Warehousing
•61 stocks
•
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Price Performance Heatmap
5Y Price (Market Cap Weighted)
All Stocks (61)
| Company | Market Cap | Price |
|---|---|---|
|
AMZN
Amazon.com, Inc.
Warehousing and fulfillment center operations and automation.
|
$2.35T |
$220.65
+1.62%
|
|
PLD
Prologis, Inc.
Warehousing - direct ownership/operation of distribution centers.
|
$116.74B |
$125.76
-0.02%
|
|
UPS
United Parcel Service, Inc.
UPS provides warehousing and distribution center services.
|
$80.23B |
$94.64
+4.15%
|
|
FDX
FedEx Corporation
FedEx operates distribution centers and warehousing as part of its logistics network.
|
$63.56B |
$269.32
-0.04%
|
|
CAH
Cardinal Health, Inc.
Warehousing and distribution center capabilities supporting CAH's distribution network.
|
$50.02B |
$209.40
+0.72%
|
|
JD
JD.com, Inc.
JD operates extensive warehousing and fulfillment networks as part of its logistics chain.
|
$41.93B |
$28.93
+1.92%
|
|
CPRT
Copart, Inc.
Warehousing services for vehicle storage and handling are a core component of Copart's physical moat.
|
$39.38B |
$40.75
+0.05%
|
|
SYM
Symbotic Inc.
Warehousing-related automation solutions, aligning with Symbotic's core market.
|
$31.63B |
$53.64
|
|
ODFL
Old Dominion Freight Line, Inc.
Ownership and operation of service centers indicating warehousing/distribution capabilities.
|
$28.22B |
$134.03
-0.19%
|
|
EXPD
Expeditors International of Washington, Inc.
Warehousing and distribution are a key service component, enabling storage and fulfillment for customers.
|
$19.44B |
$143.25
+0.03%
|
|
CHRW
C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc.
Warehousing and distribution as part of CHRW's 3PL offerings.
|
$17.91B |
$151.73
+2.13%
|
|
XPO
XPO Logistics, Inc.
Network expansion and service centers imply warehousing/distribution capabilities as part of logistics.
|
$15.61B |
$132.23
-0.23%
|
|
ZTO
ZTO Express (Cayman) Inc.
Operates warehousing/distribution center components (sorting centers and last-mile hubs) as part of its logistics network.
|
$15.46B |
$19.20
-0.08%
|
|
PFGC
Performance Food Group Company
Company runs 155 distribution centers, i.e., warehousing services integral to its distribution model.
|
$15.13B |
$96.66
+0.01%
|
|
CUBE
CubeSmart
CubeSmart's storage facilities align with warehousing and storage services.
|
$8.27B |
$36.27
+1.80%
|
|
LINE
Lineage, Inc.
Owns and operates temperature-controlled warehouses and distribution centers forming the core warehousing service.
|
$7.85B |
$34.29
+3.69%
|
|
KNX
Knight-Swift Transportation Holdings Inc.
warehousing and related storage/warehousing services are part of the All Other Segments.
|
$7.17B |
$44.19
+6.02%
|
|
R
Ryder System, Inc.
Omnichannel retail network optimization implies Ryder's involvement in warehousing and distribution center services.
|
$6.86B |
$168.25
|
|
GXO
GXO Logistics, Inc.
Core warehousing and storage services are a central component of GXO's business.
|
$5.44B |
$47.53
+2.87%
|
|
MSM
MSC Industrial Direct Co., Inc.
MSC operates a network of fulfillment centers/warehouses for rapid delivery and inventory management.
|
$4.91B |
$88.14
+0.05%
|
|
MATX
Matson, Inc.
Offers warehousing and distribution capabilities within its integrated logistics platform.
|
$3.34B |
$105.13
-0.08%
|
|
COLD
Americold Realty Trust, Inc.
Core service: temperature-controlled warehousing and storage solutions.
|
$2.96B |
$10.38
+0.05%
|
|
LXP
LXP Industrial Trust
Directly provides warehousing and distribution center space as its core asset class.
|
$2.79B |
$47.14
|
|
HUBG
Hub Group, Inc.
Warehousing and distribution network are core assets with recent network alignment improving efficiency.
|
$2.26B |
$36.92
|
|
UNFI
United Natural Foods, Inc.
UNFI operates and utilizes distribution centers and warehousing to store inventory and fulfill orders.
|
$2.12B |
$34.98
+0.42%
|
|
ANDE
The Andersons, Inc.
