United Parcel Service, Inc. (UPS) delivered a stunning performance in the third quarter of 2025, significantly surpassing Wall Street’s expectations for both profit and revenue. The quarterly results, announced on October 28, 2025, signaled that the company’s sweeping, multi-year transformation strategy is finally gaining substantial traction, leading to an immediate and sharp spike in investor confidence. Despite a challenging macroeconomic environment characterized by softer domestic shipping demand, the logistics giant demonstrated resilience and a determined focus on profitability, which was rewarded with a stock surge of over 12% in early trading.
UPS reported consolidated revenues of $21.4 billion for the third quarter, handily beating the consensus analyst forecast of approximately $20.84 billion. While this figure represented a slight year-over-year decline in total sales, the decline was widely expected due to planned volume reductions and strategic divestitures. The real headline figure, however, was the adjusted diluted earnings per share (EPS). UPS posted an adjusted EPS of $1.74, crushing the average analyst estimate of roughly $1.31 by a decisive margin of over 33%. This performance demonstrated that CEO Carol Tomé’s strategy focused on generating “better, not bigger” volume and aggressive cost control is successfully insulating the company’s bottom line from broader market softness. The company’s consolidated operating profit, on an adjusted non-GAAP basis, reached a robust $2.1 billion, contributing to an adjusted operating margin of 10.0%.
The GAAP results included a net charge of $164 million related to transformation strategy costs, but these were partially offset by a substantial financial maneuver. Specifically, the company executed a sale-leaseback transaction involving five properties within its Supply Chain Solutions segment, which generated a pre-tax gain of $330 million. This strategic monetization of real estate assets provided a significant lift to the quarter’s results, contributing $0.30 to the diluted EPS and highlighting the company’s agility in managing its capital structure.
The Pillars of Profitability: Cost Control and Revenue Quality
The primary engine behind UPS’s outperformance was a relentless focus on expense management and a deliberate pivot toward higher-margin business. CEO Tomé highlighted that the company has aggressively executed the most significant strategic shift in its history, which includes a dramatic reduction in its workforce. In its earnings announcement, UPS disclosed that it had eliminated approximately 34,000 jobs, a 70% increase over its initial planned reduction target and closed 93 leased and owned operational facilities in 2025. These comprehensive cost-cutting measures have generated substantial savings, totaling $2.2 billion year-to-date, with the company remaining on track to achieve its full-year expense reduction target of $3.5 billion.
Simultaneously, UPS has been aggressively optimizing its business mix, prioritizing revenue quality over sheer volume. This strategic shift is most evident in the U.S. Domestic Package segment, where average daily volume declined by over 12% year-over-year. The largest driver of this decline was the planned “glide down” of lower-yielding volume from its largest customer, Amazon, with Amazon’s volume down over 21% for the quarter. Yet, despite shipping fewer packages, the company’s focus on attracting high-value small-to-medium businesses (SMBs) resulted in a powerful 9.8% growth in U.S. revenue per piece. This combination of strong revenue-per-piece growth and outstanding expense control allowed the U.S. Domestic segment to expand its adjusted operating margin by 10 basis points, demonstrating remarkable financial discipline in the face of falling volumes.
International Strength and Forward-Looking Confidence
While the Domestic segment was undergoing strategic contraction, the International Package segment served as a key growth pillar. The division reported a healthy 5.9% increase in revenue year-over-year, driven by a 4.8% increase in average daily volume. This performance underscores the strength of UPS’s integrated global network and its ability to capture higher export volume even amidst global trade complexities and the company’s ongoing efforts to help customers navigate shifts in trade policy.
Looking ahead, UPS provided a positive outlook for the all-important holiday shipping season, signaling confidence in its continuing turnaround. The company forecast fourth-quarter 2025 revenue to be approximately $24.0 billion, which is slightly ahead of consensus analyst estimates. Furthermore, UPS guided for a strong Q4 adjusted operating margin in the range of 11.0% to 11.5%. By streamlining operations and focusing on automation, the company is positioned to run what it expects to be its most efficient peak shipping season in history. The strong third-quarter beat and optimistic guidance confirmed to investors that the radical strategic transformation is working, justifying the dramatic investor confidence seen in the soaring share price and setting a new trajectory for the logistics giant.


