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Germany's DHL hires US Postal Service for last-mile US parcel deliveries

?The U.S. The U.S. Postal Service announced Thursday that it had signed a'multi-year agreement with DHL eCommerce for parcel delivery in the U.S.

DHL?eCommerce is a U.S. division of the German logistics giant DHL Group. The deal, according to DHL, will help the company grow on the U.S. Market over the next few years.

DHL eCommerce, which has 19 hubs in the U.S., will be responsible for the pickup and sorting of all deliveries before USPS completes the final mile.

Deal is crucial for the financially strapped USPS. It has warned that it may run out of money as early as February. Amazon.com announced last month that it had reached an agreement with the USPS regarding package deliveries.

In an interview, Postmaster General David Steiner stated that the USPS is the only carrier to deliver to 170 millions U.S. households six days a weeks. The deal allows DHL to "play in 'the largest market of the world.

Steiner stated that DHL "would have to invest a lot of capital in order to build an end-toend network or partner with someone who has this last-mile ability" such as USPS. "We've got a win-win situation."

DHL eCommerce Americas Chief Executive Scott Ashbaugh stated that the deal will help the company to grow in the U.S., and target slightly heavier "parcels".

Ashbaugh added that a company of this size has a wide range of options for the last mile. DHL eCommerce, for example, could have built its own network or acquired a firm to make these last-mile deliveries.

He stated that the company could add more hubs in the U.S. He said the company?could add more?U.S. Ashbaugh stated that USPS was the best choice.

USPS will raise the price of "first-class" mail stamps by 8% to 82 cents, effective July 12. This follows approval for a temporary 8 %?price increase for priority mail and package deliveries in order to cope with rising transportation costs.

Since 2007, the postal service has suffered net losses of $118 Billion as its most profitable product - first class mail - has dropped to its lowest volume in decades. David Shepardson, David Gregorio (Editing)

(source: Reuters)