Resilient cloud sales and shopping trends drive Amazon’s optimistic Q3 forecast

Resilient cloud sales and shopping trends drive Amazon’s optimistic Q3 forecast

Aug‌ 3 (Reuters) – Amazon.com ⁣Inc (AMZN.O)⁣ on Thursday reported sales growth and profit that beat Wall Street’s​ expectations as ‍the company delivered goods faster and more cheaply to shoppers ‍while ⁤recent cloud-computing headwinds began ​to subside. Amazon’s shares surged 9% on the news, extending its stock market value more than $120 billion in after-hours ‌trading. Facing an⁣ array ‍of challenges, the company has aimed ​to keep its mantle⁤ as the⁤ world’s biggest cloud ‌provider and online retailer. Amazon recently answered AI front-runners Google (GOOGL.O) and Microsoft (MSFT.O) with rival⁤ services of its own, drawing thousands of customers and touting the breadth of​ technology it has on offer, similar to what is powering ⁢the human-like chatbot ⁢ChatGPT. In retail, ‌Amazon has reorganized its fulfillment network and ‌opened warehouses for same-day shipping closer to big metro areas, saving time and costs on delivery. Brian Olsavsky, Amazon’s chief financial officer, ‍said on a call ​with reporters that faster speeds have ⁣meant Prime loyalty customers‍ are “shopping more often.” For the second quarter, Amazon’s revenue grew 11% to $134.4 billion, beating estimates of ‍$131.5 billion from analysts ⁢polled by Refinitiv. ‍Amazon’s cloud-computing division has been key. In recent⁣ months, Amazon Web Services (AWS) saw its sales growth‍ slow as wary businesses scrutinized ⁤their cloud bills. Olsavsky‍ said such “cost optimization” continued, but big companies were​ embracing⁤ the cloud anew, a lift to ⁣the division ⁢this spring and ‌summer. CEO Andy Jassy said in a statement, “Our AWS⁤ growth stabilized.” The unit beat estimates of around $21.7 billion in second-quarter cloud sales, increasing them⁤ 12% to⁤ $22.1 billion. Its rivals posted bigger jumps off smaller bases: 28% growth in Alphabet’s June-quarter cloud revenue and a 26% quarterly increase for⁣ Microsoft’s Azure. Arun Sundaram, an equity analyst at CFRA Research, said the results showed Amazon was holding its own, including in so-called generative AI that can create new text, images and other content from past data. “We can put ⁤any negative narrative to rest,” Sundaram said, ⁣adding AI’s⁤ potential “should benefit all the large⁢ tech‌ companies.” Jassy told analysts every business inside Amazon has multiple generative-AI initiatives underway, including customer-facing⁤ and cost-slimming efforts. He⁤ said AWS’s spending ⁢on the ‌technology represented‍ a “significant” amount ​of the more than $50 billion in capital investments Amazon projected for ‌2023. ​Such investments, offset by lower fulfillment expenditures, are down from $59 billion in 2022.⁤ Still, the boost that Amazon’s‍ cloud could reap from powering⁣ businesses’ AI demand has yet to materialize in full. Thomas Monteiro, an analyst at Investing.com said. “In Q3, it is likely that​ companies will have to start showing ⁣results on that front.” In e-commerce, consumers have acted with some reserve for months, putting off ‍discretionary purchases​ and shopping for⁢ value.‌ CFO Olsavsky said…

Original ‍from www.reuters.com

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