Shopify narrowing its ambition, sells Deliverr, cuts staff
FILE - The company logo hangs on the Ottawa headquarters of Canadian e-commerce company Shopify, May 29, 2019. Shopify, the e-commerce company viewed as a growing competitor to Amazon, is selling the two biggest pieces of its fulfillment network and abandoning its logistics ambitions the company said Thursday, May 4, 2023. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press via AP, File) · Associated Press Finance · ASSOCIATED PRESS

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NEW YORK (AP) — Shopify, the e-commerce company viewed as a growing competitor to Amazon, is selling the two biggest pieces of its fulfillment network and abandoning its logistics ambitions.

The company announced Thursday in a blog post it will also cut about 20% of its workforce, the second mass layoff its had in less than a year. Last year, Shopify trimmed 10% of its workforce and reportedly laid off dozens of other employees before and after that announcement. The company said Thursday those affected will receive 16 weeks of severance pay and medical benefits.

“There’s no way to make this good news, but we designed a package that will attempt to make it the best possible version of a bad day,” Shopify CEO Tobias Lütke said in the blog post.

The business changes are also a remarkable reversal after the Canadian company's multiyear effort to build its own warehousing and delivery services. But investors welcomed the company's move to focus more on its retail business on Thursday by sending its stocks as high as 17% in premarket trading.

Shopify also said in its earnings report that it pulled in $1.5 billion in revenue for the first quarter, which outperformed Wall Street's expectations. It reported a profit when analysts had been expecting a loss.

Most of Shopify’s fulfillment assets will be acquired by logistics provider Flexport in an all-stock deal that also includes the sale of the shipping service company Deliverr, the company said Thursday. Shopify bought Deliverr just last year for $2.1 billion.

In exchange, Shopify will receive a stake of about 13% in Flexport, bringing its total ownership in the privately held company up to the high-teens, the company said. Flexport will become the official logistics partner for Shopify, which provides e-commerce tools for merchants. It will also acquire Shopify's warehouses.

On Thursday, the British grocery-tech company Ocado Group said it was buying another major part of the Shopify’s network - the warehouse automation firm 6 River Systems, or 6RS.

“This is about removing distractions,” said Rick Watson, CEO and Founder of RMW Commerce Consulting. “Long term the right decision, but short-to-medium term it is raises many more questions about Shopify’s management team.”

Shopify's logistics network is comprised of Deliverr, 6RS and the SFN App, which allows merchant to track shipments.

The sell-offs come as the company based in Ottawa, Ontario, is aiming to cut down on costs amid a post-pandemic slowdown in online shopping and high inflation. The moves will also allow it to offload employees it acquired under the deals.