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by nine_zeros
1109 days ago
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> In the real world it takes weeks if not months to purchase a delivery vehicle. But you are looking at it from the perspective of someone sitting behind a keyboard, starting from scratch. In the real world with thriving economies, there will be smaller, underdog players already operating. Maybe they are regional, or maybe they have a slower/smaller fleet. Whatever the reason, these smaller players rise up to eat the big one because they already have something to leverage. Facilities, workers etc. They just need to raise capital to expand rapidly. The steps in the parent post are not meant for someone starting from scratch. |
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Neither of them, nor the combined, has the assets (physical vehicles/aircraft, drivers, pilots, package handlers, terminals/hubs) to take over a substantial fraction of UPS volume on a few days’ notice. And they won’t scale up ahead of obvious opportunity because if UPS settles, they’ve got a ton of previous capital stranded and employees to fire with no associated business to pay for them.