limited to one question to allow us to accommodate all those who would like to participate. Certain statements in this conference call may be considered forward-looking statements as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such forward-looking statements are subject to risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. For additional information on these factors, please refer to our press releases and filings with the SEC. Today's presentation also includes certain non-GAAP financial measures. Please refer to the Investor Relations portion of our website at fedex.com for a reconciliation of the non-GAAP financial measures discussed on this call to the most directly comparable GAAP measures. Joining us on the call today are Raj Subramaniam, President and CEO; Brie Carere, Executive Vice President and Chief Customer Officer; and John Dietrich, Executive Vice President and CFO. Now I will turn the call over to Raj.

RS
Rajesh SubramaniamPresident and CEO

Thank you, Jeni. We delivered a solid quarter in line with the Q1 outlook we shared in June, despite significant volatility and uncertainty around the global trade environment. Our results demonstrate the resilience we have built into our network. They also reflect the dedication of our world-class team who have adapted quickly to serve customers with excellence through an evolving demand environment. I'm very appreciative of Team FedEx. We continue to reduce structural costs while deploying Tricolor, advancing Network 2.0 and improving our European operations. These strategies are enabling us to flex the network faster than ever before and lowering our cost to serve, all while providing our customers with high-quality service. Importantly, we are continuing to win new business in high-value verticals, driven in part by our differentiated digital tools that are enhancing the FedEx value proposition and customer experience. We also continue to make meaningful progress preparing for the spin-off of FedEx Freight, which remains on track. Following the spin-off, Freight will be a separate public company with the best customer value proposition in the LTL market and a proven track record of strong operational execution. Turning to our consolidated Q1 results. Revenue was up 3% year-over-year, driven by strength across our U.S. domestic package services. We achieved our targeted $200 million in transformation-related savings and grew adjusted operating income by 7%. Similar to last quarter, the results at Federal Express Corporation, or FEC, demonstrate the operating leverage that we built into our business. On a 4% year-over-year increase in FEC revenue, we grew adjusted operating income by 17% and expanded adjusted operating margin by 70 basis points. Notably, we achieved this result despite continued headwinds from the trade environment and the U.S. Postal Service contract expiration. Consistent with the industry trends that we have seen in recent quarters, revenue at Freight remained pressured. That said, despite the prolonged weakness in the industrial economy, the LTL market remains rational, and we are well positioned with our disciplined approach to strategic growth. I'm proud of the results our team is delivering across the enterprise, despite industrial economic weakness. While an industrial recovery is not required for long-term value creation at FedEx, I'm confident that we'll unlock significant upside across the enterprise when the demand environment improves. Last quarter, I spoke about the degree to which we flexed our networks to better match the demand environment amid global trade shifts. As policies and demand evolved throughout the first quarter, we further adjusted capacity, thanks to our Tricolor strategy. For example, we reduced our purple tail transpacific Asia outbound capacity by 25% year-over-year. And nearly 10% versus the prior quarter. We also decreased our third-party or white tail capacity by similar percentages. At the same time, we shifted capacity to capture profitable revenue on the Asia to Europe lane. With the full removal of the de minimis exemption in the United States late last month, we have been working closely with our customers, helping them maintain effective and efficient access to the vital U.S. market. Given a significant portion of our de minimis volume exposure previously came from China, we were able to use learnings from our experiences in May to help shippers elsewhere navigate the more recent exemption elimination. This level of connectivity extends to how we're advancing the elements of our transformation that are unique to FedEx. The Network 2.0 rollout is progressing well and customer feedback, especially when it comes to the consolidated pickup experience, remains very positive. In the first quarter, as planned, we optimized approximately 70 additional U.S. stations. Our total optimized station count across the U.S. and Canada is now approximately 360, enabling us to exit September with nearly 3 million in average daily volume flowing through Network 2.0 optimized operations. Looking beyond Network 2.0, improving profitability in Europe remains a top priority, and I am especially pleased with the team's year-over-year improvements in labor and on-road productivity metrics. Q1 also marked our best new business quarter in Europe in the last 2 years, driven by Express parcel growth on both the intra-European and Transatlantic lanes. Importantly, this business was well balanced between B2B and B2C customers demonstrating our focus on growing in premium B2B and longer-haul export B2C segments. This commercial strategy, combined with our rigorous focus on cost management, led to a meaningful contribution to our year-over-year FEC profit improvement. I talked earlier about how our Tricolor strategy enabled us to flex the network to adapt to changing demand patterns. Tricolor is also driving greater densification and reduced unit costs across our Purple, Orange, and White networks. The strategy is simultaneously focused on enhancing service quality and mitigating congestion at major sort locations. Our execution on this important initiative is bolstering end-to-end solutions for global customers as we grow profitably in the global airfreight market. This strategy supported an impressive 14% year-over-year Q1 revenue growth in international priority and economy freight with high flow-through. Data and technology remain foundational to our business, but we are entering a new chapter in how we leverage them. Our founder's vision more than 45 years ago that information about the package is as important as the package itself has proven valuable. Today, FedEx operates an advanced digital twin that goes beyond tracking. It is becoming an intelligent system that anticipates disruptions, provides optimized route information in real-time, and creates predictive customer experiences. We moved 17 million packages through our network daily, generating 2 petabytes of data and 100 billion transactions across software applications. But the real value is in the volume. It is in the unique nature of this data. Our position at the intersection of global commerce gives us an unmatched view of physical supply chain patterns, seasonal demand shifts, and emerging trade corridors. This real-world operational data platform cannot be replicated by any competitor or tech solution. Simply put, FedEx owns one of the richest logistics, intelligent assets in the world. I'm excited to welcome Vishal Talwar, our new Chief Digital and Information Officer and President of FedEx Dataworks, who joined us last month. As the former Chief Growth Officer at Accenture Technology, Vishal brings deep expertise in enterprise AI and understands how to leverage our unique physical and digital assets into next-generation AI-led capabilities. Under Vishal's leadership, we will continue accelerating two key priorities: scaling AI across the enterprise from enterprise function to how we operate and sell our customers and exploring new revenue models that leverage our unique assets. We're also strengthening our cybersecurity posture to protect our strategic advantages. Before I turn the call over to Brie, I'd like to update you on our expectations for the remainder of the fiscal year. Based on our current assumptions, we expect full-year adjusted earnings to be $17.20 to $19 per diluted share. This reflects a range of scenarios in what remains a dynamic global operating environment. As it continues to evolve, we will remain focused on executing our commercial priorities, dynamically matching capacity with demand and delivering on the $1 billion in transformation-related savings we shared previously. Brie and John will provide more details on the key variables and underlying assumptions for this outlook shortly. We have made tremendous progress on our transformation, and there is much more to come. To that end, we are excited to announce that our next FedEx Corp. Investor Day will be held in Memphis on February 11 and 12, 2026. I look forward to seeing many of you there, where we will provide more detailed updates on our strategic initiatives and our longer-term financial targets. Now over to you, Brie.

