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Parcel delivery giants FedEx (FDX.N) and UPS (UPS.N) said on Tuesday they would return any tariff refunds to customers ​as the U.S. government begins to return the illegally collected ‌levies.

Thousands of companies rushed to file claims after a refund system that was set up to allow companies to recover tariffs ​from the U.S. government went live last week.

The ​U.S. Supreme Court in February struck down the tariffs President ⁠Donald Trump pursued under a law meant for use ​in national emergencies, handing the Republican president a stinging ​defeat.

About $166 billion in U.S. tariff collections are subject to potential refunds. The Trump administration's tariffs had upended global trade through 2025 and impacted ​the earnings of a wide range of companies, including ​logistics providers.

UPS CEO Carol Tome said in a post-earnings investor call ‌that ⁠the company had collected about $5 billion worth of tariffs from its customers.

"We are working with the Customs Border Protection to apply for those refunds. Our approach is to work ​with the U.S. ​government and ⁠not to sue the U.S. government," Tome said, referring to rival FedEx's February lawsuit.

"We think ​it's going to take some time before the ​Treasury ⁠remits money to us, but as soon as we get that money, we're going to remit it right back to ⁠our ​customers," she added.

FedEx, too, said it ​would issue refunds to customers "as soon as it begins receiving refunds from ​CBP."


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