2. Presentations may contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Forward-
looking statements are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our historical experience and our present expectations or
anticipated results. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to: general economic conditions, both in the U.S. and internationally; significant competition on a local,
regional, national, and international basis; changes in our relationships with our significant customers; existing complex and stringent regulations in the U.S. and internationally, changes
to which can impact our business; increased security requirements that may increase our costs of operations and reduce operating efficiencies; legal, regulatory or market responses to
global climate change; negotiation and ratification of labor contracts; strikes, work stoppages and slowdowns by our employees; the effects of changing prices of energy, including
gasoline, diesel and jet fuel, and interruptions in supplies of these commodities; changes in exchange rates or interest rates; our ability to maintain the image of our brand; breaches in
data security; disruptions to the Internet or our technology infrastructure; our ability to accurately forecast our future capital investment needs; exposure to changing economic, political
and social developments in international and emerging markets; changes in business strategy, government regulations, or economic or market conditions that may result in substantial
impairment of our assets; increases in our expenses or funding obligations relating to employee health, retiree health and/or pension benefits; the potential for various claims and
litigation related to labor and employment, personal injury, property damage, business practices, environmental liability and other matters; our ability to realize the anticipated benefits
from acquisitions, joint ventures or strategic alliances; our ability to manage insurance and claims expenses; and other risks discussed in our filings with the Securities and Exchange
Commission from time to time, including our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2016, or described from time to time in our future reports filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission. You should consider the limitations on, and risks associated with, forward-looking statements and not unduly rely on the accuracy of predictions
contained in such forward-looking statements. Management believes that these forward-looking statements are reasonable as and when made. We do not undertake any obligation to
update forward-looking statements to reflect events, circumstances, changes in expectations, or the occurrence of unanticipated events after the date of those statements.
Management believes that these forward-looking statements are reasonable as and when made. However, caution should be taken not to place undue reliance on any such forward-looking
statements because such statements speak only as of the date when made. We undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements.
Information included in all presentations, including comparisons to prior periods, may reflect adjusted results. See appendix for reconciliations of adjusted results and other non-GAAP
financial measures.
Forward-Looking Statements
3. 2017Targets (Non-GAAP)
U.S. Domestic Target 2017
Revenue 5% to 7%
Adj. Operating Profit 6% to 8%
Adj. Operating Margin Expand slightly
International Target 2017
Revenue 2% to 4%
Adj. Operating Profit -8% to -4%
Adj. Operating Margin Below LY
SC&F Target 2017
Revenue 8% to 10%
Adj. Operating Profit Down 1Q, Y/Y
Adj. Operating Margin Slightly below LY
Total Company Target 2017
Total Revenue 5% to 7%
Adj. Operating Profit ~3%
Adj. Earnings per Share 1% to 6%
Share Repurchases of $1.8B, Dividend Payout of 50% to 55%
of Adj. Net Income, and ROIC* between 23% to 28%
See Appendix for reconciliation of adjusted results from prior years.
The company provides guidance on an adjusted (non-GAAP) basis because it is not possible to predict or provide a reconciliation reflecting the impact of future pension mark-to-
market adjustments, which would be included in GAAP results and could be material.
3
4. 2018 - 2019 Targets (Non-GAAP)
U.S. Domestic Target 2018 - 2019
Revenue 4% to 6%
Adj. Operating Profit 5% to 9%
Adj. Operating Margin 13% to 14%
International Target 2018 - 2019
Revenue 5% to 8%
Adj. Operating Profit 8% to 12%
Adj. Operating Margin 16% to 19%
SC&F Target 2018 - 2019
Revenue 4% to 8%
Adj. Operating Profit 6% to 10%
Adj. Operating Margin 6% to 8%
Total Company Target 2018 - 2019
Total Revenue 4% to 6%
Adj. Operating Profit 5% to 9%
Adj. Earnings per Share 5% to 10%
Share Repurchases of $1.0B to $1.8B, Dividend Payout of 50% to 55%
of Adj. Net Income, and ROIC* between 23% to 28%
See Appendix for reconciliation of adjusted results from prior years.
The company provides guidance on an adjusted (non-GAAP) basis because it is not possible to predict or provide a reconciliation reflecting the impact of future pension mark-to-
market adjustments, which would be included in GAAP results and could be material.
5. Strong History of Returns on Capital
10%
20%
30%
40%
ROIC
23% to 28%
2011 2016 2019
Historical average
greater than 20%
Ultimate Investment Allocation Flexibility
Re-invest in the business
Dividends are a priority
Maintain a strong balance sheet
Balanced approach to share repurchases
5
7. Annual cash dividends paid since 1969
*2008 included five dividend payments (totaling $2.22/share) due to dividend payment schedule change
**2017 is estimated based on $.83 per share first quarter announcement
$1.68
$1.80 $1.80
$1.88
$2.08
$2.28
$2.48
$2.68
$2.92
$3.12
$3.32
2007 2008* 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017**
Dividends
Since IPO growth averaged 10%
Stable or growing dividend for almost 50 years
8. 8
Industry Leading Margins*
*Operating Margin is presented on an as adjusted basis for all companies (trailing 12 months) and is not reflective of the Global Small Package market.
**FDX includes TNT in FY 4Q17
14.3%
11.3%
9.7%
UPS DHL FDX**
9. 4.3% 5.7%5.8%
7.2%
12%
20%
29%
34%
US Global
Expected Growth (CAGR) 2016 to 2020
GDP Retail Online Retail Cross Border Online Retail (Export)
~6x
~3.5x
~1.25x
~7x
~3x
~1.25x
Online Retail is Growth Engine for Future
Online Retail is forecasted to grow 3x the rate of GDP
UPS is transforming
our business model to
capture this
Opportunity
Note: Nominal GDP
Source: UPS Rates & Forecasting, eMarketer, Forrester
9
10. B2C Mix Expected to Climb
36%
40%
44%
46%
48%
49%
51%
2009 2011 2013 2015 2017 2019
PercentofU.S.DomesticPackages
Actual Forecast
B2C Shipments
projected
to continue
growing
10
11. Solving the B2C Equation at UPS
Revenue per
package
Cost
per stop
Packages
per stop
Value-added Solutions
Dim-weight Pricing
Peak Pricing Options
ORION
Hub Modernization
SurePost
UPS Access Point™
Synthetic Density
UPS Access Point™ Network
• “Not at Home” delivery
• Enhances capacity
• Improves customer service
• >8,000 in US
• >27,000 globally
• Members re-direct delivery
• Eliminates multiple attempts
• 37M members and growing
• >980M delivered packages
UPS MyChoice
®
UPS SurePost
®
Redirect
• Expanding consumer options
• Growth in Large & Middle-market
• ~33% redirected into UPS system
11
Commercial Residential
12. Superior Consumer Experience
UPS My Choice® service
UPS Access Point™ locations
12
Control
Convenience
Choice
UPS My Choice ®, UPS Access PointTM, UPS Returns
14. Smart Global Logistics Network Benefits
ORION
Network
Planning Tool
EDGE
Facility
Automation
*Annual cost savings and avoidance
$800M to $1B*
Upon Completion
14
15. The Smart Global Logistics Network
International Package Flow Tech
ORION
Facility Automation/
Modernization
Network Planning Tool
EDGE
Smart Trailer
SurePost
Redirect
Higher Levels of Automation and Integration Than Ever Before
15
19. • GeneralRateIncrease
• NEWPeakSurcharge
• DIMweight
• Largepackagehandlingsurcharge
• SurgePricing
• Residentialdeliverysurcharge
• Weeklyfuelsurcharge
• ForecastAccuracyTool
Revenue Management
Align Price
with Cost
Efficient Integrated Network
Global Package / Forwarding /
Freight / Distribution
Broad Portfolio of Capabilities
Products / Technologies
UPS Customer Solutions
Supply Chain and Industry Expertise /
Marketing / Sales
O N E U P S E X P E R I E N C E
B A L A N C E D G L O B A L P R E S E N C E
THOUGHTLEADERSHIP
LEADINGBRAND
19
20. Saturday Operations
FastestandWidestServiceonMondays
• PickupSaturday,DeliveryMonday
• 1business dayearlier
• CommercialandResidential
• Majormarketsinclude: NewYork,LosAngeles,
Dallas,Chicago,Seattle,Atlanta,andMiami
• ThroughJune2017, inalmost50metroservice
areas,ornearly2,500cities&towns
• In2018,coveragetoexpandtoabout5,900cities
andtowns
20
U.S. Pickup and Delivery of Ground and Air 6 Days a Week
We will provide Saturday Ground service to
about 4,700 towns and cities by the end of 2017.