BC
Brie CarereExecutive Vice President and Chief Customer Officer

Thank you, Raj. I'm very proud of our entire global team for how they are supporting our customers in the current trade environment. Our strong value proposition, including superior weekend coverage, supported 3% year-over-year revenue growth across the enterprise. This is the highest quarterly rate we have seen since the pandemic. At FEC, revenue was up 4%, driven by U.S. domestic package revenue strength. This was a direct result of profitable share growth in the U.S. domestic market. This strength was partially offset by continued weakness at FedEx Freight due to the continued pressure from the industrial economy. Our value proposition is helping us deepen our customer relationships and win business. For example, in Q1, Best Buy named FedEx as their primary national parcel carrier. Leveraging our advanced visibility tool, Best Buy will provide real-time tracking data and customer order communication, improving their customers' experiences. By providing customers with more timely and accurate updates, the company also expects to reduce support calls, cancellations, and reship costs. We are excited to partner with Best Buy to create a smarter, more reliable supply chain that further strengthens their customer trust. We were pleased to deliver a 5% increase in U.S. domestic ADV year-over-year, with growth across the majority of our services. In line with our expectations and consistent with the trends we saw in May, international export volumes declined, particularly on the China to U.S. lane. Knowing our strongest international lane would be under pressure, we pivoted the commercial team, and they have done a tremendous job capturing demand out of Southeast Asia and Europe. This provided a partial offset against the headwinds to demand on the China to U.S. export lane. The team has also done a great job maximizing U.S. outbound capacity. We are seeing improving trends in both outbound weight and volume, supported by strong growth in our health care vertical. At FedEx Freight, along with broader industry trends, average daily shipments declined. Weakness in the industrial economy and excess capacity in the truckload market continue to pressure our results. That said, Freight made excellent progress in the quarter, continuing to stand up its dedicated sales team. This team is focused on improving the customer experience and maintaining strong yields. As the industrial economy improves, Freight is poised for growth and margin expansion. The parcel pricing environment continues to improve. We have achieved strong capture from our pricing changes in the quarter, which included an increase in our fuel surcharge index. At FEC, U.S. domestic package yield was up 3%, driven by strength across all services. International export package yield grew 4%, driven by higher fuel surcharges, favorable exchange rate impacts, and the reduction in lightweight e-commerce volume due to the change in the de minimis exemption. Our Tricolor strategy continued to drive growth in international priority and economy freight, where we delivered a 9% increase in revenue per pound. At FedEx Freight, revenue per shipment declined 1%, driven by lower revenue per hundredweight and lower fuel surcharges. While weight per shipment was flat year-over-year, we are encouraged by the sequential improvement in weight for shipment over the past few quarters. And FedEx Freight revenue per hundredweight remains amongst the highest in the industry. We announced our demand surcharges in July, which are needed to offset the incremental cost at peak to deliver outstanding service while protecting profitability. Earlier this month, we announced a 5.9% general rate increase effective in January. We expect strong capture from both. In Q1, we prepared for the ramping of our new Amazon business, which was minimal in the first quarter as we expected. We believe the onboarding will be complete by the third quarter, which will support continued U.S. domestic revenue growth in the quarters ahead. This profitable business will skew towards larger, heavier weight packages. We are cautiously optimistic about peak season growth based on what we are hearing from our customers currently. As a reminder, this year's peak season will last one day longer than last year. With that in mind, we are expecting a modest increase in peak ADV versus fiscal year '25, and a mid- to high single-digit increase in year-over-year total peak volume, with growth driven by our larger B2C customers. Regarding the full-year outlook, we are currently planning for revenue growth of 4% to 6%. The top of this range assumes that current favorable trends in the U.S. domestic segment continue, and the lower end assumes incremental pressure on U.S. demand, particularly in the second half of the fiscal year. On the international side, the top of the revenue range assumes the current level of international export revenue pressures continue through the rest of the fiscal year, while the lower end assumes an acceleration in these pressures. At FedEx Freight, we expect revenue to be flat to up modestly year-over-year, depending largely on the market conditions in the second half of the year. We continue to advance our commercial priorities, sharply focused on B2B, small and medium-sized businesses, Europe, and of course, global airfreight. Within B2B, we continue to onboard new health care business in Q1, building on our momentum from prior quarters. This includes strong health care-related growth within our global air freight business. Later this month, we are launching a new flight linking Dublin and Indianapolis. This new flight will move goods one day faster, supporting health care and other high-value verticals with shipments between Ireland and the U.S. We grew our U.S. domestic small business revenue by more than 10% year-over-year in the first quarter. This was fueled by focused and targeted sales execution and a close alignment between our sales and operations teams. This collaboration is accelerating onboarding, shortening deal cycles, and driving meaningful new acquisition. We are also scaling high-impact support to deliver exceptional customer experiences during this complex environment. FedEx Rewards, our loyalty program, which is unique in the industry, continues to see significant growth while deepening our SMB customer relationships. In closing, I am very proud of our team's strong execution in this dynamic environment. We are helping our customers manage through evolving policies and changing demand patterns. We remain disciplined in our approach to revenue quality. We are ready to continue providing outstanding service to our customers before, during, and after peak. And with that, I'll turn it over to John.

