• Amazon reported third-quarter results surpassing analyst expectations with earnings per share of 94 cents, well above the anticipated 58 cents, and revenue reaching $143.1 billion (+13%), exceeding the expected $141.4 billion.
  • The core e-commerce business saw a 7% year-over-year expansion, rebounding from the previous quarter’s 4% growth. Amazon’s net income more than tripled to $9.9 billion, driven in part by a pre-tax valuation gain of $1.2 billion from the company’s investment in electric car company Rivian.
  • Amazon reported an operating margin of 7.8%, the highest since early 2021. This marks a significant improvement from the 2% operating margin a year ago.• Key segments such as Amazon Web Services and Advertising performed well.
  • Comparing advertising revenue in Q3 ’23, Google Search had $44 bn (+11% y/y), Meta achieved $33.6 bn (+24% y/y), and Amazon brought in $12.1 bn (+26% y/y) versus $11.6 billion expected by analysts. Amazon, while still a distant third, is catching up slowly.
  • Amazon CEO Andy Jassy credited the strong quarter to improved cost-efficiency, speed of delivery, AWS stability, and robust advertising revenue. Amazon Web Services revenue came in $23.1 billion versus the $23.2 billion expected by analysts.
  • In the cloud segment, Amazon appears to have given up some market share. However, still showed growth in the quarter of 12%. Microsoft earlier this week said Azure revenue jumped 19% in its most recent quarter, and Google’s Cloud expanded by 22%.
  • Jassy spoke optimistically about the outlook for AWS, and said the cloud unit is seeing the pace and volume of closed deals pick up.
  • Amazon anticipates fourth-quarter sales between $160 billion and $167 billion, with analysts projecting revenue of $166.6 billion, signifying a 9.6% growth from the previous year.
  • Amazon’s cost-cutting measures over the past year, including layoffs and discontinuing unprofitable ventures, have proven successful. Customer spending is showing positive signs considering the difficult economic conditions. And despite a slowdown in cost optimization efforts, Amazon’s margin improvements and the potential of AWS are a source of optimism. The company’s earnings and pricing power, and long-term growth prospects remain compelling. This Q3 report was positive overall and the share remains a stock I hold in offshore managed portfolios for clients.

    By Lee Kern

Join our Mailing list!
Sign up to get all the latest financial news and business updates.

Subscribe to fund newsletter

Please fill in the form and we will get in touch with you shortly and help answer any questions you may have about Offshore Supporting services.