Warehousing: expanded storage capacity and grain storage services as part of agri-asset footprint.
|
$1.70B |
$49.56
+1.93%
|
|
ARCB
ArcBest Corporation
Warehousing is a direct service ArcBest provides as part of its distribution network.
|
$1.44B |
$63.09
-0.17%
|
|
GLP
Global Partners LP
GLP provides warehousing-like storage services for fuels as part of its terminal network.
|
$1.43B |
$42.68
+1.57%
|
|
DXPE
DXP Enterprises, Inc.
Network of locations and warehousing capabilities support fast delivery and inventory management.
|
$1.40B |
$88.73
+2.05%
|
|
GCT
GigaCloud Technology Inc.
GCT operates fulfillment centers and warehousing as part of its SFR model.
|
$1.31B |
$34.86
-0.06%
|
|
ODP
The ODP Corporation
Warehousing reflects ODP's 3PL warehousing and fulfillment services via Veyer.
|
$839.95M |
$27.92
|
|
AENT
Alliance Entertainment Holding Corporation
Significant warehouse automation and consolidation indicate warehousing as a core service.
|
$734.54M |
$6.83
+3.25%
|
|
AMRK
A-Mark Precious Metals, Inc.
AMRK provides depository storage and security for precious metals, i.e., warehousing.
|
$651.47M |
$26.44
|
|
FWRD
Forward Air Corporation
Warehousing and value-added services are provided as part of Omni's contract logistics and integrated service offering.
|
$627.54M |
$20.36
+3.17%
|
|
ZKH
ZKH Group Limited
The group owns or provides warehousing services and warehousing automation capabilities.
|
$501.77M |
$3.07
+0.33%
|
|
CVLG
Covenant Logistics Group, Inc.
Warehousing services as part of Covenant's segment mix for storage and distribution.
|
$477.87M |
$19.10
|
|
BXC
BlueLinx Holdings Inc.
Company owns/operates warehousing and distribution centers to store and service customers.
|
$454.21M |
$57.27
+7.23%
|
|
PANL
Pangaea Logistics Solutions, Ltd.
Onshore warehousing and terminal services associated with port logistics are part of service offerings.
|
$443.64M |
$6.81
+0.15%
|
|
RERE
ATRenew Inc.
Warehousing capabilities supporting refurbishment and inventory management.
|
$441.40M |
$4.10
|
|
ULH
Universal Logistics Holdings, Inc.
Warehousing and value-added storage/terminal services are a key component of ULH’s contract logistics platform (Parsec integration).
|
$375.72M |
$14.17
+9.34%
|
|
RLGT
Radiant Logistics, Inc.
Warehousing and distribution as part of value-added logistics services.
|
$280.97M |
$5.94
+1.02%
|
|
LPA
Logistic Properties of the Americas
Warehousing facilities as primary product/service.
|
$104.62M |
$3.21
-2.58%
|
|
MMLP
Martin Midstream Partners L.P.
Warehousing and storage capacity underpin recurring cash flows.
|
$103.30M |
$2.61
-1.32%
|
|
SFWL
Shengfeng Development Limited
Warehousing and cloud storage-enabled inventory/fulfillment capabilities.
|
$80.02M |
$1.00
+4.58%
|
|
RITR
Reitar Logtech Holdings Limited Ordinary shares
Warehousing services, including automated storage management and cold-chain capabilities.
|
$75.56M |
$1.30
-2.99%
|
|
HOUR
Hour Loop, Inc.
Strategic use of warehousing/fulfillment services to mitigate logistics risk.
|
$65.42M |
$1.84
-0.81%
|
|
OCG
Oriental Culture Holding Ltd.
Provides secure warehousing/storage solutions for customer assets (artworks/collectibles).
|
$41.60M |
$2.70
+10.20%
|
|
UNXP
OZ Vision Inc.
Warehousing & distribution center services as part of 3PL capabilities.
|
$35.25M |
$2.00
|
|
ABLV
Able View Inc.
Warehousing and fulfillment services as part of end-to-end brand management.
|
$27.86M |
$0.65
+3.73%
|
|
BTOC
Armlogi Holding Corp. common stock
The company has expanded its warehousing footprint and provides storage, inventory management, and order fulfillment.
|
$24.38M |
$0.50
+3.12%
|
|
PSIG
PS International Group Ltd.
Offers ancillary warehousing and storage services as part of its logistics offerings.
|
$13.87M |
$3.90
-7.02%
|
|
IZM
ICZOOM Group Inc.
