Thursday, December 25, 2025

Is It Time to Buy UPS for Its 6.7%-Yielding Dividend?

UPS (NYSE: UPS) has faced significant challenges in recent years, resulting in lower revenue and profitability. That has weighed on the share price, causing the dividend yield to surge to 6.7%, well above the S&P 500‘s yield (1.2%).

Even though its financial results continued to fall in the third quarter — revenue dropped 3.7% and adjusted earnings per share dipped 1.1% — UPS made improvements in other key areas. Here’s a look at whether UPS has improved enough to make it an attractive buy for dividend-focused investors.

A person receiving a package.
Image source: Getty Images.

UPS made the strategic decision to reduce its exposure to Amazon earlier this year. While Amazon is its largest customer, it’s not the most profitable one. As a result, UPS plans to cut its Amazon shipping volumes by more than 50% by late next year. The e-commerce giant accounted for around a quarter of its shipping volumes last year and more than 11% of its revenue. This move is part of UPS’s strategy to pivot toward higher-margin customers.

As part of that strategy, UPS aims to deliver $3.5 billion of annual expense reductions by the end of this year. It achieved $2.2 billion in cost savings through the third quarter, including the closure of 93 buildings and the elimination of 48,000 jobs.

The company’s actions are starting to pay off. “Our focus on revenue quality yielded solid results,” stated CEO Carol Tome in a third-quarter earnings presentation. She noted that U.S. revenue per piece grew by 9.8% in the period. That growth, when combined with its cost reductions, helped boost its U.S. operating margin from 6.3% to 6.4%.

UPS’ market headwinds and strategy shift caused concerns about whether it could maintain its dividend while it worked to turn things around. The company generated only $2.7 billion in cash from operations during the first half of this year, and less than $750 million in free cash flow after capital expenditures. That didn’t come close to covering the company’s cash returns to shareholders, which included $2.7 billion of dividend payments and $1 billion of share repurchases in the first quarter. The company’s cash flow has declined significantly from last year, when it generated $10.1 billion in cash from operations and $6.2 billion in free cash flow after capital expenditures, covering its $5.4 billion dividend outlay with plenty of room to spare.

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