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United Parcel Service: The Right Value Stock for Right Now

In This Article:

  • United Parcel Service (UPS) beat estimates in the first quarter and the stock price went down.

  • UPS is now the best competitor to Amazon fulfillment, with a solid operation and stable culture.

  • UPS stock offers investors an affordable dividend with a great yield.

Close up of UPS logo printed on a delivery truck. UPS stock.
Close up of UPS logo printed on a delivery truck. UPS stock.

Source: Sundry Photography / Shutterstock

Right now, United Parcel Service (NYSE:UPS) is one of the world’s great value stocks. It opened Apr. 29 at $189 per share. That gives it a market capitalization of over $165 billion. But its price to earnings multiple is just 13, well under the market. Its $1.52 per share quarterly dividend yields 3.26%, which is still better than a government bond.

While tech stocks like Amazon.Com (NASDAQ:AMZN) rose and fell, UPS stock stayed relatively strong. It is down around 14% over the last year, while Amazon is down 25% and the overall market, including oil stocks, is flat.

You might think analysts would love the value. You would be wrong. Tipranks has 24 analysts on UPS with just a thin majority of 13 rating it a “buy.” Their price target of $230 would leave next year’s investors with a 3% yield.

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UPS

United Parcel Service, Inc.

$183.29

The Bear Case

Despite the hard fall of technology, analysts still haven’t caught the value bug.

Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) recently downgraded UPS and other transportation stocks, worried that freight demand is waning. Barclays (NYSE:BCS) is maintaining an “equal weight” rating on the stock, but reduced its price target to $220 per share.

UPS executives said that they see a growing preference by consumers for experiences over goods. This caused residential deliveries to drop 7.4% for the quarter, offset by a 3.6% increase in business deliveries.

Bears are increasingly worried about Amazon, which is now opening its fulfillment system to merchants who don’t sell through Amazon. This “Buy With Prime” plan lets Amazon Prime customers get free shipping from third-party merchants and could be expanded beyond sites now using Amazon for fulfillment.

The Bull Case

UPS announced its earnings Apr. 24. For the quarter ending in March, it earned $2.66 billion, which is $3.03 per share fully diluted, on revenue of $21.1 billion. Operating profit was $3.3 billion. The numbers beat analyst estimates. Domestic revenues rose 7.7% and the company doubled its share buyback program to $2 billion. It plans to spend over $5 billion on dividends this year.

That would mean the stock popped higher, right? Wrong. It fell 3%. Analysts blamed earlier gains from its beat on fourth quarter earnings. Traders and technical analysts wrote that the stock was no longer interesting.