JD
John DietrichExecutive Vice President and CFO

Thanks, Brie. Our Q1 results reflect the tenacity and agility of the FedEx team in providing outstanding service while delivering on our strategic initiatives and increasing stockholder returns. We executed very well in Q1, with results above the midpoint of our adjusted EPS outlook range. We also maintained our disciplined approach to capital expenditure, continue to repurchase stock, and grew our quarterly dividend. Turning to our financial results. On a consolidated basis, in the first quarter, we delivered $3.83 in adjusted earnings per share, up 6% year-over-year. And we delivered these positive results despite significant headwinds from reduced international export demand and the expiration of the U.S. Postal Service contract. Overall, we delivered revenue growth of 3%, which supported 20 basis points of adjusted margin expansion and 7% adjusted operating income growth. As Brie mentioned, our yield management and strong commercial execution resulted in higher revenue growth from U.S. domestic packaged services, which contributed to our year-over-year adjusted operating income improvement. We grew adjusted operating income by approximately $90 million despite the $150 million headwind from the global trade environment, $130 million of headwind from the U.S. Postal Service contract expiration, and continued softness at FedEx Freight. As a reminder, we will lap the expiration of the Postal Service contract at the end of this month. Additionally, our Q1 results reflect a higher-than-expected Q1 GAAP tax rate of 27.3%, which was unfavorably impacted by a nonrecurring income tax expense related to the examination of prior year tax return filings. Turning to performance by segment. At FEC, adjusted operating income increased by $168 million, up 17%, and adjusted operating margin expanded by 70 basis points. This marks the fourth consecutive quarter of year-over-year adjusted margin expansion for FEC. This was driven by higher yields, continued cost reduction efforts, and increased U.S. domestic package volume. These drivers were partially offset by higher wage and purchase transportation rates and the headwinds I mentioned earlier. As expected, due to the evolving trade environment in the quarter, we experienced a material headwind on our Asia to U.S. lane, largely from China outbound, driving most of the $150 million international export headwind to adjusted operating income. At FedEx Freight, adjusted operating income declined by just over $70 million, and adjusted operating margin contracted 250 basis points. Though the current operating environment is challenging for the entire LTL sector, FedEx Freight is uniquely positioned to see strong incremental margins in the eventual market upswing. Moving on to capital allocation. During the quarter, we opportunistically purchased $500 million worth of stock, which, alongside our increased dividend payout, demonstrates our unwavering commitment to increasing stockholder value. We have $1.6 billion remaining under our 2024 stock repurchase authorization and subject to business and market conditions, we expect to continue repurchasing shares during the remainder of FY '26. FedEx maintains a healthy balance sheet with $6.2 billion of cash on hand exiting Q1 and with investment-grade credit ratings from the major agencies. I'm also very pleased that our recent euro-denominated bond offering was significantly oversubscribed, a testament to the strength of our business, balance sheet, and capital allocation strategy. Q1 CapEx was $623 million, driven by Network 2.0 related facility enhancements of modernization, and continued investments to maintain our fleet of aircraft and vehicles. We continue to target $4.5 billion in annual CapEx for FedEx Corp. in FY '26. With regard to pension contributions, given the well-funded status of our pension plan, we are reducing our expected pension cash contribution. We now anticipate making up to $400 million in voluntary pension contributions to our U.S. qualified plan in fiscal 2026 compared to our prior forecast of up to $600 million. Moving to our FY '26 adjusted EPS outlook, which is based on the information that is known to us today. Though the global operating environment remains fluid with dynamic economic conditions across geographies, our value proposition remains strong, and we continue to execute effectively. As a result, we expect to deliver adjusted EPS of $17.20 to $19, which reflects a range of potential scenarios for the year. Factors that will determine where we ultimately fall in the outlook range include the evolution of global trade, the health of the industrial economy, the U.S. domestic demand environment, traction in our higher-margin B2B verticals, and inflation. Adjusted EPS of $18.10, which is the midpoint of our range, assumes consolidated revenue growth of 5% and $1 billion in transformation-related savings from our structural cost reductions and Network 2.0 and associated One FedEx savings in FY '26. We expect adjusted operating income offsets to include a $1 billion headwind due to the global trade environment, recognizing this number could flex in either direction as the environment evolves, and a $160 million headwind to adjusted