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Did Amazon Just Give This Logisitcs Stock A No-brainer Bu…

Oleh Patinko

By Jeremy Bowman – May 6, 2026 at 11:30PM EST

Key Points

  • GXO Logistics beat estimates on the top and bottom lines in its first-quarter earnings report.

  • CEO Patrick Kelleher doesn’t see Amazon as a threat.

  • The company is delivering strong results in key strategic verticals.

Image source: GXO Logistics.

What Amazon’s entry into logistics means for GXO

While GXO investors are clearly spooked by Amazon’s entry into the industry, Kelleher doesn’t see it that way. In fact, he dismissed the threat, essentially calling Amazon a non-factor for GXO.

Kelleher explained that GXO operates highly customized warehouses for its customers, providing “bespoke solutions” that include automation and advanced technologies, AI. Amazon, on the other hand, is inviting outside customers to use its pre-existing infrastructure for their logistics needs, which is meeting a much different value proposition than GXO is.

Regarding the stock sell-off on Monday, Kelleher saw that as a combination of a knee-jerk reaction from investors, which we have seen before when Amazon enters a new market, and a misunderstanding of GXO’s business, which is focused on specialized solutions. Kelleher acknowledged that Amazon could have an impact on air freight transportation, which is capacity-constrained, as adding new air capacity could lower prices. However, he said the contract logistics industry wasn’t facing a problem of finite capacity, but meeting customer needs, which GXO is well-equipped to do.

Finally, he also noted that the contract logistics industry is large enough, with a market size of $500 billion, that there is plenty of room in the market for a new entrant. In other words, Amazon’s (or another company’s) entry isn’t going to cause a disruption.

What we learned from GXO’s first quarter

Under new CEO Kelleher, GXO has been focused on organic growth, stepping back from its earlier strategy of growing through M&A, and executing in key verticals aerospace and defense, and life sciences. Kelleher also sees a significant opportunity for organic growth in North America.

In the first quarter, GXO’s revenue reached $3.3 billion, up 10.8% or 4.1% on an organic basis, edging out expectations at $3.22 billion. The company’s acquisition of Wincanton explains the difference between the organic and nominal growth rates.

On the bottom line, its adjusted earnings per rose from $0.29 to $0.50, and it delivered strong results in key verticals aerospace and defense, technology, and life sciences. In its strategic verticals, the pipeline for new business grew 35%, which Kelleher attributed to bringing on experts through an advisory board and getting the right people in place, including completing his management team with the naming of CFO Mark Suchinski.

Looking ahead to the rest of the year, GXO modestly hiked its full-year guidance for adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) and earnings per . It now sees adjusted EBITDA of $935 million-$975 million, up from a previous range of $930 million-$970 million, and adjusted EPS of $2.90-$3.20, compared to a previous range of $2.85-$3.15.

It continues to expect organic growth of 4%-5% for the year.

NYSE: GXO

GXO Logistics

Today’s Change

(0.12%) $0.06

Current Price

$49.91

Key Data Points

Market Cap

$5.7B

Day’s Range

$48.92 – $51.95

52wk Range

$38.78 – $66.85

Volume

124

Avg Vol

1.4M

Gross Margin

11.62%

Is GXO a buy?

Kelleher believes the company can grow significantly faster than its current growth rate, noting that the industry compound annual growth rate (CAGR) is forecast to grow at 6%-8%, and he believes GXO can beat that.

The logistics company appears to be showing early results in its priority verticals, and the guidance hike is a good sign as well. The company is planning to host an Investor Day conference in the third quarter to outline its growth targets over the next three years.

While the stock has been disappointing in recent years, the Amazon sell-off appears to offer a buying opportunity, according to Kelleher’s explanation. If he can accelerate the company’s growth as he intends to, the stock will respond favorably.

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About the Author

Jeremy Bowman has been a contributing Motley Fool stock market analyst, covering technology, consumer goods, and macroeconomic trends since 2011. Before The Motley Fool, Jeremy was a newspaper reporter, restaurant manager, and English teacher abroad. He holds a bachelor’s degree in English from Colorado College and a master’s degree in business administration from American University. One of his Motley Fool headlines was briefly featured on Late Night with Stephen Colbert.

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