Offers warehousing services to support inventory and distribution for customers.
|
$11.73M |
$1.00
|
|
DTCK
Davis Commodities Limited Ordinary Shares
Offers storage/warehousing services as part of its agri-commodities handling network.
|
$11.31M |
$0.47
-14.55%
|
|
UXIN
Uxin Limited
Owns warehousing/reconditioning facilities enabling quick inventory turnover and vehicle prep.
|
$10.97M |
$2.58
+0.78%
|
|
NCEW
New Century Logistics (BVI) Limited
Warehousing and distribution services as part of logistics offerings.
|
$9.56M |
$3.58
-2.45%
|
|
GPOX
GPO Plus, Inc.
Amb ambient temperature-controlled warehousing capability supports expanded product catalog and logistics.
|
$9.13M |
$0.11
|
|
MVNC
Marvion Inc.
MVNC owns/operates a warehouse facility providing storage, packaging, and delivery services as part of its logistics offering.
|
$7.18M |
$0.02
|
|
CTNT
Cheetah Net Supply Chain Service Inc.
Warehousing and distribution services as a key revenue stream within logistics.
|
$4.25M |
$1.31
+1.15%
|
|
TLSS
Transportation and Logistics Systems, Inc.
Asset-based warehousing was part of TLSS's services.
|
$588943 |
$0.00
|
|
RAYA
Erayak Power Solution Group Inc.
They invest in and operate warehousing facilities, including automation for distribution.
|
$422543 |
$3.28
-1.35%
|
|
KRFG
King Resources, Inc
Warehousing represents insured storage of physical art assets as part of the trading process.
|
$79809 |
$0.12
|
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# Executive Summary
* The warehousing industry is at a technological inflection point, with automation and AI no longer being optional but the primary drivers of competitive advantage and margin expansion.
* Despite long-term growth drivers, the industry faces significant near-term macroeconomic headwinds, leading to soft freight demand, pricing pressure, and customer inventory rationalization.
* The relentless growth of e-commerce continues to be the fundamental demand driver, forcing a shift towards more complex, high-velocity omnichannel fulfillment capabilities.
* Financial performance is bifurcating, with tech-forward and specialized players outperforming those more exposed to the cyclical freight market.
* Consolidation remains a key strategic lever, with major players using mergers and acquisitions (M&A) to gain scale, enter new verticals, and acquire new capabilities.
* Capital allocation is focused on a dual mandate: investing heavily in productivity-enhancing technology while returning significant capital to shareholders through buybacks.
## Key Trends & Outlook
The most critical trend reshaping the warehousing industry is the aggressive integration of automation and artificial intelligence, which is creating a stark divergence between technology leaders and the rest of the market. This is a direct response to persistent labor shortages and the need for greater efficiency. Leading companies are deploying proprietary AI and robotics to achieve significant, quantifiable productivity gains; for instance, GXO reports that its AI pilots are driving 3-4x improvements in productivity and over 90% predictive accuracy. This technology is not just about cost savings but enables higher-value services like predictive inventory management and optimized order fulfillment, fundamentally changing the business model from labor-based to technology-leveraged. The impact is immediate, with companies like ZTO achieving a CNY 0.09 year-over-year decrease in combined unit transportation and sorting costs in Q1 2025 through digitization and AI.
The industry is currently navigating a challenging freight market characterized by excess capacity and intense pricing pressure. This has led to customer inventory rationalization, directly impacting warehouse occupancy and throughput, as evidenced by Americold's decline in same-store economic occupancy to 75.5% in Q3 2025 from 78.3%. Global trade policy uncertainty, particularly tariffs, adds another layer of volatility, causing some customers to trim guidance and delay inventory decisions.
The primary opportunity lies in leveraging the structural growth of e-commerce, which demands more sophisticated and automated fulfillment solutions. The most significant near-term risk is a prolonged freight recession, which would continue to suppress volumes and pricing, negatively impacting revenue and margins for all but the most resilient players.
## Competitive Landscape
The global warehousing and storage market is a substantial and growing sector, valued at over $500 billion. This vast market, while fragmented, necessitates different strategic approaches for success. High-growth segments like smart warehousing, projected to reach USD 57.97 billion by 2030 with a 14.2% CAGR, and on-demand warehousing, expected to reach USD 455.38 billion by 2034 with a 13.32% CAGR, are growing much faster than the overall market's 3.5-8.1% CAGR.
Some of the most successful players, particularly in high-growth areas like e-commerce, focus on an asset-light, technology-first approach. This core strategy involves exclusively providing contract logistics, using an asset-light model to offer flexible, high-value-added services. These companies compete by being the industry's foremost innovators in automation, AI, and data science to solve complex customer challenges like e-commerce fulfillment and reverse logistics. Their key advantage lies in high scalability without massive capital investment in real estate, the ability to generate superior productivity gains, and a resilient model with long-term contracts that insulate them from spot market volatility. However, they are heavily reliant on continuous technological innovation to maintain a competitive edge, and their success is tied to the broader trend of outsourcing. GXO Logistics, Inc. (GXO) exemplifies this model with its pure-play focus, stated position as the "foremost innovator," and deployment of AI for proactive replenishment and order routing.
