Amazon will probably have its own airline soon
Amazon’s aircraft fleet is going to double in size in the coming months, potentially expanding into an airline and hauling third-party shipments.
Amazon’s air cargo fleet is a critical part of the company’s strategy to meet its increasingly ambitious one- and two-day delivery targets. By the end of 2022, Amazon will have a fleet of 85 planes, reports CNBC.
Analysts believe Amazon’s growth trajectory could set it on a collision course with major shippers, including Fedex and UPS. Morgan Stanley has recently predicted that Amazon will launch a third-party delivery service in the U.S. once the pandemic eases.
But even as it awaits its moment to level up in the cargo industry, Amazon appears to already have its eyes on an even bigger prize, writes Gizmodo. Joseph Schwieterman, director of the Chaddick Institute, told CNBC that the company’s recent decision to cut ties with outside contractors and bring its air cargo operations entirely in-house could signal an eventual ambition to significantly expand Amazon Air into something resembling an airline.
More Amazon news
The reason why so many Amazon searches show you sponsored ads
First consumers, now advertisers Leave Google for Amazon. It makes sense for advertisers to go where their customers are. "Follow the money" is a catchphrase used to help lead you to where true power lies. And investors who follow the money will quickly learn...
Door to Door delivery for Amazon FBA sellers
The main logistic services for door to door delivery among Chinese forwarders are the following: Air transport 1. Express – several variants with transit times from 2 to 10 working days and prices from 4 to 8 USD per kg (to a warehouse in US),...
Amazon is offering 50 percent cheaper shipping than UPS
Amazon is going after FedEx and UPS with steep discounts as it looks to court more sellers to try its pilot shipping service that launched this year, reports CNBC. Ray Berman, an Amazon seller who was recently invited to the program, said the rates were as...