- A core-satellite portfolio splits investments into stable core holdings and higher-risk satellite picks.
- The core is usually 60% of the portfolio, with satellites at 40%.
- It blends passive index investing with active opportunity bets.


UPS topped Wall Street's profit and sales views Tuesday. Yet its stock still closed down about 4%.
The takeaway: in this market, "good enough" does not always cut it.
CEO Carol Tomé called Q1 a "critical transition period." That is a polite way of saying UPS is rebuilding mid-flight.
The company is cutting volume on purpose. It is also adding more robots to its network and squeezing costs at every step.
Net income came in at $864 million. That was down from $1.19 billion a year ago. Sales slipped to $21.2 billion from $21.5 billion.
Adjusted profit landed at $906 million, or $1.07 a share. That was down from $1.40 a year earlier, even though it beat the $1.02 view.
Domestic sales dropped 2.3%. Most of that came from an expected drop in volume.
UPS hit $600 million in cost cuts in the quarter from its network plan. The full-year goal is $3 billion in year-over-year savings.
The plan leans heavily on automation. UPS is moving more parcels through fewer steps and automating more of its network.
That kind of cost work shows up first in the bottom line. The top line takes longer to turn.
The beat was real, but the forecast did not move. A non-update is what spooked the market.
UPS held its 2026 sales target at $89.7 billion. It also held its adjusted operating margin target at 9.6%.
Tomé told analysts it is "early in the year to raise" guidance. She added there are no signs of trouble in the underlying business.
Investors had hoped for a fresh boost to the outlook. They did not get one.
Even so, "we beat, but we are not raising" usually pulls a stock down on a turnaround story.
Tomé said UPS expects a return to sales and operating profit growth in Q2, plus margin gains. She also told analysts there are no signs of weakness in the broader business.
The company said fuel costs have not been a real drag this year. Bosses also told analysts it is too early to size up the impact of the Middle East war.
The bigger story: UPS is in the middle of a multi-quarter overhaul. The plan is to leave the company smaller, more automated, and more profitable per package.
The cost cuts are also a hedge. If volume keeps shrinking, UPS still has a path to higher margins.
The shift is risky. UPS is betting that paying for tech now leads to fatter profits later. The next two quarters will show if that bet pays off.
UPS just walked through what may be the messiest quarter of its turnaround.
The next step is showing investors that revenue can grow again. Q2 will set the tone for the rest of the year.
After today, the bar is set: beat the views and raise the outlook. A clean Q2 with a guidance bump could change the picture. Q2 needs to be the comeback.