United Parcel Service is the world’s largest parcel delivery company, operating a vast network of aircraft, hubs, and ground vehicles across more than 220 countries. It earns money by charging per-package and per-weight fees to businesses and consumers, with additional revenue from freight forwarding, supply chain management, and a growing healthcare logistics division. The business model is straightforward and durable. However, since 2022, revenue has fallen from $100 billion to $88 billion, and earnings per share have been halved, hurt by Amazon internalising its own deliveries, a softening freight market, and elevated labour costs. The dividend currently exceeds earnings.
EBITDA $11.65B, sector multiple 10x, net debt $18.2B, shares 850M
$100
8% premium to IV
Metric
Value
What It Signals
P/E (trailing)
17.6x
Slightly above peers; not cheap
PEG (5yr)
1.72
Above 1.0 = limited growth premium
PEGY
0.97
Below 1.0 = dividend-adjusted fair to cheap
PEGY = P/E ÷ (EPS growth% + dividend yield%). P/E 17.6, EPS growth estimate 2.5%, dividend yield 5.95% → PEGY = 17.6 ÷ 8.45 = 0.97. Below 1.0 suggests the stock may be fair value when the dividend is included.
Key Investment Questions
Question
Assessment
Simple & sustainable business model?
Yes. UPS picks up and delivers parcels, freight, and logistics services globally. The model has been stable for decades. Demand is structurally supported by e-commerce growth, though industrial freight is cyclical.
Moderate. The physical network (aircraft, hubs, vehicles, drivers) is very expensive to replicate. UPS benefits from scale, density economics, and established customer relationships. However FedEx is a direct peer, Amazon Logistics is an emerging threat, and regional carriers erode last-mile margins.
Competitors & positioning
Primary: FedEx. Secondary: DHL, USPS, Amazon Logistics. UPS leads in domestic ground, has a profitable healthcare logistics niche, and a larger international network than FedEx. Amazon Logistics is the greatest long-term threat, handling approximately 72% of its own volume today.
Management quality
Mixed. Carol Tome’s “Better, Not Bigger” strategy sacrificed revenue for margins, but earnings have declined sharply: EPS fell from $13.20 (2022) to $6.18 (TTM), a 53% drop. The dividend payout ratio is 106%, which is unsustainable on current earnings. Share buybacks have been paused.
Undervalued vs intrinsic value?
Not clearly. At $108, the stock trades above our base DCF ($97) and MEV ($100). Only the optimistic scenario ($125) shows a margin of safety. The stock is fairly priced at best; not cheap.
Capital efficiency?
Adequate but declining. ROE 33.35% looks strong but is inflated by high leverage (D/E 181%). ROIC (excluding goodwill) is more like 12-14%, modest for a capital-heavy logistics operator. CapEx has been trimmed to $3.8B from $5.2B in 2023.
Strong free cash flow?
Yes, but declining. FCF was $9.3B (2022) and has fallen to $4.5B (TTM). FCF barely covers the $5.6B annual dividend obligation. This is a red flag: the payout is unsustainable without an earnings recovery.
Balance sheet strength?
Strained. Total debt $28.6B, net debt $18.2B. D/E of 181% is high for a cyclical business. Current ratio 1.21 is adequate. Tangible book value has fallen from $12.8B (2022) to $6.4B (2025), a significant deterioration.
Earnings & revenue consistency?
Poor recently. Revenue fell from $100.3B (2022) to $88.3B (TTM). EPS declined from $13.20 to $6.18 over the same period. Quarterly earnings growth YoY: -27.2%. This is not a growth company at present; it is a turnaround story.
Margin of safety?
Thin. Base intrinsic value is $97. At $108 there is no margin of safety in the base case. Adequate margin of safety would require the stock at approximately $75-$80, representing a 20-25% discount to base intrinsic value. The current price offers no buffer for error.
Biggest risks
1. Dividend cut if earnings do not recover. 2. Amazon Logistics taking further market share. 3. Economic recession hitting parcel volumes. 4. High debt in a rising interest rate environment. 5. Labour cost inflation (Teamsters contract). 6. Ongoing volume loss to competitors.
Shareholder dilution?
Relatively benign. Shares outstanding have declined slightly from 871M (2022) to 850M (TTM) via buybacks. However, buybacks have paused ($0 repurchases in TTM). Stock-based compensation is minor.
