Ad  RAD Intel

The Company Fixing Ads Isn't Public Yet – But Insiders Are Investing

You've seen them. The cringey, mistargeted, and downright WTF ads. You sit there wondering why brands are spending billions on content that just leaves you questioning your entire algorithmic existence after seeing it.

RAD Intel is teaching brands - with proprietary tech - how to read the room. Their AI helps brands understand why content works, who it actually resonates with, and what to say next. RAD analyzes real-time audience behavior and predicts what will convert, so brands can stop guessing and start making ads that actually land.

And it's already in serious demand. Fortune 1000 brands like Hasbro, Sweetgreen, Skechers, and MGM are using RAD Intel to level up their marketing - and getting up to 3.5x better results. With $37M+ raised and a valuation that's jumped from $5M to $85M*, it's a bit of a shock that RAD Intel is still pre-IPO. Shares are just $0.60, and investors from Meta, Google, Amazon, and Fidelity Ventures are already in.

So check them out now and get in on the action before then, lest you get stuck in the "I almost invested" cycle of regret.

👉 Click here to secure your shares


DISCLOSURE: This is a paid advertisement for RAD Intel's Reg A offering. Please read the offering circular and related risks at invest.radintel.ai.

UPS sees profit in US Postal Service work that dragged down FedEx earnings

By Lisa Baertlein

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -United Parcel Service expects its newly won U.S. Postal Service (USPS) air cargo contract to be profitable in its first year and throughout the more than five-year deal, after rival FedEx struggled with the business, Chief Executive Carol Tome said on Tuesday.

Atlanta-based UPS will become the No. 1 USPS air cargo service provider on Sept. 30. It replaces FedEx, which was paid $1.75 billion in fiscal 2023 to provide Priority Mail and other speedy air services for the quasi-governmental agency.

FedEx held the contract for more than two decades, but recently struggled to squeeze out profits after the postal service shifted volume from planes to trucks in a bid to slash costs.

While some analysts and investors worry that UPS is sweeping up a money-losing business, the delivery firm said it can profit from the new deal because it has a unified network that lowers costs by reducing the distances postal service shipments travel.

“In contrast to traditional hub and spoke models, we don’t have to run all of the air volume through our main air hub” in Louisville, Kentucky, Tome said.

That means short-distance USPS shipments can be moved locally or regionally. FedEx was built on a hub and spoke model.

The unified network at UPS makes it easier for the company to make money from the work, said Satish Jindel, an industry expert who helped found a company purchased by FedEx.

CEO Tome on an earnings call said the deal will be margin accretive and earnings per share accretive to UPS “beginning in year one and through the life of the contract.”

The company reported better-than-expected quarterly profit on Tuesday as cost cuts offset still-soft demand for package delivery.

While the financial terms have not been disclosed, the contract promises to significantly increase the company’s U.S. Postal Service business from $308 million in fiscal 2023.

UPS Chief Financial Officer Brian Newman told Reuters in a telephone interview that $1.5 billion is a “good placeholder” for revenue from the new contract.

Annual postal service payments to FedEx declined after peaking at $2.40 billion in fiscal 2020. That starved the daytime air operation that FedEx created for the business of the volume it needed to keep planes about 70% full and generating profit, analysts and postal service experts told Reuters.

UPS has “plenty of space on aircraft” for the additional volume and will hire fewer than 200 pilots, Tome said.

Switching shipments from planes to trucks saved $1 billion at the post office, which plans to cut another $2 billion from its transportation costs. That forecast suggests that even more of its volume could move to lower-margin ground services.

CFO Newman declined to say if UPS would handle postal business that is diverted from planes to trucks.

The company will update its guidance to reflect the new business after the second quarter, Tome said.

Some Wall Street analysts remained cautious. Pressure to quickly absorb the business, high service costs and other factors could weigh on UPS margins, Third Bridge analyst Anthony DeRuijter said.

Meanwhile, UPS is working closely with the postal service to onboard the business ahead of this year’s busy holiday shipping season that stretches from Thanksgiving to Christmas, executives said.

(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; Editing by Michael Erman, Andrea Ricci and Nick Zieminski)

tagreuters.com2024binary_LYNXNPEK3M0MI-VIEWIMAGE