FedEx Shares Surge on Dividend Raise and Board Changes

June 14th, 2022 -

About 3 Mins
Dotted Circle
Dotted Circle Alt2x

Ticker Symbol: FDX

FedEx shares are up 15% in midday trading after the company announced a 53% increase in its’ quarterly dividend, added two independent directors to its’ board and added total shareholder return as a key performance metric to its’ executive compensation package. The changes were brought on after the company was involved in long negotiations with hedge fund and activist investor D.E. Shaw.

The share price increase, if it holds, would be the largest single day leap for the company since 1993. The moves come only two weeks after the board of the courier and transportation giant appointed a new Chief Executive Officer, Raj Subramaniam, to lead the company’s transformation. The new CEO has also instituted a reduction in capital spending for the fiscal year.

FedEx’s quarterly dividend payment will increase to $1.15 per share, for a total of $4.60 on an annualized basis. Based on the last trade price of the shares of $231.50, the dividend yield works out to a robust 2%. The increase was significantly above the average Wall Street estimate for the quarterly dividend to be raised to 87 cents per share.

The company’s moves to align the interests of management more closely with those of shareholders could also be seen as a positive sign. Such a move should, at least in theory, result in sharper focus on achieving healthier total returns for the company’s shares. FedEx is also being led by a new CEO for the first time in its’ history, after founder Fred Smith retired on June 1st. He led the company since its’ foundation in 1973.

Despite these recent moves, however, FedEx is still struggling against certain industry-wide issues and increasing earnings sustainably in the current environment could prove challenging. The company is dealing with higher logistics costs, higher freight costs due to increased oil prices, and elevated labor costs for its’ roughly 600 thousand employees globally. While the company expects to post improved gross margins this year, net profit margin would still be below a 6% mark it hit in fiscal 2018.

The company is also dealing with stiffer competition from UPS, USPS and relatively new entrant, Amazon logistics. Last-mile delivery in the U.S. market has especially become more competitive with couriers struggling to adequately predict and manage demand surges from e-commerce partners. FedEx has lagged competitor UPS and the broader market over the trailing 52-week period. FedEx shares are down 21.2%, versus a 12.3% and 13.6% decline for the S&P 500 and UPS, respectively.

This content is provided for general information purposes only and is not to be taken as investment advice nor as a recommendation for any security, investment strategy or investment account.

This content is provided for general information purposes only and is not to be taken as investment advice nor as a recommendation for any security, investment strategy or investment account.
Share

Read more latest market news

Sharpen your trading and investing skills with our regular deep dives into global financial markets, trends, insights and strategies.

Cerebras Stock Falls 10% After Blockbuster IPO Debut: What Investors Need to Know

Cerebras Systems began trading on Thursday but saw a decline on Friday. The AI chip company raised $5.55 billion in...

May 15th, 2026 -

About 2 Mins

Intel Shares Drop 4.1% as Analyst Warns of Chip-Stock Bubble Risk

Semiconductor stocks are falling as an analyst says the recent rally might be overdone. On Friday, Intel shares dropped 4.1%...

May 15th, 2026 -

About 1 Mins

NVIDIA China Chip Deal: Why the Real Story Is Bigger Than the Sales

NVIDIA shares rose 4% on Thursday after the U.S. approved the sale of H200 chips to 10 Chinese companies. While...

May 15th, 2026 -

About 1 Mins

Capital Markets Elite Group

Trade smarter with global market access, cutting-edge tools, and expert insights designed to support your strategy — wherever you are.

Capital Markets Elite Group is not a registered U.S. broker-dealer. It does not accept a U.S. Person as a client if that person was solicited by Capital Markets Elite Group. (The definition of “U.S. Person” is .) Capital Markets Elite Group will rely on a certification from a potential customer that the potential customer either is not a U.S. Person or has not been solicited, directly or indirectly, by Capital Markets Elite Group and has not been induced by Capital Markets Elite Group to engage in securities transactions. In particular, they must certify that they were directed to this website by someone other than Capital Markets Elite Group. They must also certify that they understand that they will not be protected by U.S. laws, regulations and supervisory structures applicable to broker-dealers registered in the U.S. and they do not expect such protections to apply. You should give these certifications only if they are true. If you wish to proceed to the website knowing that, please click “Continue” below. Otherwise click “Leave Website”

Sign up for a free demo

Select a platform

Sign up for a free demo

Temporary Slide Menu
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful. Find out more in our cookie policy