Cyclical or stable?
Semi-cyclical. Ground parcel (B2C e-commerce) is relatively resilient. Air freight and B2B logistics are more economically sensitive. In a recession, volumes fall, revenue declines, and operating leverage works against the company, as demonstrated from 2022 to 2025.
5-10 year outlook
Moderate. E-commerce logistics demand grows secularly. UPS is investing in healthcare and international. However, Amazon’s logistics expansion is an existential pressure on domestic volume. Margins may stabilise but are unlikely to return to 2022 peaks. A more disciplined, leaner UPS is plausible.
Buy if market closed 5 years?
Conditionally yes, but only at a lower price (~$80-$85). At $108, the total return over 5 years (dividends plus modest appreciation) likely falls below the 9% annual target. The dividend alone provides approximately 6%, but without earnings recovery, capital appreciation will be muted.
What PEGY indicates
PEGY of 0.97 (below 1.0) suggests that when the dividend yield is included alongside growth, the stock is modestly undervalued on an income-adjusted basis. However, with a 106% payout ratio, the dividend is at risk, so this PEGY signal may be deceptive.
Reinvestment vs shareholder returns?
Currently returning cash via dividends but not buying back stock. CapEx has been cut, signalling capital restraint. The dividend appears maintained for investor credibility rather than financial prudence. Reinvestment is being curtailed, which may hurt long-term competitiveness.
Why mispriced or fairly priced?
The stock may be fairly priced rather than mispriced. The market prices in a partial recovery. Bulls see the yield as a floor and believe earnings will recover to $9-10 EPS as the cycle turns. Bears see structural volume loss to Amazon as permanent. The market may be underweighting the Amazon risk.
Thesis assumptions & what breaks them
Assumes: (1) dividend is maintained; (2) EPS recovers to $8+ by 2027; (3) Amazon does not accelerate its logistics displacement. Any one of these failing, especially a dividend cut, would materially reprice the stock lower.
Portfolio fit
Suitable as an income position in a diversified value portfolio. Not suitable as a primary growth holding. The high yield is attractive for income-focused investors. Sizing should be limited to 5% or less given the payout ratio risk and cyclical nature.
Buy, hold, or sell at $108? Target entry for 9% return?
At $108: HOLD only if already owned. To target 9% annual return over 16 years with dividends reinvested, the required buy price is approximately $83-$85. At the current price, the 9% annual return target is not achievable with confidence.
Intrinsic Value Workings & Assumptions
DCF Model Inputs
Input
Base
Conservative
Optimistic
Starting FCF
$4.52B
$4.52B
$4.52B
Year 1-5 growth
3.0%
1.0%
5.0%
Terminal growth rate
2.5%
2.0%
3.0%
WACC
8.0%
9.0%
7.5%
Shares outstanding
850M
850M
850M
Net debt deducted
$18.2B
$18.2B
$18.2B
Intrinsic value per share
$97
$78
$125
MEV (Market Enterprise Value) Method
EBITDA $11.65B × 10x sector multiple = Enterprise Value $116.5B. Less net debt $18.2B = equity value $98.3B. Divided by 850M shares = approximately $116 per share on raw EV/EBITDA. Applying a 15% discount for leverage and execution risk = approximately $100 per share.
Weighted SWOT Analysis
Category
Factor
Weight
Impact
Strength
Unmatched domestic ground network; physical infrastructure impossible to replicate quickly
25%
High positive
Strength
Healthcare logistics niche with growing demand and higher margins
25%
High positive
Strength
Strong international operations and brand trust across 220+ countries
25%
Medium positive
Strength
5.95% dividend yield provides income floor and investor retention
25%
Medium positive
Weakness
EPS halved from $13.20 to $6.18 since 2022; earnings trend is adverse
25%
High negative
Weakness
Payout ratio 106%: dividend exceeds earnings, structurally unsustainable
25%
High negative
Weakness
D/E ratio 181%: excessive leverage for a semi-cyclical business
25%
High negative
Weakness
Tangible book value eroded from $12.8B to $6.4B in three years
25%
Medium negative
Opportunity
E-commerce structural growth continues to drive parcel volume long-term
25%
High positive
Opportunity
Healthcare logistics: ageing demographics and cold-chain pharma drive demand
25%
High positive
Opportunity
International expansion and SMB customer growth diversify revenue base
25%
Medium positive
Opportunity
Cost reduction and restructuring could restore margins toward historical levels
25%
Medium positive
Threat
Amazon Logistics: structural existential threat; now handling ~72% of own volume
25%
High negative
Threat
Economic recession reducing discretionary parcel volumes and B2B freight
25%
High negative
Threat
Labour cost inflation: Teamsters contract creates ongoing wage pressure
25%
Medium negative
Threat
Rising interest rates increase the cost of refinancing $28.6B in debt
25%
Medium negative
Bear, Base, and Bull Intrinsic Value Scenarios
Scenario
Intrinsic Value Range
Key Assumptions
Bear
$55 – $65
Dividend is cut, EPS remains stuck at $5-6, Amazon takes an additional 15%+ of domestic volume, a recession reduces parcel volumes, and the debt burden constrains investment. EV/EBITDA multiple compresses to 7x as investor sentiment deteriorates.