operating income from the expiration of the postal contract. We expect our FY '26 effective tax rate to be approximately 25% and EPS to be supported by our share repurchase program, as I mentioned earlier. At the midpoint of our range, we anticipate a 6% increase in Federal Express revenue with adjusted operating margin down slightly. Also at the midpoint, we expect low single-digit improvement in FedEx Freight revenue with margin down year-over-year. Now turning to our FY '26 adjusted operating income bridge. We're introducing a new view of this bridge to provide deeper insights into the expected drivers of profitability this year. The bridge shows the year-over-year elements embedded in our outlook in one of the scenarios at the midpoint, resulting in adjusted operating income of $6 billion. Of course, the assumptions behind the variables at the midpoint may flex as the environment changes. In this scenario, for FEC volume-related revenue net of variable costs associated with this volume, we expect a $400 million tailwind driven largely by U.S. domestic package services, offset by a material headwind from reduced international export demand. With respect to FEC yield, we expect a $2.3 billion tailwind, demonstrating our commitment to revenue quality and continued pricing discipline. Offsets to these tailwinds include a $2.1 billion base expense increase across the business, excluding FedEx Freight, a $300 million headwind from direct trade-related expenses, including higher customs clearance costs, the $160 million U.S. Postal Service contract expiration headwind I mentioned earlier, a $100 million decline in adjusted operating profit at Freight, and a $100 million headwind from the net impact of foreign exchange fluctuations. Embedded in our assumptions are the previously mentioned $1 billion in headwind to adjusted operating profit from the global trade environment and $1 billion in transformation-related savings from DRIVE and Network 2.0. And while DRIVE began as a cost reduction program, it is now fundamental to how we run our business. With regard to Q2, we anticipate a sequential improvement in adjusted EPS. At FEC, we expect to maintain or improve operating margins sequentially. And at FedEx Freight, we expect the year-over-year decline in adjusted operating margin to begin moderating sequentially in Q2. Before turning to Q&A, I want to provide an update on our spinoff of FedEx Freight, which is progressing well and on track for the June 2026 separation. In August, we submitted our confidential Form 10 to the FEC and in September, we submitted a request for a private letter ruling on the tax treatment of the transaction to the IRS. These are important milestones as we move toward the tax-efficient spin-off. Freight now has about 200 frontline LTL sales and sales support personnel on board and is well on its way towards our goal of 400 sales specialists prior to the spin-off. I'm confident that both the expanded dedicated sales force and our ramping technology investments will continue to improve the customer experience. Once separated, FedEx Freight will be a separately traded public company listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol FDXF. We plan to host our FedEx Freight Investor Day in New York City in the spring of 2026 prior to the separation. Overall, I remain confident that the FedEx Freight separation and the continued execution of our strategic priorities will unlock significant stockholder value in the years ahead. And with that, let's open it up for questions.

Operator

The first question comes from Jordan Alliger with Goldman Sachs.

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JA
Jordan AlligerAnalyst

Thanks for the color on the midpoint. I'm curious about the low and high end of your EPS range. Is it simply a function of where it comes out in that revenue range? Or are there other factors that could help impact where it winds up sitting?

JD
John DietrichExecutive Vice President and CFO

Yes. Thank you, Jordan. It's John. I'll start by saying it's really important to note that we're basing this outlook on the information available today. We centered on the midpoint of our range and I think it's fair to say that where we ultimately land will be determined by a variety of variables. I touched on them in some of my prepared remarks, including the evolution of global trade and its impact on demand, the health of the industrial economy, U.S. domestic demand, and so forth. So it's not any one factor. It's a variety of factors, and we're going to be monitoring those closely. It's going to be a very dynamic environment that we intend to capitalize on.

Operator

The next question is from Ken Hoexter with Bank of America.

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KH
Ken HoexterAnalyst

And thanks for the details on the cost there. I just want to dig into that a little bit to understand because if I look at the incremental margin growth of 4% to 5%, yet the incremental operating gains are not keeping pace. So is that because of those headwinds you ran through? Maybe, John, you can refine that a little bit on the $1 billion cost, the $300 million headwind on the trade expenses? I just want to maybe parse that out a little bit further.

