Amazon Posts Strong Revenue, Profit on Web Sales, Cost Cuts
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1970-01-01 08:00
Amazon.com Inc. reported revenue and profit that topped analysts’ estimates, buoyed by rising sales in its retail unit

Amazon.com Inc. reported revenue and profit that topped analysts’ estimates, buoyed by rising sales in its retail unit and significant cost cutting.

While sales growth in the cloud computing unit fell just short of projections, Chief Executive Officer Andy Jassy reassured investors on a conference call that the business had stabilized and said the company inked a number of deals that took effect early in the current quarter. The shares gained about 3.5% in extended trading on his comments.

Jassy has been winning over Wall Street this year with deep cost cuts and a focus on boosting profit. Under his guidance, the Seattle-based company has become increasingly reliant on services that tend to make more money than the original business of hawking goods online, including advertising, logistics services for independent merchants and renting computing power to corporations.

“The retail giant’s slowdown last year appears to be in the rear-view mirror as it has embarked on significant cost-cutting throughout this year and sharpened its focus on key growth areas, such as its high-margin online marketplace — and the services it can sell to those sellers — and advertising,” said Zak Stambor, an analyst at Insider Intelligence.

Sales for its cloud unit, Amazon Web Services, increased 12% to $23.1 billion. The business’s operating income of $6.98 billion was about $1.3 billion more than analysts expected. AWS, which tends to account for more profit than the rest of the company combined, reported the highest operating margin since the first quarter of 2022.

Chief Financial Officer Brian Olsavsky stopped short of saying that AWS growth has bottomed out, explaining that the division is seeing a number of cross currents. But it may be a sign the pullback in corporate spending on cloud services isn’t over yet, and a potential worry for investors.

The results provided more evidence of Jassy’s cost-cutting effort, which has scrutinized expenses across the company. Amazon’s spending on sales and marketing declined, a first since at least 2015. The growth in spending on technology and infrastructure, a category that includes the salaries of software engineers and costs for AWS servers, rose by just 8.8%, about a quarter of the rate of a year ago.

Third-quarter revenue gained 13% to $143.1 billion, Amazon said Thursday in a statement. Analysts, on average, estimated $141.6 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Operating income increased to $11.2 billion, compared with $2.5 billion in the period a year ago. Analysts, on average, estimated $7.71 billion.

The company’s central online stores also produced a better-than-expected performance. The unit generated $57.3 billion, a 7% increase from the period a year earlier. The quarter included Prime Day, Amazon’s mid-summer shopping bonanza. Advertising sales jumped 26% to $12 billion, also topping estimates.

Amazon projected sales of $160 billion to $167 billion in the quarter ending in December, compared with analysts’ average estimate of $166.6 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Operating income will be $7 billion to $11 billion in the period. Analysts, on average, projected $8.71 billion.

While Olsavsky said the consumer is “spending money, but cautious and deal driven,” Stambor, of Insider Intelligence, was more optimistic. Amazon’s “successful Prime Big Deal Days event — which Insider Intelligence believes generated $5.9 billion in US retail e-commerce sales, an 8% gain year-over-year — give it strong momentum as we head into the heart of the holiday season,” Stambor said.

Amazon’s stock closed at $119.57 in New York and has jumped 43% this year.

(Updates with extended trading in the second paragraph.)

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