Amazon reported a boost in its quarterly profits, while exceeding revenue estimates.
For the three months ending September 30, the Seattle-based tech giant posted revenue of US$158.9 billion, higher than the US$157.28 billion analysts had expected.
Amazon said it earned US$15.3 billion, higher than the US$12.21 billion industry analysts surveyed by FactSet had anticipated. Amazon earned US$9.9 billion during the same period last year. Earnings per share were US$1.43, higher than analysts’ expectations of US$1.14.
Net sales increased 11 per cent compared with the third quarter of 2023, Amazon said.
The report offers a last look at Amazon’s business before the start of the holiday shopping season, the busiest time of year for the retail industry.
“As we get into the holiday season, we’re excited about what we have in store for customers,” said Andy Jassy, Amazon’s president and CEO. “We kicked off the holiday season with our biggest-ever Prime Big Deal Days and the launch of an all-new Kindle lineup that is significantly outperforming our expectations; and there’s so much more coming.”
The company said it expects revenue for the fourth quarter to be between US$181.5 billion and US$188.5 billion, compared with the US$186.29 billion forecast by analysts.
The better-than-expected earnings come after Amazon missed revenue estimates last quarter,.
Amazon reported its core online retail business pulled in US$61.41 billion in revenue this in the third quarter. Those figures include sales from the company’s popular Prime Day shopping event held in July. Though Amazon does not disclose how much revenue comes from the 48-hour shopping bonanza, it said this year’s event resulted in record sales and more items sold than ever before.
The e-commerce company held another discount shopping event for Prime members earlier this month, a strategy it rolled out two years ago in order to ahead of the holiday shopping season. Sales for that event will be included in Amazon’s fourth quarter earnings report.
The company’s results follow other earning reports this week from tech giants such as Microsoft, Meta and Google’s corporate parent, Alphabet.
Amazon Web Service, the company’s cloud computing unit and a main driver of its artificial intelligence ambitions, reported a 19 per cent increase in sales to US$27.5 billion. The boost in sales comes as the company, like others of its calibre, is ramping up investments in data centres, AI chips and other infrastructure needed to support the technology.
During a call with reporters in August, Amazon’s Chief Financial Officer Brian Olsavsky noted the company had spent more than US$30 billion during the first half of the year on capital expenditures and that the majority was spent on AWS infrastructure. Those investments, he said, were expected to increase during the second half of the year.
Just this month, Amazon said it was investing in small nuclear reactors, following a similar announcement by Google, as both tech giants seek new sources of carbon-free electricity to meet the surging demand from data centres and generative AI. Meanwhile, last month, the company inked a multi-year deal with the chipmaker Intel, which will create some custom AI chips for AWS, adding to those the unit already produces on its own.
Amazon’s capital expenditures jumped year-over-year from US$12.48 billion to US$22.62 billion, driven in large part by its investment in technological infrastructure, such as data centres and Nvidia GPUs used for AI.
During an earnings call Thursday afternoon, Jassy said Amazon is using generative AI “pervasively” across its businesses, including AI-powered shopping in parts of Europe, Canada and the United States. Amazon also recently débuted AI shopping guides for consumers, which help customers to find products, he said, as well as an AI assistant that “offers tailored business insights to boost productivity and drive seller growth.”
“The increase bumps here are really driven by generative AI,” he said on the call.
Jassy told investors that both AWS and AI require the company to invest in data centres, networking gear and hardware upfront. A lot of those assets — such as data centres, he said — can be useful for decades.
“It is a really unusually large, maybe once in a lifetime type of opportunity,” he said, “and I think our customers, the business and our shareholders, will feel good about this long-term, that we’re aggressively pursuing it.”
Regulators have been scrutinising Amazon’s other partnership with the AI start-up Anthropic, which is using AWS as its primary cloud provider and the company’s custom chips to build, train and deploy its AI models. Amazon got some good news in September when British competition authorities cleared its partnership with Anthropic.
The relationship and others like it, however, continue to face scrutiny in the United States by the Federal Trade Commission. Headed by Big Tech critic Lina Khan, the FTC has brought an antitrust lawsuit against Amazon, alleging the company is stifling competition and overcharging sellers on its e-commerce platform.
AP