JD
John DietrichExecutive Vice President and CFO

Sure. Yes, there will be pressure. I mean, what we're talking about here is a $1 billion headwind as a result of some of the environmental impacts. So our full year assumption includes the removal of the de minimis exemption for the rest of the world that went into effect at the end of August. But I think it's fair to say that, that $1 billion will be something that we'll be focused on, but something that will be a challenge for us as we go forward.

RS
Rajesh SubramaniamPresident and CEO

If I can add to that, Ken, I think that is a big headwind for fiscal year '26. We're doing everything in our power to make sure that we can improve our customer experience and mitigate the costs as we move forward. The underlying business is very strong as we move into '27 and beyond.

Operator

The next question is from Bascome Majors with Susquehanna.

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BM
Bascome MajorsAnalyst

Raj, you leaned a little further into the data side of the business post the hire Vishal I know we just started a month ago. I don't know if he's on the call or could talk a little bit high level about strategy, particularly where you're talking about finding new revenue models to monetize that part of the FedEx story? Or if not him, just a little more thought on where you're heading in that and how big a business that might be for FedEx going forward?

RS
Rajesh SubramaniamPresident and CEO

Thank you for the question, Bascome. We recognize the significant value of our data. We handle 17 million packages daily, generating 2 petabytes of data. It's not merely about the amount of data we have; it's about its value, particularly in today's fast-changing environment. We began our efforts in 2020, organizing and engineering our data on a platform. This groundwork gives us a competitive advantage, especially as AI continues to advance rapidly, with data being essential for AI's success. The engineered and high-value data we possess is critical for our future initiatives. We are already seeing positive results in our operations, as deep learning models are improving our predictive capabilities. We could not have achieved Network 2.0 without our data platform and technology. Our differentiated approach is evident, as we offer superior monitoring and intervention tools to our clients, with 40% of them in the healthcare sector utilizing our platform, which relies on our data and AI tools. We also introduced the FDX commerce platform, which is now facilitating workflow for our customers by streamlining their supply chains. In the current complex trade environment, we are adding value as we enhance our ability to move goods across borders and leverage GenAI for HS classifications. This area is still developing, and we have ample opportunities ahead of us. Our mission has shifted towards making supply chains smarter for everyone, starting with our data platform and the insights we provide, along with our AI tools. Looking ahead, we will provide more updates in February as our initiatives begin to support our operations, differentiate us for customers, and help us develop new revenue models. Thank you again for your question.

Operator

The next question is from Scott Group with Wolfe Research.

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SG
Scott GroupAnalyst

Can you provide some insight into the expected sequential earnings growth? Was that for Q2? Looking at the bigger picture, over the last couple of years, we've heard about reducing costs and growing earnings despite lower revenue. When we do see revenue growth, the operating leverage should be significant. Currently, we have 5% revenue growth alongside $1 billion in cost reduction and buybacks, yet earnings remain flat. What accounts for the lack of improved operating leverage? I understand there are global challenges, but we're still achieving 5% revenue growth despite the $1 billion headwind.

JD
John DietrichExecutive Vice President and CFO

So Scott, thanks for that. Let me start with the Q2. We have focused our commentary on the full-year guidance and are not giving Q2 guidance. That said, as Brie mentioned, we're cautiously optimistic about peak season demand. We do expect, consistent with last year's sequential earnings improvement in Q2 and versus Q1 $3.83, but we're not guiding to Q2 being up or down on a year-over-year basis. We expect continued benefits from our transformation-related savings and large trade-related OI headwind than in Q1 of the $150 million. But just pivoting to your second question on kind of the flow-through. I'll repeat what I said before, we're facing a $1 billion headwind due to the trade environment. In Q1, we experienced $150 million of that to adjusted op income primarily driven by reduced demand out of China on the U.S. lane. And so for the full year, and just to give a little bit more detail, we're assuming a material revenue headwind from the global trade environment. Operating income at the midpoint of the range will require us to execute, but there's going to be pressure. So the flow-through is not as great, given some of the pressures. The $1 billion is embedded in lost opportunities in our FEC volume net of cost line. The direct trade-related expenses for things like customs clearance and staffing and base expense increases. So there's a fair amount of pressure there from which we intend to deliver on and we'll be focused on staying in the range.

Operator

The next question is from Tom Wadewitz with UBS.

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TW
Thomas WadewitzAnalyst

John, I guess it's maybe a little more on that same topic that Scott was just asking about. The global trade headwind, I still feel like I don't really understand what it is. If I look at your international export revenue, I think, was up a little bit in 1Q. And then I think on one of your slides, you were pointing to some nice reduction in hours in flight hours on Asia, U.S. in both purple tail and white tail. So I guess it's not clear to me what that $150 million in 1Q is. It doesn't seem to be revenue. It doesn't seem to be clear where the cost impact is. So I really just wanted to see if you could just help us understand that a little bit better? And also why that gets meaningfully worse on a full-year basis to like $1 billion instead of versus the $150 million in 1Q?

BC
Brie CarereExecutive Vice President and Chief Customer Officer

Tom, it's Brie. I'll take the top line question and then certainly let John kind of add in the color on the expense increase. So what we saw in the first quarter is the vast majority of that $150 million was impact from reduction in top-line revenue. Specifically, the majority of that is de minimis impacted in coming out of the China lane. We anticipate that, that will continue to flow through the year. In addition to the $150 million per quarter, as we are planning for incremental pressure because of the global de minimis change, which took place at the end of August, we've got $100 million of bottom line pressure throughout the year. And then we have $300 million of incremental expense. So to be really clear that $1 billion of headwind is predominantly an impact of top-line revenue reduction because China to the U.S. is a very profitable lane for us. John?

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John DietrichExecutive Vice President and CFO

Yes. No, Brie, just to add what I mentioned before, I mean, you touched on the direct trade-related expenses of the $300 million for additional customs clearance and related capabilities and also running through the base expense increases that coupled with the top line that you mentioned.

Operator

The next question is from Jonathan Chappell with Evercore ISI.

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Jonathan ChappellAnalyst

I think we're all trying to get to the same place here. So I'll just layer on top of Tom and Scott. If this is all the top line impact from the global trade $150 million in the first quarter, yes, $850 million for the rest of the year, which is close to $300 million. So it's almost doubling the impact in fiscal 2Q, 3Q, and 4Q. You have to get to the midpoint or even the low end of the full-year revenue guide, the rate of change will have to accelerate from the 3% in the first quarter and your year-over-year comps and even 2-year stock comps are more difficult. So can you just help us bridge where the revenue acceleration comes from if this anomalous headwind is intensifying, potentially doubling? Is it all from price and yield? Are you expecting some significant volume pickup at some point absent the global tariff headwinds in de minimis?

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Brie CarereExecutive Vice President and Chief Customer Officer

Jonathan, it's Brie. So great question. So yes, we were very pleased with the 3% revenue growth in the first quarter. To get to the midpoint of 5%, first of all, we do expect the majority of trends will continue. So right now, what we're seeing in September looks a lot like August with a continuation of trend with a couple of really important notes. Number one, in the first quarter, we had a $280 million top line headwind because of USPS. That goes away in Q2 and beyond. We are still onboarding some of the wins from Q1 or Q4 of last year and early Q1. And as I mentioned, as an example, Amazon is still onboarding and it had very little impact in Q1. There are several other examples of onboarding. And then in the back half of the year, we do expect FedEx Freight to have modest yield improvement and better than the first quarter or the first quarter and the second quarter from an expectation perspective. So we do think the midpoint is very realistic, and we're clear-eyed about how to get from Q1 to the rest of the year's range.

Operator

The next question is from Brandon Oglenski with Barclays.

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Brandon OglenskiAnalyst

Brie, I appreciate all those details. I was wondering if maybe you could walk through the outlook for domestic volumes on the package side again. And it's no secret that your largest competitor is shrinking here. So can you talk about maybe the competitive landscape? What's presenting for market share opportunities and pricing?

BC
Brie CarereExecutive Vice President and Chief Customer Officer

Great question. From a domestic perspective, particularly concerning parcel, we do not anticipate a significant change in trends. As I mentioned, we are focusing on onboarding, and the mix should remain quite similar regarding package profiles. The team has done an excellent job in execution, and we have experienced the best momentum in small and medium business in the last quarter, which is aiding our yield growth. It's also worth noting that fuel was advantageous in the first quarter and will continue to positively impact us throughout the year. Additionally, we implemented some price changes in the middle of the quarter that will benefit us in the second quarter and beyond. Overall, I don't foresee a major trend shift; this is about self-improvement and strategically acquiring profitable market share, which we expect to persist. Regarding pricing, we are concentrating on enhancing our value proposition. We are achieving success in health care and small business sectors and benefiting from our seven-day coverage. As you may have heard with the Best Buy example, market pricing is improving and appears to be competitive but reasonable.

Operator

The next question is from Chris Wetherbee with Wells Fargo.

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Christian WetherbeeAnalyst

I guess maybe I just wanted to ask about the range. So 4% to 6% on the top line and $17.20 to $19 on the bottom line. Midpoint is 5% of revenue for the midpoint of the EPS. Should we assume that 4% revenue growth lines up with 17.20 and 6%? Is it the $19 side? And then maybe just a quick clarification point. What exactly is the $300 million of direct related expenses on the trade side? Just want to get a sense of what that is?

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John DietrichExecutive Vice President and CFO

Yes, Chris, it's John. I wouldn't draw a direct link between the factor you mentioned regarding the 4% and the low end. As I mentioned earlier, this is a dynamic environment, and there will be various factors influencing our progress. We'll be closely monitoring and managing the situation. What I provided was just one scenario. As we discussed about reaching the midpoint, there could be several other possibilities as well. Regarding your second question, I recall that the $300 million relates to customs clearance, along with staffing and administrative costs due to our adjustments to the current trade environment.

Operator

The next question is from Richa Harnain with Deutsche Bank.