In contrast, other industry leaders dominate through deep specialization in capital-intensive infrastructure. Their core strategy is to dominate a high-barrier-to-entry niche, such as temperature-controlled warehousing, by leveraging immense scale, network density, and specialized operational expertise. Technology is used to optimize existing infrastructure rather than to avoid owning it. This creates a deep competitive moat due to high capital costs and specialized knowledge, commands premium pricing, and benefits from durable, non-discretionary demand from sectors like food and pharmaceuticals. A key vulnerability is high capital intensity, and performance is sensitive to capacity utilization and occupancy rates, which can be impacted by macroeconomic shifts in customer inventory. Americold Realty Trust, Inc. (COLD) perfectly illustrates this model, being a global leader in temperature-controlled real estate with a focus on operational excellence within its 230 facilities, and experiencing a recent dip in occupancy due to macro pressures.
A third group competes by offering a broad, integrated suite of supply chain solutions. Their core strategy is to provide an end-to-end "one-stop-shop" for customers by offering a wide array of services, including warehousing, intermodal, trucking, and brokerage. These companies compete on the breadth of their network and their ability to simplify a customer's entire supply chain. The key advantage is that this deeply embeds them with customers, creating sticky relationships, and diversified revenue streams can smooth out cyclicality in any single segment. However, they can be a "jack of all trades, master of none," potentially lacking the deep specialization of focused players, and execution complexity is high. Hub Group, Inc. (HUBG), with its offerings across intermodal, dedicated trucking, LTL, and warehousing, combined with strategic acquisitions like Marten Intermodal for refrigerated solutions, is a clear example of this strategy.
Ultimately, the key competitive battleground is increasingly centered on technological capability, regardless of the underlying business model.
## Financial Performance
Revenue growth across the warehousing industry is highly bifurcated. Performance ranges from strong double-digit growth, such as Reitar Logtech Holdings Limited (RITR) with a +50.10% year-over-year (YoY) revenue growth in FY25, to mid-single-digit or high-single-digit declines, like The ODP Corporation (ODP) with -9% YoY consolidated sales in Q3 2025. This bifurcation is a direct result of the key industry trends. Growth is concentrated in companies benefiting from structural tailwinds like e-commerce or those executing a successful technology-driven strategy. GXO Logistics, Inc. (GXO) exemplifies this success with +16% YoY revenue growth in Q2 2025. In contrast, companies heavily exposed to the soft general freight market and macroeconomic pressures are experiencing revenue contraction, as seen in Hub Group, Inc.'s (HUBG) -5.4% YoY revenue decline in Q3 2025.
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Profitability also shows significant divergence, largely based on business model and technology adoption. Adjusted operating margins range from over 30% to low single digits. This divergence is driven by the ability to create operating leverage through technology and specialization. Asset-light, tech-enabled models generate higher margins by decoupling headcount from volume growth. C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc.'s (CHRW) "Lean AI" initiative is a prime example, allowing it to improve its adjusted operating margin to 31.3% in Q3 2025 even on declining revenue by automating millions of tasks. This contrasts sharply with more traditional, asset-heavy, or competitive distribution segments where margins are much thinner.
{{chart_1}}
Capital allocation in the industry demonstrates a dual focus on strategic M&A for growth and significant shareholder returns. Companies are allocating capital to where they see the highest returns. In a fragmented industry, M&A is a key tool for rapid growth, geographic expansion, and capability acquisition. Performance Food Group Company (PFGC) highlights this with its substantial $2.0 billion acquisition of Cheney Bros., Inc. in October 2024. Simultaneously, strong cash flow allows mature players to authorize large buyback programs to boost shareholder value, as evidenced by GXO Logistics, Inc.'s (GXO) new $500 million share repurchase plan authorized in February 2025.
The industry's balance sheet health is generally strong and managed, though some companies are carrying higher debt loads post-acquisition. Financial positions vary from no debt for some specialized players to manageable leverage for others. Hub Group, Inc. (HUBG) maintains a low net debt to EBITDA of 0.4x as of March 31, 2025, demonstrating a particularly strong and flexible balance sheet. Companies that have recently completed large acquisitions are temporarily operating with higher leverage but have clear plans to de-lever, demonstrating disciplined financial management.
{{chart_2}}