21. Asset Leverage, Technology Driven Flexibility, Unmatched Efficiency
All Service Levels, One Integrated Network
Advantage
of single
integrated
network
UPS domestic
and international
packages –
all levels
DeliveryUPS Worldport®
Distribution Center
UPS Shipper UPS Feeder Package Sorting Hub UPS Airplane
Residential
Business
UPS Access PointTM
Returns
NPT Automation 747-8
NPT, EDGE
ORION
22. International Growth Strategy
• First expanded outside the U.S. more than 40 years ago
• Today we serve more than 220 countries and territories
* UPS Estimates
CREATE
OPTIMIZE
FOUNDATION
• Invested nearly $2B in our European infrastructure, about one-third complete
• Add capacity to existing network footprint, increase scale economies & expand capabilities
• Offer customer centric solutions: UPS My Choice, UPS Access Point, and i-parcel
• Improving Europe time-in-transit by cutting one full day between 101K “city pairs”
• Entered 3PL truckload market with the acquisition of Freightex
• Expanding our dangerous goods service to 36 countries; effectively expand market opportunities
22
23. International Service Portfolio Expansion
ExpandIndustry-LeadingExpressService:
• UPSExpressprovidesbroadesttime-of-daycoverageinthemarket
• UPSExpressSaverprovidesglobalcoveragetoalmostanywherein20to48hours
• In2016:
• AddedEarlyA.M.ExpressPlusto26newcountries
• AddedExpressto52newcountries
• In2017,bringingExpressandExpressPlusto37newcountries
• Cutafulldayoutofdeliverytimesbetweenover350citiesin26Europeancountries
23
UPS Reaches the Top 20 Countries* for AM Delivery - More than the Competition
* By GDP
26. 26
• Air and Ocean
• Brokerage
• Rail Freight
• Insurance / Financing
• Expedited Ground
• Express Critical
• Supplier Management
• Design & Planning
• Post Sales and Service
Parts
• Contract Logistics
• e-fulfillment solutions
• Acquired Marken
• TL brokerage
• Expanded in Mexico
• Best in class customer
facing technology
• Expanding into Europe -
acquired FreightEx
• Freight LTL
• TL and Intermodal
• Dedicated Contract
Carriage
• Specialty solutions: trade
show, temperature…
Freight Forwarding
Supply Chain & Freight
Distribution Coyote UPS Freight
Addressing Customers’ Total Transportation Needs With Industry Leading Portfolio of Services
Supply Chain &
Freight Portfolio…
…connected well to
Small Package
27. 78 dedicated facilities globally… and growing
Global Healthcare Integrated Distribution Network
• GDP & GMP compliance*
• Temperature control storage &
packaging
• Integrated Transportation services
including Temperature Controlled Air
and Ground
• Labelling and kitting
• Order to cash services including
charge-back processing
• Pharmacy operations
• Single integrated global platform
• Implantable Device Inventory
Management and Loaner Kit
management
7.7 million square feet
Current UPS Facilities UPS Air Hub
27
28. UPSAcquires Marken
• Expanding existing UPS capabilities and coverage, especially in emerging markets
• Expect to be accretive year 1
• High margin business
• #1 Inbound Market Leader
• 43 Global Facilities
• Serving >150 countries
• 140 Vehicles
• 650 Employees
Makes UPS the World’s Largest Clinical Trials Integrated Carrier
Expanding Global Clinical Trials Capability
28
29. Coyote - High Growth, Scaled Provider
Technology-driven solutions and a scaled provider of full truckload brokerage
services. Coyote primarily operates in North America, but with recent expansion
into Europe, Coyote is positioned to service global shippers.
