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FedEx to combine all but LTL into 1 organization

FedEx Corp. plans to combine most of its companies into 1 business, effective June 1, 2024

FedEx Corp. plans to rebrand as Federal Express and combine air, ground and other units into new entity. (Photo: Jim Allen/FreightWaves)

Editor’s note: This story was updated at 5:45 p.m. April 5 with new information.

In arguably one of the most important moves in its history, FedEx Corp. said Wednesday it will combine three of its operating units into one business known as Federal Express Corp.

The transition will bring FedEx’s (NYSE: FDX) air, ground parcel and FedEx Services businesses under one umbrella, effective June 1, 2024. FedEx Freight, the company’s LTL operation, will continue to operate as a stand-alone entity within the new corporation.

FedEx Corp. CEO Raj Subramaniam will run the new enterprise as president and CEO, the company said.


Effective April 16, John Smith, current FedEx Ground CEO, will become president and CEO of all FedEx Express and FedEx Ground operations in the U.S. and Canada. Smith will also run surface operations across FedEx Express, FedEx Freight and FedEx Ground units.

Richard Smith, head of FedEx Express and son of founder Frederick W. Smith, will serve as president and CEO of air and international of the Express unit.

Since its founding in the early 1970s, FedEx has operated in a siloed manner with each business unit running on its own. That model, which worked so well for decades, faded in relevance as a new regime led by Subramaniam took over and the elder Smith stepped away from the CEO job in 2022 to become executive chairman. 

“This is a tremendous milestone for us,” Subramaniam said during a presentation in New York, where the company gave more details on its Drive program, a multilayered cost initiative aimed at saving $4 billion by the end of fiscal 2025. The company ends FY 2023 on May 31.


The new organizational structure, called One FedEx, is designed to underpin the company’s Drive transformation.

Part of the program is Network 2.0, a multiyear effort to improve the efficiency with which FedEx picks up, transports and delivers packages in the U.S. and Canada. That program is aimed at reducing $2 billion in incremental costs by FY 2027.

Subramaniam said the company will come to market with a more simplified operating structure that will make it better positioned for its customers to compete.

The company has been moving, albeit haltingly, toward a unified corporate and operational vision for several years. FedEx Express and FedEx Ground are testing merged delivery operations in Alaska and Hawaii.

There will be more mixing and matching at FedEx than it has seen before, and little will be left on the table. For example, FedEx Ground, which hopes to save $1.2 billion through fiscal year 2025, expects to nearly double the portion of miles it moves via rail to 15%, John Smith said. Virtually all of the volumes will move in company-owned double-stack boxes, Smith said.

Another main objective is to attain what is called the “one van, one neighborhood” proposition. Today, it is commonplace for FedEx Express and Ground vans to circle a neighborhood several times per day, sometimes within hours of each other. “If you’ve ever seen a Ground and Express truck in your neighborhood on the same day, or watched them pass each other on the street, you know what we’re trying to accomplish,” said Smith.

The air express and international business, which aims to save $1.3 billion in Drive-related costs by FY 2025, will focus on flying more balanced lanes and leveraging outside partners for nonurgent flights, said Richard Smith. The company is parking planes, cutting aircraft and flight hours, and looking for ways it could substitute truck service for a second air leg on lower-priority international flights, he said. 

Savings on procurement and an increased focus on functional excellence and efficient IT investments are expected to save $1.5 billion out of the $4 billion figure, the company said.


Though LTL was not part of the consolidation, company executives remain adamant about its role at the company. Subramaniam said it was a vital part of the business. Brie Carere, who oversees all customer-related functions, said FedEx is the only major carrier that offers a parcel-LTL package, which makes it very sticky to many shippers.

The macro economy remains uncertain and generally lackluster, the company said. Inflation remains an issue though executives expect it to normalize over time. The company’s volumes remain under pressure, which lent urgency to the moves highlighted Wednesday. But given the mindset of Subramaniam and Richard Smith that the company had outlived its siloed ways, the change was inevitable.

E-commerce will account for 90% of all new business through 2026, Carere said. Through 2026, the company expects e-commerce to grow at a 4% to 5% rate dating back to 2022. The business-to-business segment, which has struggled, “will be better in the next couple of years than it has been in the past three years,” she said.

Pricing remains solid despite the slowing economy, Carere said. FedEx implemented a record 6.9% general rate increase for 2023, and she said the company is very happy about how much of that increase it’s been able to capture.

Separately, the board of directors approved a 10% dividend hike payable on July 3 to shareholders of record June 12. The increase brings the dividend to $5.04 a share.

FedEx, which has been criticized in years past for seeing operating margins fall into the single-digit levels from its historic double-digit perch, vowed to consistently hit 10% adjusted operating margins on an annualized basis, said Michael Lenz, the company’s CEO.

Nate Skiver, who runs LPF Spend Management, a consultancy, called the undertaking “massive” and wondered how they can remain service-oriented and profitable while combining its two largest networks and completing a corporate restructuring. 

Mark Solomon

Formerly the Executive Editor at DC Velocity, Mark Solomon joined FreightWaves as Managing Editor of Freight Markets. Solomon began his journalistic career in 1982 at Traffic World magazine, ran his own public relations firm (Media Based Solutions) from 1994 to 2008, and has been at DC Velocity since then. Over the course of his career, Solomon has covered nearly the whole gamut of the transportation and logistics industry, including trucking, railroads, maritime, 3PLs, and regulatory issues. Solomon witnessed and narrated the rise of Amazon and XPO Logistics and the shift of the U.S. Postal Service from a mail-focused service to parcel, as well as the exponential, e-commerce-driven growth of warehouse square footage and omnichannel fulfillment.