Amazon Air cargo flights grow at slowest pace since pandemic

 

Bloomberg

Amazon.com Inc’s cargo airline is growing at the slowest pace since the start of the pandemic, the latest sign that the e-commerce giant is adjusting to slackening demand.
Amazon Air freighters averaged about 194 flights a day during a week earlier this month, up 3.8% from March, according to researchers with DePaul University’s Chaddick Institute for Metropolitan
Development. That’s the smallest increase in the institute’s periodic snapshots, compiled roughly once every six months since May 2020.
“Amazon is making significant adjustments,” Joseph Schwieterman, the Chicago-based institute’s director, said. “The company apparently was overly optimistic about its need to grow its supply chain so rapidly at the height of the pandemic.”
The world’s largest online retailer entered this year with too many workers and facilities as consumers returned to normal shopping habits. Amazon has shuttered, delayed or abandoned plans for dozens of warehouses in the US and Europe, Bloomberg reported earlier this month. The company reduced its workforce — primarily through attrition, Amazon says — by almost 100,000 people between March and June, the biggest quarterly decline in its history.
The company didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. The shares fell 2.3% to $121.85 in New York.
Amazon Air, which relies on pilots from a handful of partner carriers, flies packaged items en route to customers. That operation grew rapidly in the last few years, tacking on new airport hubs, leasing and purchasing more aircraft.
It even contemplated acquiring bigger long-haul jets to import goods directly from Asia.
FedEx Corp shocked investors after withdrawing its annual earnings forecast and saying preliminary results for the quarter fell short of expectations, sending shares of the package-delivery giant tumbling. Analysts subsequently said some of the company’s woes were self-inflicted and weren’t solely the result of slowing consumer demand.
Amazon Air began flying to Las Vegas and El Paso, Texas, recently, Schwieterman said, and has continued to grow in Europe, where it relies on hubs in Milan and Leipzig, Germany.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend