FDX in one paragraph
FDX is FedEx Corporation's NYSE ticker. The business prints roughly $87.7 billion in yearly revenue across three operating segments: Express at 47% of revenue handling global priority air freight, Ground at 36% handling US domestic parcel, and Freight at 11% running less-than-truckload trucking. Services and other fills the remaining 6%. The fiscal year ends 31 May, so reports drop in mid-September, mid-December, mid-March and late June, always after the New York close. Same-session moves of 8 to 15% on the print are routine. At LHFX you trade FDX as a CFD on MetaTrader 5 with leverage capped at 1:20, a flat $3 per side commission, STP/ECN routing, settlement in USD, and a quarterly dividend pass-through running near $5.52 a year.
What FedEx actually does
Frederick Smith filed the business plan for FedEx as a Yale undergraduate paper in 1965. The hub-and-spoke overnight network he proposed went live in 1973 with 14 small aircraft connecting Memphis to 25 US cities. Five decades on, the same Memphis SuperHub still handles roughly 1.5 million packages a night, and the company moves more international air cargo than any other carrier on the planet.
The modern parent, FedEx Corporation, sits at the holding-company level above three operating brands. Each one looks like a distinct business with its own pricing model, customer base and cost structure. Express runs the global air network and long-haul international door-to-door. Ground handles the high-volume US domestic parcel layer, much of it tied to e-commerce. Freight is the less-than-truckload trucking unit serving palletised business shipments inside North America. The three move together when the macro cycle turns, but they behave very differently quarter to quarter, which is why traders read FedEx's segment commentary as carefully as they read the headline EPS print.
The fiscal year ends 31 May, so the reporting calendar is shifted one quarter ahead of most US large caps. A FedEx fiscal Q1 covers June through August. That is worth keeping in your head when an analyst note refers to FQ2 in December and you assume they mean calendar Q4: the two periods are the same. Network 2.0, announced in 2022, is the project that collapses Express and Ground into a single delivery footprint in the United States, targeting roughly $4 billion of annual run-rate cost savings by fiscal 2027.
Why the segment math matters. FedEx Express is 47% of revenue but the lowest-margin segment because of fuel intensity and underutilised aircraft on weak demand quarters. Freight at 11% is the highest-margin unit by a wide margin. The planned 2026 spin-off of FedEx Freight reshapes the equity story because the standalone Freight margin guidance is the sum-of-the-parts bull thesis on the parent.
The three-segment revenue map
FedEx is not really one company. It is three connected delivery businesses that share a brand and a holding entity. Yield per package, volume growth and unit cost behave independently across the three, and the share price reflects the weakest of them on any given quarter.
| Segment | What ships in this line | Revenue share | Margin profile |
|---|---|---|---|
| FedEx Express | International and domestic priority air freight, long-haul door-to-door | ~47% | Thinnest, fuel-intensive, low single digits to mid-single digits |
| FedEx Ground | US domestic ground parcel, much of it tied to e-commerce, run by contracted independent service providers | ~36% | High single digits to low double digits |
| FedEx Freight | Less-than-truckload trucking inside North America, palletised business shipments | ~11% | Highest, well into the teens, planned 2026 spin-off |
| Services and other | Customs brokerage, logistics consulting, supply-chain technology, dataworks | ~6% | Not split out, integration glue between the three networks |
Trading FDX means taking a view on three businesses bolted together. Express is the volume but not the profit; Ground is the e-commerce growth lever; Freight is the margin engine that the market wants to value separately. The DRIVE program had locked in about $1.8 billion of the $4 billion FY2027 cost-savings target as of FY2024, and every quarterly call updates the cumulative figure.
Four prints a year, all after the bell
If you trade only one thing about FedEx, it is the report. FedEx operates on a fiscal year that closes on 31 May, so the calendar of quarterly releases sits one quarter ahead of most US large caps. Fiscal Q1 reports in mid-September covering June to August. Fiscal Q2 reports in mid-December covering September to November. Fiscal Q3 reports in mid-March covering December to February. The full-year and Q4 print lands in late June covering March to May. Every release lands after the New York close, which means the initial price reaction happens in the post-close window and the first chance to trade it as an LHFX CFD is the next morning open at 14:30 UTC.
Since the start of 2020, FDX has surprised consensus EPS by 10% or more in over half of its quarters, in both directions. Reports drop after the New York close. The conference call runs roughly 60 to 75 minutes later. The opening price the next session is usually 4 to 10% away from the prior close, and on outlier quarters the gap reaches 15%. Because LHFX trades FDX only during US cash-equity hours, retail traders cannot react inside the gap; the first usable price is the 14:30 UTC open the following day.
Mid-quarter guidance pre-announcements are the second category of gap risk. FedEx has issued pre-announcements multiple times in recent years, with September 2022 being the most cited example, when a profit warning erased about a quarter of the market cap overnight. Holding a leveraged position through a quarter without a hedge means accepting both categories of gap. The practical rule: open positions sized for the calmest two months of a quarter, not the loud one. The two weeks around an earnings date are when most retail blow-ups happen on FDX.
Worked example, sizing into a print
Start with a $2,500 account. FDX is quoted at $270 a share and you want to take a long view ahead of a mid-quarter trading update. You decide to open 3 share-equivalents of FDX CFD. Margin required at the 1:20 cap is 3 x $270 / 20, which is $40.50 of locked margin. Commission on entry is $3 per side, so opening costs $3 and the eventual close costs $3 more. A 5% adverse move on 3 shares at $270 is $40.50, or 1.62% of the $2,500 account. A 12% adverse move (the lower end of an earnings-gap range) is $97.20, or 3.89% of the account. A 15% gap is $121.50, or 4.86%. That sizing leaves enough headroom to survive a guidance pre-announcement. Pushing the same account into 10 shares at the same price would require $135 of margin, and the same 15% gap would print a $405 loss, or 16.2% of equity gone in one session.
What moves FDX day to day
FDX is a mega-cap industrial that trades on several distinct narratives running in parallel. Most days the stock moves on broad index flow and one or two of the inputs below. Earnings windows pull all of them onto the same screen.
Quarterly print and forward guidance
Four times a year FedEx releases results after the New York close. Express segment yield and Ground volume growth typically drive the tape more than headline EPS, because they are the cleanest read on whether parcel demand is accelerating or decelerating in real time. Forward gross margin guidance is the variable that drives EPS sensitivity for the following two quarters.
Network 2.0 cost-savings trajectory
Each call gives a cumulative savings number and a reaffirmation or revision of the FY2027 target of roughly $4 billion in annual run-rate savings. A reaffirmation roughly holds the multiple. A revision higher tends to add a leg up; a quiet softening of language has cost FDX 6 to 8% on the day in past reports. The DRIVE program had locked in about $1.8 billion as of FY2024.
Freight spin-off newsflow
The standalone listing of FedEx Freight planned for 2026 is the structural valuation catalyst on the table. Updates on the timeline, the capital structure and the standalone Freight margin guidance move FDX ahead of the actual separation, because the sum-of-the-parts case is the bull thesis for late-cycle holders watching the highest-margin segment break out.
Jet fuel and diesel prices
Annual fuel spend sits in the $4 to 5 billion range. A sustained 25% rise in jet-fuel prices is roughly $1 billion of EBIT exposure, partially neutralised by surcharges that lag one to two months. A 3% Brent move on a normal session is enough to nudge FDX in sympathy. The fuel pass-through mechanism never fully closes the gap inside a single quarter.
US Postal Service contract dynamics
FedEx Express used to carry USPS air freight under a multi-year contract worth roughly $1.7 billion a year. That contract expired in September 2024 and went to UPS. The lost revenue and the capacity rationalisation that follows are still working through guidance and will be referenced on calls into FY2026, with associated aircraft parking and headcount adjustments.
When FDX trades
FDX is a New York Stock Exchange listing. At LHFX you can trade the CFD only while the NYSE cash session is live. Pre-market and after-hours moves on the cash-equity book are reflected when the CFD reopens at the next regular-session start, which is why earnings-night reactions land outside the LHFX window.
US cash session
14:30 to 21:00 UTC, 09:30 to 16:00 New York time, Monday to Friday. Full liquidity. Tight spreads, deep order book, the cleanest order routing. Typical intraday range on FDX runs 1.0 to 2.5% on a normal day, widening to 8 to 15% on earnings-reaction days. Earnings reactions appear in the first 30 to 60 minutes of the open.
First hour after the open
14:30 to 15:30 UTC, 09:30 to 10:30 New York time. The highest-volume hour of the day on FDX. Most opening-range trades on FDX finish before 16:00 UTC. On the morning after a print, the first 30 minutes typically establishes the day's full range and the rest of the session ranges around that level.
Final 30 minutes into the close
20:30 to 21:00 UTC, 15:30 to 16:00 New York time. Closing auction effects dominate. Earnings days and quarter-end days see large market-on-close orders skew the final 10 minutes. Spreads widen briefly into the auction print as inventory clears. Carrying a position into the auction means accepting the print, not the indicative price.
FDX CFD hours at LHFX
Regular NYSE session only: 14:30 to 21:00 UTC during US winter and 13:30 to 20:00 UTC during US summer. There is no pre-market or after-hours trading on FDX at LHFX. When FedEx reports after the bell, the post-market move is visible on news feeds but not tradeable inside MT5 until the following 14:30 UTC open.
Carrying an FDX CFD position over an earnings print or a mid-quarter guidance pre-announcement means accepting the full overnight gap with no opportunity to flatten in real time. Stop losses cannot fill across a closed market. Either size to the gap, or close the position before the bell on print day.
FDX CFD vs registered share vs logistics ETF
You can take a directional view on FedEx three principal ways: an FDX CFD at LHFX, direct cash-equity ownership of FDX through a brokerage, or a transport-sector ETF such as IYT that holds FedEx alongside UPS and the rail names. Each route exposes you to a different mix of access, leverage, income, and friction.
| Product | What you own | Income treatment | Leverage available | Cost structure |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FDX CFD at LHFX | A contract on the price move, no underlying share, no AGM vote | Cash adjustment on the ex-date (long credit, short debit) mirroring the dividend near $5.52 yearly | Up to 1:20 | Raw spread plus $3 per side commission, overnight swap on held positions |
| Registered FDX share | Direct ownership on the shareholder register with voting rights and proxy ballots | Cash dividend paid quarterly, annualised near $5.52 a share, subject to withholding tax | Reg-T margin caps roughly 2:1 at a typical US broker | Broker commission and bid-ask, no swap, custody and transfer fees may apply |
| Transport-sector ETF (IYT, XTN) | ETF unit with indirect FedEx exposure alongside UPS, rails, and airlines | Quarterly distribution from the underlying portfolio | Reg-T in a margin account or a leveraged ETF wrapper | Bid-ask spread plus annual management fee of roughly 0.40% |
Pick the CFD for short-dated directional trades around earnings, the Freight spin-off, or fuel-price moves where leverage and the ability to short matter. Pick the registered share for multi-year ownership, the compounding dividend, and AGM voting rights. Pick a transport ETF if you want broad logistics exposure without the single-stock binary that FDX carries on each quarterly print.
FDX next to its peers
Three names sit closest to FDX in any trader's universe: UPS, the closest pure-play comparable; DPWGn (Deutsche Post DHL), the European logistics anchor; and AMZN, both a customer and a competitor since the launch of Amazon Logistics. FedEx and UPS often gap in opposite directions on the same macro print, because the two compete head-to-head for incremental shippers.
| Attribute | FDX | UPS | DPWGn | AMZN |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary listing | NYSE | NYSE | Xetra (Frankfurt) | NASDAQ |
| Fiscal year-end | 31 May | 31 December | 31 December | 31 December |
| Core revenue mix | Express + Ground + Freight | Domestic parcel + Supply Chain | DHL Express + Post + Freight | Online retail + AWS + Logistics |
| Revenue scale (latest FY) | ~$87.7B | ~$91B | ~EUR 82B | ~$575B |
| Leverage cap at LHFX | 1:20 | 1:20 | 1:20 | 1:20 |
| Commission per side | $3 | $3 | $3 | $3 |
| Typical earnings gap | 8 to 15% | 5 to 10% | 3 to 8% | 5 to 12% |
| Dividend cadence | Quarterly, near $5.52 yearly | Quarterly | Annual (May) | None |
DPWGn gives a European cross-check on global air-freight demand. AMZN is a more diffuse trade because the parcel network sits inside a much larger retail and cloud business. The cleanest pair trade in this group is long FDX against short UPS (or the reverse) ahead of overlapping earnings windows, which often print within the same week.
Trading FDX at LHFX
LHFX offers FDX as a Contract for Difference inside MetaTrader 5 with STP/ECN routing and no dealing-desk intervention. Specifications are visible inside MT5 by right-clicking FDX in Market Watch and opening Specification. Account base currency is converted at the prevailing rate; FDX itself settles in USD. The minimum deposit at LHFX is $10.
Up to 1:20 on FDX CFDs. The cap is set deliberately tight for single-name US equities because earnings gaps can swallow several percent of margin in a single morning open. Most experienced traders run effective leverage well below the cap, often 1:5 or lower for earnings-window positions.
$3 per side, $6 round-trip. Quoted as a flat fee on top of the raw spread rather than embedded inside it, so the published bid and ask reflect the underlying NYSE market quote with no dealing-desk markup.
MetaTrader 5 on Windows, Mac, web, iOS, and Android, plus the LHFX Trade web terminal. LHFX is a direct MetaQuotes licensee, so FDX appears in the same Market Watch as forex pairs, indices, commodities, and crypto CFDs without any separate platform installation.
STP/ECN routing. Orders are passed straight through to aggregated US equity liquidity rather than internalised against a dealing desk. There is no broker position taken against your fill, no requote behaviour, and slippage during fast moments mirrors what the underlying market is experiencing.
Regular NYSE session only: 14:30 to 21:00 UTC during US winter, 13:30 to 20:00 UTC during US summer, Monday through Friday. Pre-market and after-hours moves on the cash-equity book are reflected when the CFD reopens at the next regular-session start.
Variable raw spread, tightest mid-session. Spreads widen on the open, the close, and around scheduled releases such as earnings or US macro prints that move the broader index. There is no fixed-spread markup applied on top of the underlying NYSE quote.
All FDX CFD P&L is settled in US dollars on the trading account. If your base currency is EUR, GBP, or another supported wallet, the result is converted at the prevailing rate at close-out. Quarterly dividend adjustments are applied automatically on ex-date.
A worked sizing example
Account balance $2,500. FDX at $270 a share. You want 3 share-equivalents of long exposure ahead of a mid-quarter trading update. Margin required at the 1:20 cap is 3 x $270 / 20 = $40.50 of locked margin. Commission on entry is $3 per side, so $6 round-trip. A 5% adverse move on 3 shares is $40.50, or 1.62% of the account. A 12% adverse move (the lower end of an earnings-gap range) is $97.20, or 3.89%. A 15% gap is $121.50, or 4.86%. Pushing the same account into 10 shares would require $135 of margin and a 15% gap would print a $405 loss, or 16.2% of equity in one session.
For live spread snapshots, contract size, swap, and dividend treatment, see the FDX instrument page. For the full commission breakdown across instrument groups, see spreads and fees, and for the leverage policy by asset class see leverage.
Risks of trading FDX
On top of normal equity-CFD risk, FDX carries two structural exposures that have produced several of its largest single-session moves in the last few years. Treat them as standing inputs to position sizing rather than as tail events to ignore.
Earnings-window overnight gap risk
FedEx has surprised consensus EPS by 10% or more in over half of its quarters since 2020. Same-session reactions of 8 to 15% are routine. All four quarterly prints land after the regular-session close on NYSE and LHFX CFDs do not trade after-hours. The post-close gap is not tradeable; you meet the price at the 14:30 UTC open the following day. A position sized for ordinary session volatility is not sized for an earnings night.
Pre-announcement risk between scheduled releases
FedEx has issued mid-quarter profit warnings on more than one occasion. The September 2022 pre-announcement removed about a quarter of the market capitalisation overnight. There is no calendar warning for these events; they appear on the wires after the close and the next regular session opens at the new lower level. Stops cannot fill across a closed market for any reason.
Structural Express-segment decline
The USPS air-freight contract loss in late 2024 removed roughly $1.7 billion of annualised Express revenue. International express demand has softened on a multi-year view, raising questions about long-run Express margins. Network 2.0 is the response, but a 500,000-employee operational reshape targeting $4 billion of cost savings by FY2027 is not a low-risk programme to execute.
Macro and fuel sensitivity
Parcel volumes correlate with industrial production, retail sales and trade flows. A real recession in the US or a sustained jet-fuel spike both compress FDX margins inside the same quarter. With annual fuel spend in the $4 to 5 billion range, a sustained 25% rise in jet-fuel prices is roughly $1 billion of EBIT exposure. The stock is one of the more economically sensitive large-cap industrials on the NYSE.
Risk disclosure: CFDs are complex instruments and carry a high risk of losing money rapidly because of leverage. The majority of retail accounts lose money trading CFDs. Make sure you understand how CFDs work and that you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money. Never trade with capital you cannot afford to lose.