
Amazon shares took successful on Thursday after second-quarter revenue missed expectations despite a stellar performance from its cloud business. That doesn’t change our thesis on this long-standing core holding. According to LSEG estimates, revenue rose 10% year-on-year to $147.98 billion, below expectations of $148.5 billion. Earnings per share based on generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) rose to 1.26 cents, up from 65 cents last 12 months and the estimate of $1.03. Operating income rose 91% year-on-year to $14.67 billion, beating the consensus forecast of $11.37 billion and above the high end of management’s previous guidance of $10 billion to $14 billion. Amazon Why we own the stock: While Amazon is widely known for online shopping, its real asset is its cloud business. Advertising is one other fast-growing, high-margin business. Investments in a sturdy e-commerce logistics infrastructure make the web store a sought-after address as management works to drastically reduce delivery times and lower overall costs. Prime leverages free shipping and video streaming, together with tons of other perks, to maintain users paying every month. Competitors: Walmart, Target, Microsoft, and Alphabet Last Purchase: August 23, 2023 Initiated: February 2018 Conclusion It was certainly not a clean quarter for Amazon, but that doesn’t suggest the story has modified. Amazon Web Services delivered great results, hitting $105 billion in revenue and with operating margins that continued to trend upward despite heavy investments to maintain up with demand. On the opposite hand, there have been failures throughout e-commerce and related businesses, which in fact we don’t love to see. But the crucial a part of the story, the part that hasn’t modified, is that the corporate continues to lower its “cost to serve,” which is the associated fee Amazon pays to deliver a product to customers. The forecast was low, and that is vital when the market is frightened a couple of decline in spending on uncommitted products. However, it’s difficult for an organization of Amazon’s size to predict revenue prematurely, so the forecast is prone to be conservative. With external events just like the Olympics and the upcoming presidential election, people could also be less focused on filling their shopping carts on Amazon. Amazon is the corporate that will likely be first to choose up on this trend. Still, management has a history of delivering results on the high end or above the forecast range, and next quarter is likely to be no different. With AWS humming and management finding more ways to scale back service costs, Amazon’s profitability story continues to be intact. We reiterate the two rating and our $220 price goal, but will look ahead to further weakness on this volatile market to upgrade to 1. Quarterly Results Let’s start with the great things. Amazon Web Services was the star of the report, with revenue growth accelerating to 19% 12 months over 12 months for the third consecutive quarter, beating expectations of 18%. On the earnings call after the outcomes were announced, CEO Andy Jassy pointed to a few macro trends driving AWS’s strong growth. “First, companies have completed most of their cost optimization efforts and are refocusing on new efforts,” Jassy said. “Second, companies are reinvesting their energy in modernizing their infrastructure and moving from on-premises infrastructure to the cloud.” There’s also an AI component driving up revenue: “Builders and companies of all sizes are excited about using AI. Our AI business continues to grow dramatically with multi-billion dollar revenue,” he added. AWS ended the quarter with a backlog of about $156.6 billion, up 9% 12 months over 12 months. Operating margins at AWS were incredible, rising to about 35.5%, in comparison with estimates of 32.5% and 24.2% a 12 months ago. To be fair, a few of the big year-over-year increase was resulting from a positive accounting change, but margins are also benefiting from cost controls and a slowing hiring pace. As for the remainder of the corporate, revenues were below consensus estimates, causing total revenue to fall in need of estimates for the primary time since October 2022. In North America, where revenues rose 9% year-over-year, management provided some information that might help explain slower trends from the 12% rate seen in the primary quarter. One issue is that Amazon is seeing lower average selling prices in its stores because consumers are cutting price where they will. While this will result in lower revenue per product, it might help Amazon gain market share. Jassy identified that non-essential, higher-cost items like computers and TVs are growing faster at Amazon than the remainder of the industry, but not as fast as one would expect in a booming economy. In addition, Jassy believes Amazon’s faster delivery speeds are helping the corporate gain market share in on a regular basis necessities. Another reason for the weak numbers was seller fees. These fell below management’s expectations resulting from a change in behavior resulting from the recent fee change. The third-party services division was the business unit that missed consensus estimates by essentially the most significant margin. Still, Jassy doesn’t imagine these are long-term issues to fret about. “While some of these issues are hurting near-term revenue, we’re generally comfortable with these trends,” he said on the conference call. Although operating margins in North America fell barely from 5.77% in the primary quarter to five.63% within the second quarter, CFO Brian Olsavsky attributed the decline to a rise in investments in areas like satellite. Olsavsky said profitability in North American operations improved quarter over quarter, driven by continued improvements in service costs. “We saw improvements in our service costs driven by our efforts to place inventory more regionally and closer to our customers. This resulted in more consolidated deliveries with more units per box shipped. We also saw packages travel shorter distances to customers, which also led to better productivity on the road in our transportation network,” Jassy explained on the conference call. Reducing service costs is vital to Amazon’s emerging profitability story. The company sees additional levers to scale back costs in the longer term, akin to increasing using automation and robotics, further expanding its same-day network and regionalizing its inbound network. Internationally, Amazon attributed the profitable quarter primarily to improvements in its cost structure in established countries and expanded customer offerings in emerging markets. For capital expenditures, Amazon invested $30.5 billion in the primary half of the 12 months and expects that number to rise within the second half to satisfy growing needs for AWS infrastructure. This is not investing for fear of underinvestment. The company cited strong demand signals for Gen-AI and other workloads. Forecast Amazon’s third-quarter forecast left investors wanting more. The company expects net revenue of $154 billion to $158.5 billion, up 8% to 11% 12 months over 12 months. The high end of the forecast is in keeping with the consensus of $158.2 billion, but misses the analyst consensus of $156.25 billion. Operating income forecast was also low. Management expects operating income of $11.5 billion to $15 billion, which is below the consensus of $15.34 billion, with a midpoint of $13.25 billion. Operating income for the third quarter of 2023 totaled $11.2 billion. (Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust is long AMZN. A full list of stocks may be found here.) As a subscriber to CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you’ll receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock from his charitable foundation’s portfolio. If Jim has spoken a couple of stock on television, he’ll wait 72 hours after the trade alert is issued before executing the trade. THE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION PROVIDED ABOVE IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY AND OUR DISCLAIMER. 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The Amazon Prime logo on a package in Manhattan.
Michael Kappeler | Picture Alliance |
Amazon The company’s shares took successful on Thursday after second-quarter revenue fell in need of expectations despite a superb performance from its cloud business.
This doesn’t change our thesis regarding this long-standing core investment.