Base
$95 – $105
EPS recovers gradually to approximately $8 by 2027. The dividend is maintained but not grown. Amazon’s displacement slows as UPS strengthens B2B and healthcare. No recession in the planning horizon. EV/EBITDA holds at 9-10x.
Bull
$130 – $155
EPS recovers to $10-11 by 2027 driven by healthcare logistics, international growth, and successful cost reduction. Capital allocation improves. Dividend reinstated with growth. Multiple expands to 11-12x as the turnaround narrative solidifies.
Entry and Exit Signals
Entry trigger: Consider buying in the $80-$90 range once evidence of an earnings recovery emerges, specifically two consecutive quarters of year-over-year EPS growth with improving operating margin. The dividend yield at that price would exceed 7%, providing meaningful income protection.
Exit trigger: Begin trimming at $125-$130. Sell the full position above $150, or immediately exit if Amazon’s logistics share accelerates beyond 80% of its own volume, if the dividend is cut, or if debt is refinanced at rates above 7%.
Required Buy Price by Target Annual Return (16-Year Horizon)
Assumes base intrinsic value of $100 at exit. “With dividend” column assumes 5.95% yield reinvested annually.
Target Annual Return
Price Appreciation Only
With Dividends Reinvested
5% per year
$46
approximately $68
6% per year
$39
approximately $65
7% per year
$33
approximately $80
8% per year
$28
approximately $82
9% per year
$24
approximately $83-$85
10% per year
$20
approximately $80
Required Buy Price for 9% Annual Return Across Holding Periods
Holding Period
Price Appreciation Only
With Dividends Reinvested
5 years
$65
approximately $85
7 years
$55
approximately $84
10 years
$42
approximately $83
12 years
$35
approximately $83
14 years
$29
approximately $83
16 years
$24
approximately $83
When to Trim and When to Exit
Action
Price Range
Rationale
Start trimming (25-30% of position)
$125 – $130
Approaching bull scenario fair value; reduce exposure and lock in gains
Trim further (to minimal position)
$135 – $145
If earnings improvement has not materialised, the stock is running on sentiment
Full exit
$150+
Fully priced even in the bull scenario; forward P/E would exceed 18-20x on recovered earnings
Immediate exit (any price)
Any
Dividend cut confirmed; Amazon takes over 80% of its own volume; debt refinanced above 7%; EPS fails to recover for three or more consecutive quarters
Risk Score
Component
Weight
Score (out of 10)
Weighted Score
Financial stability
30%
4.5 (high debt, payout ratio above 100%)
1.35
Earnings volatility
20%
6.0 (EPS halved in three years)
1.20
Business model risk
20%
5.5 (Amazon threat is structural)
1.10
Macro sensitivity
15%
5.5 (semi-cyclical volume exposure)
0.83
Market risk
15%
4.5 (beta 1.04, sector sentiment weak)
0.68
Total Risk Score
5.16 / 10
A score of 5.2/10 implies moderate-to-elevated risk. The primary dangers are financial (dividend unsustainability and high leverage) and competitive (Amazon’s logistics displacement). UPS is not a high-risk stock in the traditional sense, but it is not the safe, defensive income play it superficially appears to be. Income investors attracted by the 5.95% yield should weigh it carefully against the 106% payout ratio.
