TLDR
- Amazon is opening its less-than-truckload (LTL) freight service to all businesses and destinations across the U.S.
- The service, running since 2019, now covers third-party warehouses, distribution centers, and retail partners of all sizes.
- Old Dominion fell 7.3%, Saia dropped 8.2%, FedEx Freight slid 5.2%, and Knight-Swift fell 5.4% on the news.
- Amazon’s logistics network backing the service includes 80,000+ trailers and 24,000 intermodal containers.
- The move follows Amazon’s May announcement of its broader Supply Chain Service, which also rattled logistics stocks.
Amazon is expanding its less-than-truckload freight service to any business, any size, and any destination in the U.S., and the trucking sector is feeling it.
The company confirmed the LTL expansion on Tuesday as part of its Amazon Supply Chain Services portfolio. The service, which has been running since 2019, previously only served businesses shipping goods into Amazon warehouses. Now it’s open to everyone.
Amazon Freight director Jim Ruiz put it plainly: “Now Amazon LTL can move your freight wherever it needs to go, servicing destinations nationwide for businesses of all sizes.”
The reaction on Wall Street was swift. Old Dominion Freight Line (ODFL) fell 7.3%, Saia (SAIA) dropped 8.2%, Knight-Swift (KNX) slid 5.4%, and FedEx Freight (FDXF) was down around 5.2%. XPO (XPO) also fell roughly 4% to 5%. Amazon (AMZN) itself was down about 1.2%.
LTL shipping covers businesses that don’t fill an entire truck — typically one to six pallets — hauling freight over relatively short distances, primarily to industrial and commercial customers. It’s a well-established, competitive space. Old Dominion, XPO, Saia, and FedEx Freight are among the biggest publicly traded names in it.
Amazon’s expanded offering comes loaded with features: next-day live pickup, same-day drop trailer pickup, real-time GPS tracking, and cargo camera monitoring. The logistics muscle behind it includes more than 80,000 trailers and 24,000 intermodal containers.
This isn’t the first time Amazon has rattled the sector. In May, the announcement of its broader Amazon Supply Chain Service — covering distribution, warehousing, and last-mile delivery — sent UPS down more than 10% in a single session.
Why Analysts Say Don’t Panic
Wall Street analysts have pushed back on the idea that Amazon’s moves spell doom for established carriers. The argument is familiar: Amazon has been building out logistics for years, the industry has enough growth to support multiple players, and history shows incumbents adapt.
They also point out that Amazon expanding into freight isn’t the same dynamic as e-commerce eating into brick-and-mortar retail. Traditional carriers serve a wide industrial customer base that Amazon is only now beginning to target.
What Amazon Is Actually Offering
The expanded LTL service targets businesses shipping one to six pallets, a segment that carriers like Old Dominion and Saia have long served. Amazon moved millions of pallets through the service last year, even before the expansion.
The addition of nationwide reach, combined with the tracking and reliability features Amazon is marketing, gives smaller shippers an alternative they haven’t had before.
That’s the part making investors nervous — not necessarily the size of the threat today, but the direction of travel.
For now, the stock moves in the trucking sector are telling the clearest story. Saia’s 8.2% drop was the sharpest single-session reaction among LTL peers on Tuesday.
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