Upbeat e-commerce demand bodes well for the Zacks Transportation -Air Freight & Cargo industry. UPS, FDX and ATSG are well-poised to capitalize on this uptrend.
UPS is growing as customers choose to buy more products online.
These Buffett-backed stocks pay substantial dividends and look poised to thrive despite rising interest rates.
UPS is coming off a record 2021 defined by strong earnings growth amid continued momentum in demand for package deliveries.
Buy Alert: 2 Undervalued High Growth Dividend Stocks You Should Consider Buying Right Now

UPS shrinks lag time between fuel surcharges

01:59pm, Tuesday, 15'th Mar 2022
UPS Inc. said Monday that changes to its diesel and jet fuel surcharges will now be subject to a one-week lag from the federal government's prices instead of a two-week lag, a move that matches the su
The shipping courier failed to request reservations for its trucks during an early priority window before ferries for the island’s busiest season from May to October were booked close to capacity.
The United Parcel Service (UPS) is scrambling to make alternative plans to deliver to the wealthy island enclave of Nantucket, Massachusetts, after forgetting to make ferry reservations for its trucks for the upcoming summer season.

UPS's Massive Dividend Raise Reflects Strength

01:15pm, Sunday, 13'th Mar 2022
At the beginning of February, United Parcel Service Inc. ( UPS , Financial) announced that it was raising its quarterly dividend by 49%. This is one of the largest increases this year amongst the big-

2022 starts on bleak note for manufacturers

11:37am, Saturday, 12'th Mar 2022 BusinessDay
The first quarter of 2022, which should determine the pace of the year for businesses, kicked off on a grim note for manufacturers which may result in a bleak business year if corrective steps are not taken. Despite numerous objections and pleas by manufacturers and the organized private sector (OPS), the FG through Zainab Ahmed, Minister of Finance in January directed that an excise duty of N10 per litre be imposed on all non-alcoholic, carbonated and sweetened beverages. This was to discourage excessive consumption of sugar in beverages and raise revenues for health-related and other critical expenditures. Alfred Olajide, managing director at Coca-Cola Nigeria, said at a virtual fiscal policy dialogue held recently that the excise duty of N10 per litre on all non-alcoholic, carbonated and sweetened beverages would be detrimental to the growth and development of the soft drinks industry. He added that the excise tax being a production tax makes it worse for them as it is not based on what is sold but what is produced which is a lot of burden at this critical time when industries need to be protected and supported to bounce back.
This post contains sponsored advertising content. This content is for informational purposes only and not intended to be investing advice. Parcel shippers have been struggling with rising carrier fuel surcharges for months. The struggle has now entered a new dimension. On Monday, the Energy Information Administration (EIA) reported a 74.5-cents-a-gallon increase in the average nationwide price of diesel fuel to $4.845 a gallon, the largest week-over-week increase in the diesel index since EIA began keeping records in 1994. The jump, in turn, will trigger significant increases in fuel surcharges imposed by FedEx Corp.''s ground unit (NYSE: FDX ) and UPS Inc.''s (NYSE: UPS ) domestic ground parcel business. Based on the carriers'' calculations, FedEx Ground customers will pay a surcharge of 15.25% on all shipments, effective this Monday. Effective March 21, UPS customers will pay a 14.5% surcharge on each ground delivery. Changes in FedEx surcharges take effect one week after the most recent EIA price, which is published every Monday.
Some of FedEx's key fundamentals help make the blue-chip shipping stock worth considering heading into its Q3 FY22 financial release on March 17.
Brian Barish, president and director of research at Cambiar Investors, and Gina Sanchez, chief executive officer of Chantico Global and Chief Market Strategist for Lido Advisors, join 'The Exchange' t
Whitehead: The Rise Of Global Fascism And The End Of The World As We Know It Authored by John W. Whitehead & Nisha Whitehead via The Rutherford Institute, “This is the way the world ends Not with a bang but a whimper.” - “ The Hollow Men ,” T.S. Eliot Barely three years into the 2020s, and we seem to be living out the prophesies of the Book of Revelation with its dire warnings about plague, poverty, hatred and war. Just as the government hysteria over the COVID-19 pandemic appears to be dying down, new threats have arisen to occupy our attention and fuel our fears: food shortages, spiking inflation, rocketing gas prices, and a Ukraine-Russia conflict that threatens to bring about a world war. Is this the end of the world as we know it? Or is this the beginning of the end of the world? Will the world end with a bang or will it end, as T.S. Eliot concludes, with a whimper ? Robert Frost, torn between a vision of the world ending in fire (the hot flame of violence, anger and greed) or ice (the cold burn of hatred), suggests that either would suffice to do the job .
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