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Reading: FedEx Beat on Revenue and EPS. The Stock Still Fell. The Freight Math Explains It
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FedEx Beat on Revenue and EPS. The Stock Still Fell. The Freight Math Explains It

Anderson Liam
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FedEx reported its fiscal Q4 2026 results on Tuesday that beat Wall Street’s expectations on both headline metrics: revenue of $25.01 billion against a consensus of $24.04 billion, and adjusted EPS of $6.31 against a consensus of $5.96. Net income for the quarter was $1.6 billion. Full-year fiscal 2026 revenue reached $94.7 billion, up from $87.9 billion in fiscal 2025. Adjusted EPS for the full year came in at $20.24. CEO Raj Subramaniam described the results as an “impressive finish to a strong fiscal year,” citing the successful spin-off of FedEx Freight into a separate publicly traded company on June 1, Network 2.0 cost savings that exceeded $1 billion in structural benefits, and what he called seven consecutive quarters of adjusted earnings growth. Despite all of that, shares fell roughly 6% in extended trading. A clean beat, a successful spinoff, a new fiscal year structure – and the stock declined anyway.

The spin-off is both the biggest strategic event of the quarter and the most important variable for interpreting the forward guidance that disappointed investors. FedEx Freight, now trading as an independent company, paid a cash dividend of approximately $4.1 billion to FedEx Corporation in connection with the separation. That is a genuine financial event: real cash returned to the parent. But FedEx Freight also represented a meaningful portion of FedEx’s revenue and operating income, and the company is now providing guidance on a continuing operations basis that excludes the Freight segment entirely. The new calendar-year EPS guidance of $16.90 to $18.10 for 2026 reflects a smaller, restructured business, and the fiscal year change from a May 31 end to a December 31 end adds a calculation complexity that the analyst community has not yet fully normalized. That discontinuity in how the guidance number compares to prior years is what NewsTrackerToday picks up the spin-off math on.

Ethan Cole strips the macro read down: “Revenue up 12.6% year-on-year. Network 2.0 delivered over $1 billion in structural savings. Express segment operating margin at 7.7%, highest in four years. These are real execution improvements. The guidance implied EPS of $16.90 to $18.10 on a smaller base, and the market read it as a step-down from the $20.24 full-year figure. The comparison is structurally misleading given the Freight spinoff, but markets react to the number, not the explanation.” The Express segment is the cleanest read on FedEx’s core air and international business without the Freight noise: Express revenue grew 14% in Q4, and adjusted operating income rose 13%, with International Priority package yields up 16% as the primary driver. That yield strength is a direct function of the Middle East air freight market recovering as the Iran ceasefire agreement from June 14 enables airspace normalization.

Isabella Moretti examines the structural story: “Network 2.0 is FedEx’s most consequential operational program since Fred Smith built the hub-and-spoke system in the 1970s. Exceeding $1 billion in structural savings in the first full year of implementation is a real milestone. The program consolidates ground and express networks to eliminate redundant infrastructure, and the cost savings compound as volume grows through a unified network. The capital return program, which accelerated with the $4.1 billion Freight spinoff dividend, gives management tools to return cash while the network restructuring runs.” Fuel costs are the headwind that qualifies the otherwise strong FY2026 narrative, and the trajectory is what NewsTrackerToday follows: fuel costs jumped 66% year-on-year to $1.43 billion in Q4, from $864 million a year earlier, a direct consequence of elevated oil prices during the Iran conflict period that drove Brent crude near $98 per barrel through most of Q2 2026.

FedEx also disclosed plans to change its fiscal year end from May 31 to December 31, effective June 2026. The transition year – June through December 2026, which the company is calling a six-month transition period – creates a structural discontinuity in year-on-year comparisons that will persist through early fiscal 2027 reporting. The FY2027 guidance of 11% revenue growth and adjusted EPS of $16.90 to $18.10 on a calendar-year basis implies a company that is growing through the Freight separation while absorbing the transition costs. The combination of factors – Freight spinoff, fiscal year change, Network 2.0 early-stage savings – is what NewsTrackerToday draws as the line that separates FedEx’s current investor communication challenge from its actual operating performance.

The shift FedEx’s Q4 result registers is structural and worth naming plainly. A company that generated $94.7 billion in revenue in FY2026 has voluntarily separated one of its core business units, accepted near-term EPS guidance that reads as a decline in raw number terms, changed its fiscal year calendar, and posted $1.4 billion in fuel headwinds in a single quarter – and still grew Express operating income 13% while exceeding $1 billion in transformation savings. The question of whether the stock market fully understands the comparison apples-to-oranges problem created by the Freight spinoff is what News Tracker Today marks as the re-rating catalyst waiting to happen when analysts normalize the continuing operations basis and the FY2027 growth trajectory becomes the primary frame.

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