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Richa HarnainAnalyst

Okay. So regarding the top end of your guidance, you said it's predicated on the continuation of strength in domestic. I guess this question for Brie. You saw some of the best conditions you said since like COVID period, your pricing was certainly the best, we believe, since 2022. Volume growth third consecutive quarter of mid-single-digit plus growth in domestic volumes. Brie, you said SMB best momentum you've seen in a while. So maybe you can help us understand what's really driving the share gain what do we need to see to make it sustainable? And then regarding the onboarded the business you're onboarding, what does it look like? What's the profitability profile, et cetera?

BC
Brie CarereExecutive Vice President and Chief Customer Officer

Thanks for the question, Richa. Honestly, from an execution perspective, we're really focused on strategic segments. SMB, we are selling direct. Our primary competitor sells through more platforms and third parties, and we've really seen some just outstanding execution momentum. We have a loyalty program that is highly effective, and we've been very focused on making sure customers are aware and engaged in the loyalty program, and that is working from a health care perspective; that's why you're seeing the premium volume momentum that we have seen over the last 2 quarters essentially. So we're pleased with that. Health care is very sticky revenue. It is high service expectations, very, very custom SOP, and yeah, it is profitable, but it's also very sticky. And then of course, from an e-commerce perspective, you have seen that HD ground economy bundle working. We are growing there. We are faster than our primary competitor. We have rural coverage that they don't have. And of course, we now cover about 65% of GDP on Sunday. So really pleased with the team's focus, equally pleased with their revenue quality. We've been pulling pricing levers as appropriate and that definitely benefited us in the first quarter, and we anticipate that we'll get a high capture throughout the year. Of course, we're also planning very rigorously for peak surcharges are in place. They are working. The team has got a very focused plan for peak that I'm excited about.

Operator

The next question is from Ravi Shanker with Morgan Stanley.

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Ravi ShankerAnalyst

A two-parter, if I may. On the de minimis, what has been the customer reaction to the expiry of the rule? And do you think that is a new normal going forward? And also, does it feel like there's been much pull forward in international volumes that may have benefited you in fiscal 1Q? And kind of what does that kind of normal run rate look like for the next kind of several quarters as well?

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Brie CarereExecutive Vice President and Chief Customer Officer

Thanks for the question. I'm certainly not going to speculate on the future trade environment. But I will tell you, obviously, from a customer perspective, it has been a very stressful period. I'm really proud of our clearance operations team, and our commercial team because they are lockstep with customers and have been particularly challenging for small exporters because they do not have the expertise and the staffing, and that's where our teams have come in and really partnered with them to help, as Raj talked about, automate some of their clearance inputs from a digital perspective. So we're very, very focused from a partnership perspective, but it has been really tough on small customers and exporters. As far as the pull forward, I will remain optimistic the American consumer from our numbers has been resilient. We do not see any indication in either airfreight or our domestic parcel business that this is all forward. I will absolutely acknowledge July was quite strong for us, especially the Prime Week. We saw a lot of U.S. retailers' sales in the market, and they were affected. We saw strong volumes in July, but I don't necessarily see that as a pull forward. And like I said, right now, from our forecasting, we both peak in the back half, we're confident in the range we put out from a top-line perspective.

Operator

Next question is from Brian Ossenbeck with JPMorgan.

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Brian OssenbeckAnalyst

Maybe Brie, just to start off by elaborating a bit more on the peak. It sounds like some of its visibility to maybe some of these new contracts that are onboarding, some of it's more of a macro. So maybe you can separate just how much of the peak strength is FedEx-related versus what you see in the underlying market? I think that would be helpful. And also maybe a little bit of context on freight. We didn't get too much color on that, but certainly a tough market and tough quarter, but it sounds like you expect things to stabilize and improve pretty significantly from here. So I wanted to get some additional thoughts on what's embedded in that outlook.

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Brie CarereExecutive Vice President and Chief Customer Officer

I believe I have all the details, Brian, but please let me know if I miss anything. From a peak perspective, we expect to see low to moderate growth in average daily volume, although total volume will increase due to an extra day. A significant part of this volume growth comes from last year's acquisition, and we anticipate benefiting from this in our peak performance. I expect our numbers to be slightly higher than the market. Moreover, we see strong performance driven by large B2C retailers and brands during the peak period. We have implemented our revenue quality strategy and peak surcharges, and the team has effectively collaborated with Scott Ray and the service team to manage capacity and service. We are confident about our peak performance, but I don't see this as a reflection of overall market conditions. Regarding FedEx Freight, we recognize the pressures on the industrial economy, and as the market share leader in the LTL industry, we feel that impact. Our top priority at FedEx Freight is revenue quality, a responsibility we take seriously. We expect to see the benefits of last year's performance in the latter half of the year, and while we anticipate increased yields then, we remain disciplined and focused.

Operator

The next question is from Bruce Chan with Stifel.

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J. Bruce ChanAnalyst

Maybe just one on the broader airfreight market. We've been hearing about some potential supply constraints as the global fleet sort of ages here. I guess, first, are you seeing signs of that? And then so how do you think about the flow-through with Tricolor? I imagine you've got some good flexibility to shift volumes sort of between the purple tails and third-party capacity.

