Can UPS Stock Beat the Market?

Source The Motley Fool

Key Points

  • The company's revenue and earnings are not what management had previously expected.

  • UPS isn't covering its dividend with free cash flow.

  • Management has committed to maintaining the dividend, and UPS can muddle through a difficult period with it intact.

  • 10 stocks we like better than United Parcel Service ›

UPS (NYSE: UPS) has significantly underperformed the S&P 500 index over the last year, three years, and five years. While the benchmark index is up nearly 88% over the previous half-decade, UPS stock is down almost 44%. Still, long-term value investors love the opportunity to buy a beaten-down stock with potential upside coming from management engineering a turnaround.

What happened to UPS?

It has been a challenging period for the industry, marked by the previous boom in demand driven by pandemic stay-at-home orders, which created overcapacity in the small-package delivery market. When the economy reopened and demand moderated, UPS found itself with less demand than its network was designed to handle.

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Person delivering package.

Image source: Getty Images.

Moreover, the Trump tariffs created significant uncertainty in one of its key end markets, the small and medium-sized business (SMB) sector, in 2025. While large enterprises have the resources to shift suppliers relatively easily, it's a lot harder for an SMB whose main product comes from China or another country facing hefty tariffs.

One way or another, whether due to management error or end-market dynamics, UPS has missed its initial delivery volume estimates over the last three years.

UPS restructures

In the midst of all of this, the company continues to aggressively pivot toward higher-margin end markets like healthcare and SMEs, while voluntarily reducing low-margin delivery volume for Amazon. The idea is to refocus on more productive deliveries rather than just volume.

Moreover, the Amazon volume reduction target of a 50% cut from the end of 2024 to the middle of 2026 enables substantive cost-cutting actions that will help alleviate pressure on its revenue from trade market challenges and tariff conflicts -- never good news for transportation companies.

Where will UPS be in a year?

Management's operational strategy makes perfect sense. Improving productivity by aiming for higher-margin deliveries, investing in productivity-enhancing technologies (such as smart facilities and automation) will also enable facility rationalization. Additionally, investing in growing healthcare and SME-related revenue is a sensible long-term strategy.

Still, its capital allocation policy deserves circumspection. The Wall Street analyst consensus has UPS generating free cash flow of $4.6 billion in 2025, $5.3 billion in 2026, and $4.7 billion in 2027. None of these figures covers the $5.5 billion in dividends that management is committed to maintaining, at the very least.

As such, under that scenario, its net debt is highly likely to increase as UPS will need to fund its dividend. To be clear, UPS could do this and continue to muddle through as it improves its long-term profitability and the delivery market improves. In that case, investors would enjoy a huge dividend, and the stock price is likely to improve.

Magnifying glass, chart, pen, and notepad with the words "Dividend Yield" on the open page.

Image source: Getty Images.

On the other hand, UPS CEO Carol Tomé told investors on a recent earnings call that, "Next year is when you're going to feel the full brunt of some of these tariffs hitting some of these SMBs," and the company's near-term outlook is uncertain.

All told, UPS could outperform if its recovery goes as planned, but it could also underperform if end-market pressures persist and further deteriorate its cash flow.

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Lee Samaha has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends United Parcel Service. The Motley Fool recommends FedEx. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
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