FedEx Corporation (NYSE: FDX)
Company Overview
FedEx closed fiscal year 2026 last night in better fundamental shape than it has been in years — and the after-hours tape didn’t reflect it. The company reported Q4 FY2026 adjusted EPS of $6.31 against the $5.96 analyst consensus, on revenue of $25.01 billion versus $24.04 billion expected — a clean beat on both lines. Shares dipped roughly 6% in extended trading despite the beat, as investors focused on the guidance complexity created by the FedEx Freight spinoff and near-term cost headwinds from a new pilot contract. The market’s reaction was the opposite of what the underlying numbers suggest.
This is FedEx’s first earnings report as a fundamentally different company. The FedEx Freight division spun off into a separate publicly traded company called FedEx Freight on June 1, completing a multi-year restructuring that management has spent years engineering. What remains is a leaner, more focused package delivery and express logistics business — one that sits on $13.3 billion in cash and cash equivalents and received a $4.1 billion cash dividend from the Freight spinoff, giving the post-separation FedEx one of the strongest balance sheets in its history. CEO Rajesh Subramaniam announced a new earnings forecast for calendar year 2026 projecting adjusted EPS of $16.90 to $18.10 per share — guidance the market punished, but which TheStreet’s analysis called “a pretty strong outlook to pair with these strong results.”
Key Technical and Fundamental Drivers
Beat on Both Lines → $6.31 EPS, $25 Billion Revenue
FedEx reported Q4 FY2026 adjusted EPS of $6.31 versus the $5.96 consensus, on revenue of $25.01 billion versus $24.04 billion expected. Base yield growth was robust, combined with sustained volume growth, reflecting the underlying health of the financial results. The beat follows a pattern: FedEx delivered four consecutive quarterly earnings beats heading into last night, including the prior quarter’s adjusted EPS of $5.25 against a $4.13 consensus — a 26.98% beat — as the DRIVE and Network 2.0 programs generated more than $1 billion in permanent cost takeout for the year.
Freight Spinoff Complete → $4.1 Billion Cash Dividend, Clean Balance Sheet
FedEx is in as good a shape to end fiscal year 2026 as ever: $13.3 billion in cash and cash equivalents, a $4.1 billion cash dividend from the FedEx Freight spinoff, and a forecast pointing to stronger results in fiscal year 2027 post-spinoff. The spinoff eliminates a business that was diluting margins and complicating the core package delivery story. FedEx’s package delivery operations now account for over 95% of total revenue — a cleaner, higher-margin business that institutional investors can value with considerably more precision than the prior conglomerate structure allowed.
Network 2.0 → 45% of Volume, $1 Billion+ in Permanent Cost Savings
Network 2.0 implementation reached a significant milestone, with approximately 45% of eligible volume now flowing through Network 2.0 facilities by the end of June. This is the operational transformation that underpins the entire FedEx investment thesis: integrating what were previously separate Express and Ground networks into a single, more efficient pickup and delivery infrastructure. The DRIVE and Network 2.0 programs generated more than $1 billion in permanent cost takeout for the year — savings that compound as more volume flows through the integrated network. With 45% penetration today and a multi-year runway to reach the majority of eligible volume, the cost savings story is still in its early innings.
Calendar 2026 EPS Guidance → $16.90–$18.10, 11% Revenue Growth
Management projects adjusted EPS of $16.90 to $18.10 for calendar year 2026 and anticipates approximately 11% revenue growth for the period — guidance that, at the midpoint, implies continued earnings growth from the already-elevated Q4 base. FedEx expects continued revenue and earnings growth momentum in its June-through-December transition year. The market’s negative reaction likely reflects concern about the pace of stranded cost absorption from the Freight separation and a new pilot contract creating near-term headwinds — real issues, but ones that are temporary rather than structural.
37.87% YTD Gain → Post-Spinoff Re-Rating Still Ahead
FedEx shares are up 37.87% year-to-date heading into last night’s report — a strong run that reflects the market’s anticipation of the Freight spinoff. But the post-spinoff re-rating — where analysts build clean, Freight-free financial models and institutional investors reunderwrite the core express and ground business at standalone multiples — typically takes several quarters to fully play out. Last night’s results are the first chapter of that story, not the last.
Market Takeaway
FedEx’s post-earnings selloff last night has the hallmarks of a market reaction that’s focused on the wrong timeframe. The 6% after-hours decline came despite a beat on both EPS and revenue, $13.3 billion in cash, a $4.1 billion spinoff dividend, and guidance that implies continued earnings growth into calendar 2027. The concerns driving the selloff — stranded costs from the Freight separation, a new pilot contract, and a transition-year reporting structure — are real but temporary, the kind of friction that accompanies any major corporate restructuring and typically resolves over two to four quarters.
The longer-term thesis is what the market appears to be discounting. A FedEx stripped of its lower-margin Freight division, running Network 2.0 at 45% penetration and climbing, with $1 billion-plus in permanent cost savings already banked and more to come, is a structurally different business than the one that reported a year ago. Fleet optimization has continued with 10 additional jet aircraft permanently retired, an 8% reduction versus FY2022 — the kind of ongoing operational discipline that compounds over time. The risks in this setup are worth naming: volume trends in express and ground remain sensitive to global trade conditions and e-commerce growth rates, and any macro softening would pressure both yield and volume simultaneously. The new pilot contract adds labor cost pressure that management will need to offset through yield or Network 2.0 savings. And the transition-year reporting structure means the next two quarters will carry noise from the spinoff that makes clean year-over-year comparisons difficult. For traders watching Thursday’s session, the key signal is whether the market uses last night’s after-hours decline as an entry opportunity — buying a clean beat with a fortress balance sheet at a discount — or whether the guidance concerns extend the selling. Either way, the first full trading day as a post-spinoff company is worth watching carefully.