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Brie CarereExecutive Vice President and Chief Customer Officer

Yes. From an airfreight perspective, again, we're a relatively small market share participant from a global airfreight perspective. We are being selective and really focused on premium freight. I am particularly proud of the airline team this quarter. They shifted capacity and equally proud of the commercial team. We knew because of the trade environment that our China to U.S. lane, and we are the market share leader there would be pressured. And so we pivoted. We are growing between Asia and Europe, which is a large lane. We're being selective there. And then equally important on the Purple tail, we balance capacity, and the team did a really good job from a U.S. perspective. I'll give the health care team a shout out; almost 50% of the weight growth from a U.S. export perspective came from health care airfreight, so our health care strategy is working there, too.

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Rajesh SubramaniamPresident and CEO

Bruce, if I can jump in on this Tricolor, if you remember the conversations that we have had before, the idea was to decongest the hubs and to have a truck-fly-truck network so that it links all our networks together optimally and densification of our network. All those are being tracked at KPI level very carefully, and I'm happy to report that the team has done a tremendous job and it's working. And that's what enables us to provide the value proposition to our customers to strategically and profitably grow in these segments. So again, we are in early innings on Tricolor, but the implementation has been stellar.

Operator

The next question is from Jason Seidl with TD Cowen.

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Unknown AnalystAnalyst

This is Elliot Alper on for Jason Seidl. So in terms of Network 2.0 and heading into peak season, are you planning for any changes in the process like putting some stations on hold in busier markets as you work through peak? Could that affect any timing in terms of the cadence of the $1 billion in cost savings or anything to think about there?

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Rajesh SubramaniamPresident and CEO

Thank you for the question. We are very encouraged by the progress on Network 2.0. The transition in Canada is complete, and service levels there are very strong. We are moving forward in the U.S. market as planned, and there is no change to our existing plans. We ended Q1 with 18% of our U.S. ADV operating through the Network 2.0 model. We have nearly 140 facilities and integrated 360 stations in progress. Overall, this is going according to plan, and we will continue to execute moving forward. While some may see Network 2.0 as primarily an efficiency initiative, it is also a growth strategy as we enhance customer value and experience, which will contribute to both efficiency and our growth in this segment.

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Brie CarereExecutive Vice President and Chief Customer Officer

I think it's important to note, we never plan for a new optimization in the middle of peak. So our rollout schedule, it's a given that just doesn't happen in peak because service is our top priority for our customers.

Operator

The next question is from David Vernon with Bernstein.

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David VernonAnalyst

So John, I wanted to kind of come back to this question on operating leverage and try to help better understand the bridge that you laid out here. When we think about the first quarter, is there anything in the comp on a year-over-year basis that may be added to the leverage, whether it's incentives or anything like that? And then as we think about the remainder of the year, right, obviously, there's a lot of things happening on trade and things happening top line, bottom line. Is the answer here of why we're not getting more leverage just that the mix is shifting to less profitable traffic? I'm just trying to really understand this thing at a high level, like if we've got $1 billion worth of costs taking out that would offset the headwind and then we got 5% of revenue growth, like why isn't there more falling to the bottom line?

JD
John DietrichExecutive Vice President and CFO

Yes. As I mentioned before, there's a variety of factors in play here, including kind of the opportunity cost of the hit to revenue as a result of the change in the trade environment. Mix shift is a factor to lower-yielding mix. But I should say it's profitable; it's profitable mix, I want to be clear on that. But that is certainly a consideration. But there's a whole dynamic environment of factors that are putting pressure on us that run the range that are factored into that $1 billion.

Operator

The next question is from Ari Rosa with Citi.

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Ariel RosaAnalyst

Could you help us understand how much of the revenue growth target is coming from new business wins? I'm looking for clarity on how to segment the 4% to 6% growth into organic versus new business contributions. Also, could you provide insights on the margin contribution of that? Additionally, regarding the $600 million of Freight spin costs, could you elaborate on what that entails?

JD
John DietrichExecutive Vice President and CFO

Well, I'll start with the Freight spin costs and then turn it over to that like with any large transaction, there's a significant amount of cost that's incurred; it's largely driven by the IT and the systems and enhancing the systems have freight to improve the customer experience. There are some staffing costs, but I would say those are small in the scheme of things. We talked about the sales force and so forth, but largely IT-related and systems-related.

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Brie CarereExecutive Vice President and Chief Customer Officer

Yes. As far as the revenue range, it's a combination of factors, as I talked about. We've got execution from a share gain perspective, we've got execution on getting the right business in, and the yield. The one thing that I can emphasize that as we look at the difference between Q1 and Q2 through Q4, the domestic momentum. One of the larger factors there will be continued onboarding, but we'll also be pushing on yields.

Operator

This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Raj Subramaniam for any closing remarks.

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Rajesh SubramaniamPresident and CEO

Well, thank you, operator. In closing, our Q1 results demonstrate our ability to support customers through this dynamic environment, and I'm incredibly proud of the FedEx team for their outstanding commitment to our customers and for driving such strong performance in this quarter. I'm confident that the momentum we have established positions us well for the peak season ahead. Thank you very much.

Operator

The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.

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