Complete Global Visibility Supplier & Systems Integrator 29
32. • 2Q17:
U.S. Domestic Operating Profit Jumps 13% and Margin Expands to 14.3%
U.S. Domestic Revenue up 8.1% on Strong Air & Ground Product Growth
Export Shipments Rise 12% with Gains from all International Regions
International Revenue up 2.8%, Currency-Neutral Revenue* 8.3% Higher
All Supply Chain & Freight Units Contribute to 12% Revenue Increase
Company Reiterates Full-Year 2017 Adjusted EPS Guidance
Consolidated Results
32
(In millions, except EPS) 2Q17 2Q16 $ Change % Change
Revenue $15,750 $14,629 $1,121 7.7%
Operating Expenses $13,534 $12,591 $943 7.5%
Operating Profit $2,216 $2,038 $178 8.7%
Net Income $1,384 $1,269 $115 9.1%
Diluted EPS $1.58 $1.43 $0.15 10.5%
33. UPS Snapshot
33
Ranked as most valuable global brand by:
Started by two teenagers
making retail deliveries in the
early years
Delivering 19 million packages
every day
Founded 110
Year Ago
Leader in
global supply chain &
freight services
Premium Global Brand
Enabled by Technology
UPS.com Smart LogisticsUPS Ready
434,000+
employees
Sustainably Serving Customers
& Communities
Employees Sustainability
20% reduction
carbon density
Customers &
Communities
10M+
Connected
100M+
UPS Foundation
500+
aircraft
10th largest
airline serving
114,000
delivery vehicles
from vans to
motorcycles
38. Reconciliation of GAAP and non-GAAP Financial
Measures
We supplement the reporting of our financial information determined under generally accepted accounting principles ("GAAP") with certain non-GAAP financial measures, including, as
applicable, "as adjusted" operating profit, operating margin, pre-tax income, net income and earnings per share. The equivalent measures determined in accordance with GAAP are also
referred to as "reported" or "unadjusted.” Additionally, we periodically disclose free cash flow as well as currency-neutral revenue, revenue per piece and operating profit.
We believe that these non-GAAP measures provide additional meaningful information to assist users of our financial statements in understanding our financial results and assessing our
ongoing performance because they exclude items that may not be indicative of, or are unrelated to, our underlying operations and may provide a useful baseline for analyzing trends in our
underlying businesses. Management uses these non-GAAP financial measures in making financial, operating and planning decisions. We also use certain of these measures for the
determination of incentive compensation award results.
Non-GAAP financial measures should be considered in addition to, and not as an alternative for, our reported results prepared in accordance with GAAP. Our non-GAAP financial
information does not represent a comprehensive basis of accounting. Therefore, our non-GAAP financial information may not be comparable to similarly titled measures reported by other
companies.
Currency-Neutral Revenue, Revenue per Piece and Operating Profit
We supplement the reporting of our revenue, revenue per piece and operating profit with similar non-GAAP measures that exclude the period-over-period impact of foreign currency
exchange rate changes and hedging activities. We believe currency-neutral revenue, revenue per piece and operating profit information allows users of our financial statements to
understand growth trends in our products and results. We evaluate the performance of our International Package business on a currency-neutral basis.
Currency-neutral revenue, revenue per piece and operating profit are calculated by dividing current period reported U.S. dollar revenue, revenue per piece and operating profit by the
current period average exchange rates to derive current period local currency revenue, revenue per piece and operating profit. The derived current period local currency revenue, revenue
per piece and operating profit are then multiplied by the average foreign exchange rates used to translate the comparable results for each month in the prior year period (including the
period over period impact of foreign currency revenue hedging activities). The difference between the current period reported U.S. dollar revenue, revenue per piece and operating profit
and the derived current period U.S. dollar revenue, revenue per piece and operating profit is the period over period impact of currency fluctuations.
38
43. Adjusted Net Income and EPS Reconciliation
(amounts in millions, except per share amounts) 2014 2015 2016 2015 & 2016
% Increase 2014
