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FedEx Freight's shares fall after market debut

June 1, 2026 6:02 AM

By Lisa Baertlein and ‌Nandan Mandayam

June 1 (Reuters) - ​FedEx ​Freight shares fell after their New York Stock Exchange debut on Monday, following the completion of its spinoff from ‌parent FedEx Corp.

The shares of the trucking company dropped ⁠as much as 13.8% from their opening price, and were last down 2.8%. Parent ‌FedEx Corp's shares were little ‌changed at $333.30.

J.P. Morgan analyst Brian Ossenbeck said he values FedEx Freight at a lower multiple compared to its rivals XPO, Saia ​and Old Dominion Freight Line, "given execution risk and transition costs related to the spin as well as persistent underperformance on service and ⁠volume metrics".

FedEx Freight's shares opened 2.3% higher on Monday at $164, compared to $160.37 when the stock ​was trading on a when-issued basis last week.

When-issued trading allows investors to buy and sell stock before they ​officially begin regular trading, with settlement taking ‌place once the shares are formally issued.

FedEx Freight's debut as an independent company comes at a time when ⁠freight rates could be emerging from a four-year slump, partly due to several operators exiting the market because of financial losses and a push by ⁠federal regulators to drastically restrict commercial driver licenses to U.S. citizens only.

The company ​expects average revenue growth of 4% to 6% in the medium term, Chief Financial Officer Marshall Witt said in April.

It also expects average core profit growth ‌in the range of 10% to 12% over the medium term.

Investments in modernizing and separating the business from ‌FedEx will dampen profit in the short term, but cost controls, automation ⁠and the addition of more ‌high-profit cargo will strengthen ​margins over time, Witt said.

(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles and Nandan Mandayam in Bengaluru; Editing by ‌Shinjini Ganguli)

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