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The long game

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Fri, Oct 6, 2017 11:06 AM

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From    Hi folks, it’s Spencer, filling in for Eric. We reported some news on Thursday ab

[Bloomberg] [Fully Charged]( From [Bloomberg](   [FOLLOW US [Facebook Share]]([Twitter Share]( [SUBSCRIBE [Subscribe]](  Hi folks, it’s Spencer, filling in for Eric. We reported some news on Thursday about Amazon.com Inc.’s new experimental delivery service called [Seller Flex](. It entails Amazon taking greater control over the final mile of delivery from the warehouses of its merchant partners to the doorsteps of customers, and it could have big implications. It can be surprising to see the market react to subtle moves by Amazon (UPS and FedEx both dropped a bit), but below are a few takeaways to help understand why investors get skittish when they discover Amazon is eying someone else’s business. First, a quick primer for folks who only know Amazon by its website and boxes: The company distinguished itself in e-commerce by offering quick, free delivery to Amazon Prime members who pay $99 a year. It continues to expand its network of warehouses around the country to store a growing assortment of products closer to shoppers. Many sellers on Amazon’s site send their products to Amazon warehouses because the company can stow, pack and ship them more quickly and affordably. Now Amazon is looking to help those same merchants make deliveries directly to the customer. What it means in the near term: Amazon will continue to use its existing delivery partners, including United Parcel Service Inc. and FedEx Corp. It can’t build a new delivery service overnight. But UPS and FedEx will make less money on those same deliveries if they are purchased by Amazon, which negotiates better rates from couriers thanks to its large volume, Morgan Stanley noted Thursday. This can also help reduce congestion in Amazon warehouses during the busy holiday shopping season. Keeping products out of its warehouses while still delivering them within two days reduces that congestion and can lower costs for Amazon. What it means in the long term: For now, the trial brings Amazon into the facilities of businesses that sell things on Amazon.com. In the future—and you have to look far ahead when considering the movements of Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bezos—Amazon could expand the services to any merchant selling anything to anyone. This would push it deeper into the territory of UPS and FedEx. Even if Amazon doesn’t buy fleets of trucks to take on UPS and FedEx directly, it could expand its relationships with smaller delivery partners like XPO Logistics Inc. and JB Hunt Transport Services Inc., companies with trucks that can reach customers around the country but small enough that Amazon could have greater sway over their operations than it does with UPS and FedEx. Cowen Inc. published a note Thursday predicting XPO, in particular, could potentially gain from Amazon’s new delivery service. —[Spencer Soper](mailto:ssoper@bloomberg.net)  And here’s what you need to know in global technology news Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg are unlikely to testify in congressional panels. Facebook will [deliver its earnings report]( on Nov. 1, the same day the company and its peers are scheduled to answer questions in Washington about Russia’s influence on the election.  An Airbnb rival in China sets its sights on Japan. About half the Japanese listings on Tujia are owned by Chinese investors, but the company hopes to [significantly expand inventory]( over the next two years.  Netflix is raising the price of its most popular plan in the U.S. The streaming company will [hike it by 10 percent]( to $11 as it looks to fund movie and TV show development.  Russian hackers stole NSA data related to U.S. cyber-defense projects. The hackers were able to [gain access to U.S. documents]( because an agency contractor transferred highly classified material onto his home computer, according to the Wall Street Journal.    You received this message because you are subscribed to the Bloomberg Technology newsletter Fully Charged. You can tell your friends to [sign up here](.  [Unsubscribe]( | [Bloomberg.com]( | [Contact Us]( Bloomberg L.P. 731 Lexington, New York, NY, 10022

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