to 2016
% CAGR
2014 to 2016
GAAP Net Income 3,032$ 4,844$ 3,431$ 8,275$ 13.2% 6.4%
GAAP Diluted Earnings Per Share 3.28$ 5.35$ 3.87$ 18.0% 8.6%
Operating Expenses:
Transfer healthcare coverage to MEP 1,102$ -$ -$ -$
Pension Mark to Market 1,062 118 2,651 2,769
Total Adjustments to Operating Expenses: 2,164$ 118$ 2,651$ 2,769$
Tax-Effect of Above Items (807) (39) (978) (1,017)
Total Adjustments to Net Income 1,357$ 79$ 1,673$ 1,752$
Adjusted Net Income 4,389$ 4,923$ 5,104$ 10,027$ 16.3% 7.8%
Divided By: Diluted WAVG Shares Outstanding 924 906 887
Adjusted Diluted Earnings Per Share 4.75$ 5.43$ 5.75$ 21.1% 10.0%
Shareholder Distributions
Dividends 2,487$ 2,649$ 2,771$ 5,420$
Share Repurchases 2,662 2,711 2,706 5,417
Total 5,149$ 5,360$ 5,477$ 10,837$
% Adjusted Net Income - Dividends 57% 54% 54% 54%
% Adjusted Net Income - Share Repurchases 61% 55% 53% 54%
% Adjusted Net Income Returned to Shareholders 118% 109% 107% 108%
Earnings per Share and Shareholder Distribution Trends
43
44. ROIC Reconciliation
(amounts in millions)
2011 -
Adjusted
2011 -
GAAP
2012 -
Adjusted
2012 -
GAAP
2013 -
Adjusted
2013 -
GAAP
2014 -
Adjusted
2014 -
GAAP
2015 -
Adjusted
2015 -
GAAP
2016 -
Adjusted
2016 -
GAAP
Operating Profit 6,874 6,080 7,070 1,343 7,073 7,034 7,132 4,968 7,786 7,668 8,118 5,467
Less: Taxes (2,365) (2,073) (2,439) (230) (2,504) (2,427) (2,532) (1,719) (2,647) (2,607) (2,801) (1,815)
After-Tax Op Profit 4,509 4,007 4,631 1,113 4,569 4,607 4,600 3,249 5,139 5,061 5,317 3,652
Beginning LT Debt 10,491 10,491 11,095 11,095 11,089 11,089 10,824 10,824 9,856 9,856 11,316 11,316
Ending LT Debt 11,095 11,095 11,089 11,089 10,824 10,824 9,856 9,856 11,316 11,316 12,394 12,394
Beginning Shareowners' Equity 10,387 8,047 9,853 7,108 7,941 4,733 6,566 6,488 5,356 2,158 5,200 2,491
Ending Shareowners' Equity 9,853 7,108 7,941 4,733 6,566 6,488 5,356 2,158 5,200 2,491 3,850 429
Average Invested Capital 20,913 18,371 19,989 17,013 18,210 16,567 16,301 14,663 15,864 12,911 16,380 13,315
Return on Invested Capital 21.6% 21.8% 23.2% 6.5% 25.1% 27.8% 28.2% 22.2% 32.4% 39.2% 32.5% 27.4%
Beginning Total Debt 10,846 10,846 11,128 11,128 11,120 11,120 10,872 10,872 10,787 10,787 14,334 14,334
Ending Total Debt 11,128 11,128 11,120 * 11,120 * 10,872 10,872 10,787 10,787 14,334 14,334 16,075 16,075
Beginning Shareowners' Equity 10,387 8,047 9,853 7,108 7,941 4,733 6,566 6,488 5,356 2,158 5,200 2,491
Ending Shareowners' Equity 9,853 7,108 7,941 4,733 6,566 6,488 5,356 2,158 5,200 2,491 3,850 429
Average Invested Capital 21,107 18,565 20,021 17,045 18,250 16,607 16,791 15,153 17,839 14,885 19,730 16,665
Return on Invested Capital 21.4% 21.6% 23.1% 6.5% 25.0% 27.7% 27.4% 21.4% 28.8% 34.0% 27.0% 21.9%
*2012 total debt adjusted to reflect 1/15/13 debt repayment of $1.75B
Shareowners Equity Adjustments:
2011 beginning balance adjusted $2.340 billion for unrecognized pension and postretirement benefits costs, net of tax
2011 ending balance adjusted $2.745 billion for unrecognized pension and postretirement benefits costs, net of tax
2012 ending balance adjusted $3.208 billion for unrecognized pension and postretirement benefits costs, net of tax
2013 ending balance adjusted $78 million for TNT and unrecognized pension and postretirement benefits costs, net of tax
2014 ending balance adjusted $3.198 billion for unrecognized pension and postretirement benefits costs, net of tax
2015 ending balance adjusted $2.709 billion for unrecognized pension and postretirement benefits costs, net of tax
2016 ending balance adjusted $3.421 billion for unrecognized pension and postretirement benefits costs, net of tax
ROIC
44
45. Glossary
Definition Definition Definition
ABC Activity Based Costing EDGE
Enhanced Dynamic Global
Execution
LTL Less-Than-Truckload
ADV Average Daily Volume EMEA
Europe, Middle East, and
Africa
MTM Mark-To-Market pension revaluation
B2B Business To Business retail channel EPS Earnings Per Share NPT Network Planning Tools
B2C
Business To Consumer retail
channel
FSC Fuel Surcharge ORION
On-Road Integrated Optimization and
Navigation
B2R
Business To Retail store
distribution channel
GDP Gross Domestic Product ROIC Return On Invested Capital
Block
hours
Aircraft hours IAF International Air Freight SC&F Supply Chain and Freight segment
CAGR Compound Annual Growth Rate IP Industrial Production SSLAW Small Sort Label & Weigh
DIAD
Delivery Information Acquisition
Device
IPO Initial Public Offering TTM Trailing Twelve Months
3PL Third Party Logistics
45