Amazon opens its logistics network to other businesses
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Amazon has launched Amazon Supply Chain Services, offering its freight, warehousing, fulfillment, and delivery network to businesses beyond its marketplace, with a focus on the automotive sector. The move could challenge established logistics providers and ...
The e-commerce giant is opening its global logistics network to all businesses, betting it can turn its supply chain into the next AWS.
Amazon. com Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) has rolled out its Amazon Supply Chain Services platform, opening up its logistics infrastructure to third-party shippers beyond its traditional marketplace sellers.
Amazon has opened its logistics network to all businesses, intensifying competition for global and Indian delivery firms and raising questions on pricing, margins, and scale
Amazon opens its logistics network to all businesses, signing up AEO and Lands' End as customers and intensifying competition with FedEx, UPS and DHL.
Amazon has announced it is expanding its logistics reach beyond its own marketplace, launching a new service designed to let businesses use the mega-company’s vast supply chain network. And it is specifically targeting the automotive industry, where supply chain complexity has become particularly challenging of late.
FedEx shareholders in Memphis and beyond took one on the chin Monday after Amazon pulled back the curtain on a sweeping new logistics play. The stock slid roughly 8 to 9 percent in intraday trading, a near 10 percent drop that wiped out billions in market value, just weeks before FedEx’s planned June 1 spin-off of its FedEx Freight business.