Opportunity Score
Component
Weight
Score (out of 10)
Weighted Score
Growth potential
30%
4.0 (modest at best)
1.20
Unit economics
20%
5.5 (margins declining but still positive)
1.10
Competitive advantage
20%
6.0 (network moat is real but eroding)
1.20
Valuation asymmetry
20%
4.0 (limited upside at $108)
0.80
Catalysts
10%
5.0 (earnings recovery, healthcare growth)
0.50
Total Opportunity Score
4.80 / 10
A score of 4.8/10 indicates limited upside at the current price. The opportunity would improve materially at $80-$90, where the dividend yield exceeds 7% and the valuation asymmetry score would rise to 7+/10. Patience is the edge here: this is not a stock to chase.
Classification
Lens
Classification
Reasoning
Growth classification
Stable / Declining
Revenue and earnings have declined since 2022. E-commerce growth offsets volume losses partially, but not fully. Not a declining business fundamentally, but currently in a secular slowdown phase requiring a turnaround rather than organic momentum.
Peter Lynch classification
Slow Grower
Lynch would classify UPS as a large, slow-growing company in a mature industry. He held slow growers only when the dividend was reliable and the P/E was low. At 17.6x with a 106% payout ratio, he would likely pass and wait for a meaningfully lower price before initiating a position.
Charlie Munger classification
Moaty but structurally challenged
Munger would appreciate the physical network moat and high switching costs but would be deeply uncomfortable with a payout ratio exceeding earnings and the Amazon competitive threat. He would likely describe the moat as “mediocre” given the incursion of a vastly better-capitalised competitor, and would demand a much lower price before committing capital.
52-week high and low (used only for price context)
EBITDA $11.65B, ROE 33.35%, tangible book value $6.4B
Tax effect of unusual items (minor line item)
Short interest rising: 16.4M to 23.8M shares in one month
Normalized income adjustments
Beta 1.04 for market risk scoring; institutional ownership 70.66%
Interest paid supplemental (already captured in net debt)
Red Flag Scan
Red Flag
Present?
Severity
Declining free cash flow
Yes. FCF fell from $9.3B (2022) to $4.5B (TTM)
High
Rising debt without rising earnings
Yes. Debt rose while EPS halved
High
Management compensation misaligned
Moderate. Compensation partly tied to revenue, which is falling
Medium
Serial acquisitions
No. Capital allocation has been disciplined recently
Low
Accounting complexity
No. Financials are straightforward for a company of this size
Low
Moat erosion
Yes. Amazon Logistics represents a structural competitive threat
High
Overreliance on one customer or product
Moderate. Amazon was approximately 11% of revenue before the dispute
Medium
Dividend payout ratio above 100% of earnings
Yes. Payout ratio is 106%
High
Short interest rising sharply
Yes. Short interest rose 45% in one month (16.4M to 23.8M shares)
Medium
Final Verdict Summary
Summary Point
Assessment
Business quality
Good. Durable network, real moat, essential global service
Financial health
Strained. High debt, declining earnings, payout ratio above 100%
Valuation at $108
Fairly priced to slightly expensive relative to base intrinsic value
Dividend safety
At risk. A 106% payout ratio is unsustainable without earnings recovery
9% return target feasible at $108?
No. Requires entry at approximately $83-$85 with dividends reinvested
Verdict
WAIT / WATCH. Do not buy at $108. Target entry: $83-$88.
UPS is a high-quality franchise in a difficult patch. The 5.95% yield is tempting, but the 106% payout ratio is the single most important number in this report. If earnings do not recover to at least $7.50-$8.00 per share by 2027, a dividend cut is probable, and that would reprice the stock sharply lower. At $108, the investor is not being adequately compensated for that risk. The stock becomes genuinely interesting at $83-$88, where the total return profile, combining dividends and price appreciation, can plausibly meet a 9% annual target. The prudent course is to watch for two consecutive quarters of EPS improvement before committing capital.
Suggested Blog Image
A split-image composition: on the left, a UPS delivery truck parked on a busy urban street at golden hour, representing the physical network and brand reliability. On the right, an overlaid financial chart showing the EPS decline from 2022 to present, with a dotted recovery line, rendered in UPS brown and amber palette tones. A headline overlay reads: “Risk or Rebound?” This creates visual tension between the stable brand and the challenged financials, making it immediately compelling for a financial blog reader scrolling a feed.
Disclaimer: This analysis is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Always perform your own due diligence or consult with a financial advisor before making investment decisions.