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The e-retailer said it will offer less-than-truckload shipping to all businesses, not just those who ship goods into its warehouses and fulfillment centers, and deliver to any destination in the U.S., as part of its nascent Amazon Supply Chain Services program.
Less-than-truckload refers to a service where companies carry shipments from multiple customers on a single trailer, instead of full truckloads.
Old Dominion Freight Line‘s stock tumbled more than 6%, while shares of ArcBest sank 4%. Saia and XPO Logistics slid 5% each. Shares of FedEx Freight, which started trading earlier this month after it was spun off by FedEx, fell about 3%.
“The feedback from Amazon selling partners using our LTL service was clear: the technology, visibility, and reliability were exactly what they needed — and they wanted to use it more broadly,” Jim Ruiz, director of Amazon Freight, said in a statement. “Now Amazon LTL can move your freight wherever it needs to go, servicing destinations nationwide for businesses of all sizes.”
Amazon has been spinning out more of its in-house logistics offerings for others to access, posing a growing threat to industry incumbents.
Last month, Amazon unveiled an “end-to-end” supply chain service that combines several of its logistics and freight offerings into a single package. The announcement sent shares of rival carriers UPS and FedEx lower.