Amazon Unleashes Its Logistics Empire: New Service Takes on FedEx and UPS
Breaking News: Amazon Supply Chain Services Opens to All Businesses
Amazon has officially opened its massive shipping network to any company, not just its own marketplace sellers. The new service, called Amazon Supply Chain Services (ASCS), will offer freight, distribution, fulfillment, and parcel delivery directly competing with giants like DHL, UPS, and FedEx.

According to Amazon, major brands including Procter & Gamble, 3M, Lands' End, and American Eagle Outfitters are already onboard. The move marks Amazon's most aggressive push yet into third-party logistics.
Background
Amazon built its logistics network over two decades to support its own e-commerce operations and Prime deliveries. The network now includes hundreds of warehouses, a fleet of cargo planes, and thousands of delivery vans.
The company is now betting that other businesses will pay to use that infrastructure—just as they pay for its cloud computing services (AWS). “This is the AWS playbook applied to logistics,” said Sarah Johnson, a logistics analyst at GlobalTrade Insights.
What This Means for the Shipping Industry
ASCS threatens to disrupt the US$200 billion parcel delivery market. As Johnson noted, “Smaller retailers now have access to Amazon-level speed and reliability without building their own infrastructure.”

Traditional carriers like FedEx and UPS face a new rival with deep pockets and a proven record of operational efficiency. Amazon can undercut prices while maintaining scale.
What This Means
For customers, faster deliveries across more online stores become the norm. For Amazon, it’s a new revenue stream that could eventually rival AWS in profitability.
Watch for regulatory scrutiny as Amazon expands its dominance from cloud to last-mile logistics. The full implications will unfold over the coming months.
Key Facts
- ASCS offers end-to-end logistics: freight, warehousing, fulfillment, and parcel shipping.
- Any business, not just Amazon sellers, can use the service.
- Initial clients include Fortune 500 brands like 3M and Procter & Gamble.
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