Amazon gains after "strongest" top-line and margin print in several quarters
Investing.com -- Amazon.com (NASDAQ: AMZN) shares traded about 2% higher premarket after the company reported record-breaking quarterly profits. The technology giant reported earnings per share of $2.78, which crushed the analyst consensus of $1.63, while revenue of $181.5 billion also cleared the $177.13 billion Street estimate.
The focal point of the release was a 28% growth rate at Amazon Web Services, signaling a major re-acceleration for the cloud division. Chief Executive Andy Jassy noted the momentum by stating, “AWS is growing 28% (our fastest growth in 15 quarters) on a very large base, our chips business topped a $20 billion revenue run rate (growing triple digits year-over-year), Advertising grew to over $70 billion in TTM revenue, and unit growth in our Stores reached 15% (the highest since the tail end of covid lockdowns).”
Investors appeared to be balancing the record operating income of $23.9 billion against a sharp contraction in free cash flow. This metric dropped to $1.2 billion for the trailing twelve months, a decline that was “driven primarily by a year-over-year increase of $59.3 billion in purchases of property and equipment, net of proceeds from sales and incentives.”
In the first quarter alone, purchases of property and equipment surged to $44.2 billion. This figure represents a nearly 77% increase from the $25.0 billion spent in the prior year’s first quarter, exceeding the expectations of analysts who had signaled caution over the speed of infrastructure expansion.
Evercore analyst Mark Mahaney described Wednesday’s report as "the strongest top-line and consolidated margin print in several quarters."
The company’s massive investment in proprietary silicon reached a new milestone as its chip business exceeded a $20 billion annual revenue run rate.
Jassy highlighted other internal successes, saying, “We also hit exciting milestones with delivery speed (more than 1 billion items same-day or overnight in 2026 and counting), Project Hail Mary (nearly $615 million at the box office to date and the second most successful non-sequel, non-franchise opening of recent memory), and Amazon Leo continues to resonate with prospective customers, with Delta Airlines the latest to sign on.”
The core retail business remained a bright spot with North America segment sales rising 12% to $104.1 billion. This growth allowed the division to expand its operating margin to 7.9% even as the company absorbed a $1 billion headwind from its satellite-based internet project.
Management provided second-quarter revenue guidance between $194 billion and $199 billion, which remains above the $189.15 billion analyst consensus. The company expects operating income to range from $20 billion to $24 billion, indicating that the core business continues to generate enough cash to fund its $200 billion long-term investment cycle.
The second-quarter outlook was further bolstered by the official confirmation that Prime Day will move to June, pulling significant retail demand forward.
Emarketer principal analyst Sky Canaves observed, "A June Prime Day will provide a major lift to Q2 revenues but one that will be counterbalanced by relatively weaker Q3 growth this year, though Amazon Ads should come out ahead and will remain a key profit engine for the company."
Reflecting on the scale of the current technological transition, Jassy expressed confidence in the company’s aggressive capital allocation strategy. He told shareholders, “we’re in the middle of some of the biggest inflections of our lifetime, we’re well positioned to lead, and I’m very optimistic about what’s ahead for our customers and
